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Ken Campbell (actor)

 
Ken Campbell (actor)

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Ken Campbell (actor)



 
 
Kenneth Victor Campbell (December 10 1941 - August 31 2008) was an English
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 writer
Writer

A writer is anyone who creates a written work, although the word usually designates those who write creatively or professionally, as well as those who have written in many different forms....
, actor
Actor

An actor or actress is a person who acting in a dramatic production and who works in film, television, theatre, or radio programming in that capacity....
, director and comedian
Comedian

A comedian or comic is a person who seeks to entertain members of an audience, primarily by making them laughter. This might be through jokes or amusing situations, or acting a fool, as in slapstick, or employing prop comedy....
 known for his work in experimental theatre
Experimental theatre

Experimental theatre is a general term for various movements in Western theatre that began in the 20th century as a reaction against the then-dominant conventions governing the writing and production of drama, and against naturalism in particular....
. He has been called "a one-man dynamo of British theatre."

The Guardian
The Guardian

Sorry, no overview for this topic
 in a posthumous tribute judged him to be "one of the most original and unclassifiable talents in the British theatre of the past half-century . . . a genius at producing shows on a shoestring and honing the improvisational capabilities of the actors who were brave enough to work with him."

Among those who early in their careers passed through his portals, some of whom expressed their gratitude at his funeral in Epping Forest
Epping Forest

Epping Forest is an area of ancient woodland in south-east England, straddling the border between north-east Greater London and Essex. It is managed by the City of London Corporation....
  in September 2008, were Jim Broadbent
Jim Broadbent

James "Jim" Broadbent is an England Academy Award-winning, theatre, film and television actor....
, Bob Hoskins
Bob Hoskins

Robert William "Bob" Hoskins, Jr. is an England actor, known for playing Cockney rough diamonds and gangsters, and for his performances in family films such as Who Framed Roger Rabbit and Hook ....
, Chris Langham
Chris Langham

Christopher Langham is a BAFTA award-winning United Kingdom writer, actor and comedian. He is most famous for playing MP Hugh Abbot in BBC Four Situation comedy The Thick of It and as presenter Roy Mallard in People Like Us, first on BBC Radio 4 and later on its transfer to television on BBC Two, where Mallard is almost entirely an u...
, Bill Nighy
Bill Nighy

'William Francis "Bill" Nighy' is a Golden Globe- and British Academy of Film and Television Arts-award winning English people actor. He started working in theatre and television, before his first film role in 1981, and is perhaps best known to international film audiences for his roles in Love Actually, Shaun of the Dead, Notes on a...
, David Rappaport
David Rappaport

David Stephen Rappaport was an England actor, probably one of the best known dwarfism actors in television and film. He was reported standing 3' 11" , although he himself told newspapers different heights, ranging from 3' 6" up to 4 feet ....
, John Sessions
John Sessions

John Gibb Marshall , better known by the stage name John Sessions, is a Scotland actor and comedian. He is known for comedy improvisation in television shows such as Whose Line Is It Anyway?; as a panelist on QI and as a character actor in numerous films, both in Britain and Hollywood....
, Sylvester McCoy
Sylvester McCoy

Sylvester McCoy is a Scotland acting. He is best known for playing the Seventh Doctor of Doctor in the long-running science fiction television series Doctor Who from 1987 to 1989 and a brief return in a television movie in 1996....
, Keith Allen
Keith Allen

Keith Philip George Allen is a Wales-born United Kingdom actor, comedian, singer-songwriter, artist and author....
, and the award-winning ventriloquist Nina Conti
Nina Conti

Nina Conti is a British actress, comedian and ventriloquist. Her onstage puppet sidekick is a depressed monkey named Monk....
.






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Kenneth Victor Campbell (December 10 1941 - August 31 2008) was an English
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 writer
Writer

A writer is anyone who creates a written work, although the word usually designates those who write creatively or professionally, as well as those who have written in many different forms....
, actor
Actor

An actor or actress is a person who acting in a dramatic production and who works in film, television, theatre, or radio programming in that capacity....
, director and comedian
Comedian

A comedian or comic is a person who seeks to entertain members of an audience, primarily by making them laughter. This might be through jokes or amusing situations, or acting a fool, as in slapstick, or employing prop comedy....
 known for his work in experimental theatre
Experimental theatre

Experimental theatre is a general term for various movements in Western theatre that began in the 20th century as a reaction against the then-dominant conventions governing the writing and production of drama, and against naturalism in particular....
. He has been called "a one-man dynamo of British theatre."

The Guardian
The Guardian

Sorry, no overview for this topic
 in a posthumous tribute judged him to be "one of the most original and unclassifiable talents in the British theatre of the past half-century . . . a genius at producing shows on a shoestring and honing the improvisational capabilities of the actors who were brave enough to work with him."

Among those who early in their careers passed through his portals, some of whom expressed their gratitude at his funeral in Epping Forest
Epping Forest

Epping Forest is an area of ancient woodland in south-east England, straddling the border between north-east Greater London and Essex. It is managed by the City of London Corporation....
  in September 2008, were Jim Broadbent
Jim Broadbent

James "Jim" Broadbent is an England Academy Award-winning, theatre, film and television actor....
, Bob Hoskins
Bob Hoskins

Robert William "Bob" Hoskins, Jr. is an England actor, known for playing Cockney rough diamonds and gangsters, and for his performances in family films such as Who Framed Roger Rabbit and Hook ....
, Chris Langham
Chris Langham

Christopher Langham is a BAFTA award-winning United Kingdom writer, actor and comedian. He is most famous for playing MP Hugh Abbot in BBC Four Situation comedy The Thick of It and as presenter Roy Mallard in People Like Us, first on BBC Radio 4 and later on its transfer to television on BBC Two, where Mallard is almost entirely an u...
, Bill Nighy
Bill Nighy

'William Francis "Bill" Nighy' is a Golden Globe- and British Academy of Film and Television Arts-award winning English people actor. He started working in theatre and television, before his first film role in 1981, and is perhaps best known to international film audiences for his roles in Love Actually, Shaun of the Dead, Notes on a...
, David Rappaport
David Rappaport

David Stephen Rappaport was an England actor, probably one of the best known dwarfism actors in television and film. He was reported standing 3' 11" , although he himself told newspapers different heights, ranging from 3' 6" up to 4 feet ....
, John Sessions
John Sessions

John Gibb Marshall , better known by the stage name John Sessions, is a Scotland actor and comedian. He is known for comedy improvisation in television shows such as Whose Line Is It Anyway?; as a panelist on QI and as a character actor in numerous films, both in Britain and Hollywood....
, Sylvester McCoy
Sylvester McCoy

Sylvester McCoy is a Scotland acting. He is best known for playing the Seventh Doctor of Doctor in the long-running science fiction television series Doctor Who from 1987 to 1989 and a brief return in a television movie in 1996....
, Keith Allen
Keith Allen

Keith Philip George Allen is a Wales-born United Kingdom actor, comedian, singer-songwriter, artist and author....
, and the award-winning ventriloquist Nina Conti
Nina Conti

Nina Conti is a British actress, comedian and ventriloquist. Her onstage puppet sidekick is a depressed monkey named Monk....
.

The artistic director of the Liverpool Everyman
Everyman Theatre

The Everyman Theatre is a theatre on Hope Street, Liverpool in Liverpool, England. It was established in 1964 to perform works of relevance to the inhabitants of Liverpool....
 and Playhouse
Liverpool Playhouse

The Liverpool Playhouse is a theatre in Williamson Square in the city of Liverpool, England.Although a concert room had existed on the site since approximately 1844, the Listed building theatre seen today was built in 1866, when it was the Star Music Hall....
 said, "He was the door through which many hundreds of kindred souls entered a madder, braver, brighter, funnier and more complex universe."

Campbell achieved notoriety in the 1970s for his nine-hour adaptation of the science-fiction trilogy Illuminatus! and his 22-hour staging of Neil Oram's play cycle The Warp. The Guinness Book of Records listed the latter as the longest play in the world; the British acid house
Acid house

Acid house is a sub-genre of house music that emphasizes a repetitive, hypnotic and trance music-like style, often with samples or spoken lines rather than sung lyrics....
 band The KLF
The KLF

The KLF, also known as The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu , The Timelords and other names, were one of the seminal bands from the Music of the United Kingdom acid house movement during the late 1980s and early 1990s....
, the biggest-selling singles act worldwide in 1991, later notorious for burning a million pounds, had its origin in the former.

The Independent
The Independent

The Independent is a United Kingdom Compact newspaper published by Tony O'Reilly's Independent News & Media. It is nicknamed the Indy, with the Sunday edition, The Independent on Sunday, being the Sindy....
 said that, "In the 1990s, through a series of sprawling monologues packed with arcane information and freakish speculations on the nature of reality, he became something approaching a grand old man of the fringe, though without ever discarding his inner enfant terrible." The London Times
The Times

The Times is a daily national newspaper published in the United Kingdom since 1785 when it was known as The Daily Universal Register.The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary of News International....
 labeled Campbell a one-man whirlwind of comic and surreal performance.

Early life & career

Campbell was born in Ilford
Ilford

Ilford is a district of the London Borough of Redbridge. It is a suburban development situated east north-east of Charing Cross and one the major metropolitan centres identified in the London Plan....
, Essex
Essex

Essex is a counties of England in the East of England England. The county town is Chelmsford, and the highest point of the county is Chrishall Common near the village of Langley, Essex, close to the Hertfordshire border, which reaches ....
, the son of Elsie (née
Married and maiden names

A married name is the family name adopted by a person upon marriage, and in speaking of the many cultures where the practice is traditional for women, the maiden name is the family name that the married name replaces....
 Handley) and Anthony Colin Campbell, who was a telegrapher. He staged his first performances in the bathroom of his childhood home: “I was three years old and helped by my invisible friend, Peter Jelp, I put on shows for the characters in the linoleum.”

He was educated at Chigwell School
Chigwell School

Chigwell School is an English co-education public school in Chigwell, in the Epping Forest district of Essex. It was founded in 1629 by Samuel Harsnett, a former Archbishop of York ....
 and then studied drama at RADA
Rada

Rada is the term for "council" or "assembly"borrowed by Polish language from the Low Franconian "Rad" and later passed into the Czech language, Ukrainian language, and Belarusian language languages....
 before joining Colchester
Colchester

Colchester is a town, and the largest settlement within the Colchester , in Essex, England.It has a population of List of English cities by population....
 Repertory theatre as an understudy
Understudy

In theatre, an understudy is a performer who learns the lines and blocking/choreography of a leading actor or actress in a play . Should the lead actor or actress be unable to appear on stage because of illness or accident, the understudy takes over the part....
 to Warren Mitchell
Warren Mitchell

Warren Mitchell is an England actor....
. He soon began writing and directing his own productions, including working with director Lindsay Anderson
Lindsay Anderson

Lindsay Gordon Anderson was an Indian-born England feature film, theatre and documentary film director, film critic, and leading light of the Free Cinema movement and the British New Wave....
. After seeing the American Living Theatre at The Roundhouse in the early 1970s he was inspired to found The Ken Campbell Roadshow, a small theatre group that performed in unconventional venues such as pubs. Members included Bob Hoskins and Sylvester McCoy. Campbell was invited by John Cleese
John Cleese

'John Marwood Cleese' is an Academy Award-nominated English actor, comedian, writer, film producer and singer, who is known as being a member of Monty Python, a group of comedians responsible for the sketch show Monty Python's Flying Circus and for all of the four Monty Python films: And Now for Something Completely Different, Monty...
 to appear with his Roadshow team in the first Secret Policeman's Ball
The Secret Policeman's Ball (1979)

The Secret Policeman's Ball took place over four consecutive nights in London in June 1979. It was a successor to the 1976 show A Poke In The Eye and the 1977 show The Mermaid Frolics....
 in June 1979.

Theatre director & playwright


In 1976, he and Chris Langham formed the Science Fiction Theatre of Liverpool in order to stage Illuminatus
The Illuminatus! Trilogy

The Illuminatus! Trilogy is a trilogy written by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson purportedly between 1969 and 1971, and first published in 1975....
, a nine-hour cycle of five plays by himself and Langham based on the cult trilogy of avowedly anarchist science fantasy novels of the same name by Robert Shea
Robert Shea

Robert Joseph Shea was a novelist and former journalism best known as co-author with Robert Anton Wilson of the science fantasy trilogy Illuminatus!....
 and Robert Anton Wilson
Robert Anton Wilson

Robert Anton Wilson or RAW was an United States novelist, essayist, philosopher, psychonaut, futurologist and libertarian.Wilson described his writing as an "attempt to break down conditioned associations?to look at the world in a new way, with many models recognized as models or maps and no one model elevated to the Truth." ... ...
. Starring Campbell and Langham themselves, the production featured Neil Cunningham, David Rappaport, Jim Broadbent, Bill Nighy and Campbell's future wife Prunella Gee
Prunella Gee

Prunella Gee is an England actress.Her first major role was in 1974 alongside Sidney Poitier and Michael Caine in The Wilby Conspiracy and in 1983 she starred in the unofficial James Bond film Never Say Never Again opposite Sean Connery....
. It later moved to the National Theatre
Royal National Theatre

The Royal National Theatre, London, England, is generally known as the National Theatre and commonly as The National. It is located on the The South Bank in the London Borough of Lambeth, England, immediately east of the southern end of Waterloo Bridge....
, where it opened the new Cottesloe Theatre in 1977.

Sir Peter Hall, director of the National at the time, writes of Campbell in his Diaries, "He is a total anarchist and impossible to pin down. He more or less said it was a crime to be serious."

The Warp, a dizzying trek through the nether reaches of gurudom and tireless post-sixties mind-expansion, opened at London's Institute of Contemporary Arts
Institute of Contemporary Arts

The Institute of Contemporary Arts is an modernism and cultural centre on The Mall in London, just off Trafalgar Square. It is located within Nash House, part of Carlton House Terrace, near the Duke of York Steps and Admiralty Arch....
 in January 1979. It was based on the real-life experiences of author Neil Oram. Its inordinate length, 22 hours, rendered the 9-hour Illuminatus! a mere bagatelle by comparison. (The Warp was revived in the 1990s in a production directed by Campbell's by then grown-up daughter Daisy.)

In May 1979, again at the ICA, the company presented the first stage version of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a Comic science fiction series created by Douglas Adams. Originally a The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1978, it was later adapted to other formats, and over several years it gradually became an international multi-media phenomenon....
. One eye-popping aspect of the production was that for each set change the entire audience was wafted 1/2000th-of-an-inch above the floor aboard an industrial hovercraft
Hovercraft

A hovercraft, or air-cushion vehicle , is a craft , designed to travel over any smooth surface supported by a cushion of slowly moving, high-pressure air, ejected downwards against the surface below, and contained within a "skirt." Hovercraft are used throughout the world as a method of specialized transport where ever there is the nee...
. The cast cavorted on various ledges and platforms. The craft's carrying capacity meant that audiences were limited to a maximum of eighty each night. Langham was Arthur Dent
Arthur Dent

Arthur Philip Dent is a fictional character, the hapless protagonist and antihero in the comic science fiction series The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams....
, and narration of The Book was split between two usherettes. The problem of how to portray Zaphod Beeblebrox
Zaphod Beeblebrox

Zaphod Beeblebrox is a fictional character in the various versions of the humorous science fiction story The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams who based him on his Cambridge contemporary, Johnny Simpson....
, the Betelgeusian blessed with three arms and two heads - not an issue in the original radio series - was assailed in typical Campbell fashion by simply (or not so simply) putting two actors inside one large costume.

Audience-carrying capacity was not a problem at London's vast Rainbow Theatre where Campbell mounted a yet more grandiose version of The Hitchhiker's Guide in July 1980. The venue had been renovated in the 1970s to take rock operas. Some reviewers, who in general did not greet the show favourably, labeled it a musical, since it now came with incidental music and audacious laser effects. It ran for over three hours and, despite attempts to shorten the script, was forced to close some four weeks early, losing in the process a lot of money.

For a year, 1980-1981, Campbell was artistic director the Liverpool Everyman Theatre
Everyman Theatre

The Everyman Theatre is a theatre on Hope Street, Liverpool in Liverpool, England. It was established in 1964 to perform works of relevance to the inhabitants of Liverpool....
. From 1984, he made repeated efforts to adapt for the stage VALIS
VALIS

VALIS is a 1981 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. The title is an acronym for Vast Active Living Intelligence System, Dick's Gnosticism vision of one aspect of God....
, the largely autobiographical cult science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick
Philip K. Dick

Philip Kindred Dick was an United States science fiction novelist, short story writer, and essayist. Dick explored sociological, political and metaphysics themes in novels dominated by monopoly corporations, Authoritarianism, and altered states of consciousness....
, but to the disappointment of fans, these efforts came to nothing.

Television, radio & film

Campbell played Alex Gladwell, the particularly dodgy lawyer in one of the TV events of the 1970s, Law and Order, the notorious but ground-breaking corruption drama by G.F. Newman, a luminary of British TV screenwriting. It provoked such a press outcry at the time that the BBC banned the series from foreign sales, since it was deemed to have portrayed Britain's police and criminal justice system in such a wholly unfavourable light.

He played Alf Garnett's neighbour Fred Johnson in the half-dozen series of the 1980s sitcom In Sickness and in Health
In Sickness and in Health

In Sickness and in Health was a BBC British sitcom which ran between 1985 & 1992 it was also a sequel to both the highly successful Til Death Us Do Part which ran between 1966 and 1975 and Till Death... which ran for one series in 1981....
, which had the effect of cementing his career-long friendship with Warren Mitchell.

Campbell in 1987 unsuccessfully auditioned for the part of the seventh doctor
Seventh Doctor

The Seventh Doctor is a fictional character, the seventh Doctor #Changing faces of the Doctor seen on screen in the long-running BBC Science fiction on television series Doctor Who....
 in Doctor Who
Doctor Who

Doctor Who is a British Science fiction on television programme produced by the BBC. The programme depicts the adventures of a mysterious alien Time travel known as "Doctor " who travels in his space and time-ship, the TARDIS, which normally appears from the exterior to be a blue 1950s police box....
. He was beaten to the role by his old protegé Sylvester McCoy. The then script editor
Script editor

A script editor is a member of the production team of scripted television programmes, usually dramas and comedies. The script editor has many responsibilities including finding new script writers, developing storyline and series ideas with writers, ensuring that scripts are suitable for production....
, Andrew Cartmel
Andrew Cartmel

Andrew Cartmel is a United Kingdom science fiction writer and journalist, and former script editor of Doctor Who. He has also worked as a script editor on other television series, as a magazine editor, a film studies lecturer and as a novelist....
, later revealed that Campbell's interpretation had been considered "too dark" to put on television. Other roles included that of the irritating Roger in The Anniversary
The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers)

"The Anniversary" is the fifth episode of the second series of BBC sitcom Fawlty Towers....
 episode of Fawlty Towers
Fawlty Towers

Fawlty Towers is a British sitcom produced by the BBC Television and first broadcast on BBC Two in 1975. Although only twelve episodes were produced , the programme has had a lasting and powerful legacy....
.

Campbell's radio career included playing Poodoo
Minor characters from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

The following is a list of minor characters in the various versions of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams....
 in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a Comic science fiction series created by Douglas Adams. Originally a The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1978, it was later adapted to other formats, and over several years it gradually became an international multi-media phenomenon....
, a part specifically written for him. The Radio 3
Radio 3

Radio 3 may refer to:* BBC Radio 3* CBC Radio 3* Rai Radio 3...
 literary programme The Verb included Campbell as a regular contributor; in such spots as Campbell's Book Soup he became an upturner of bibliographic rocks, revealing unconsidered trifles to the hilarity of fellow contributors.

His film work included Derek Jarman
Derek Jarman

Derek Jarman was an England film director, stage designer, artist, and writer....
's The Tempest
The Tempest (film)

The Tempest is a 1979 in film Fantasy film/extravaganza film adaptation of William Shakespeare's The Tempest. Directed by Derek Jarman, with Heathcote Williams as Prospero, it stars Toyah Willcox and Jack Birkett from his previous feature, Jubilee , as well as his longtime cohort Karl Johnson....
 (1979), Breaking Glass
Breaking Glass

This article is about the 1980 musical film. For the song by David Bowie, see Breaking Glass . For the film about Stephen Glass, see Shattered Glass....
 (1980), Chris Bernard
Chris Bernard

Chris Bernard , is an English film director. He has directed eight films since 1985 in film.He was born in Liverpool, England and started his profeesional career in the theatre....
's Letter to Brezhnev
Letter to Brezhnev

Letter to Brezhnev is a 1985 in film film about working class life in contemporary Liverpool. It was written by Frank Clarke and directed by Chris Bernard....
 (1985), Peter Greenaway
Peter Greenaway

Peter Greenaway, Order of the British Empire is a United Kingdom film director born in Wales. He is currently professor of cinema studies at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland....
's A Zed and Two Noughts (1985), Saving Grace
Saving Grace (2000 film)

Saving Grace is a Golden Globe-nominated 2000 in film Great Britain comedy film, directed by Nigel Cole and based on a screenplay by Mark Crowdy and Craig Ferguson....
 (2000) and Creep
Creep (film)

Creep is a United Kingdom horror film about a woman locked in overnight on the London Underground who finds herself being stalked by a hideously deformed killer living in the sewers below....
 (2004).

In the final years of his life Campbell suddenly found himself cast in a whole new TV role: that of doggedly curious sceptic called upon to probe the outer realms of particle physics
Particle physics

Particle physics is a branch of physics that studies the elementary particle constituents of matter and radiation, and the interactions between them....
 and cognitive science
Cognitive science

Cognitive science may be concisely defined as the study of the nature of intelligence. It draws on multiple empirical disciplines, including psychology, philosophy, neuroscience, linguistics, anthropology, computer science, sociology and biology....
 on behalf of the ordinary oikparticularly where taxonomical
Taxonomy

Taxonomy is the practice and science of classification. The word comes from the Greek language ', taxis and ', nomos .Taxonomies, or taxonomic schemes, are composed of taxonomic units known as taxa , or kinds of things that are arranged frequently in a hierarchical structure....
 borders might blur into the fog of the paranormal
Paranormal

Paranormal is a general term that describes unusual experiences that lack a scientific explanation, or phenomena alleged to be outside of science's current ability to explain or measure....
 or the downright outrageous. National Geographic he was not. His idiosyncratic modus operandi
Modus operandi

Modus operandi is a Latin phrase, approximately translated as "mode of operation". The plural is modi operandi . It is used in law enforcement to describe a criminal's characteristic patterns and style of committing crimes....
 in Brainspotting, Reality On the Rocks and Six Experiments that Changed the World, each made for Channel 4
Channel 4

Channel 4 is a UK Public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television broadcaster which began transmissions on 2 November 1982. Although commercially self-funded, it is ultimately publicly owned; originally a subsidiary of the Independent Broadcasting Authority , the station is now owned and operated by the #Channel Four Television...
, owed much to the influence of one of Campbell's heroes, the American iconoclast Charles Hoy Fort
Charles Fort

Charles Hoy Fort was an United States writer and researcher into anomaly .Jerome Clark writes that Fort was "essentially a Satire hugely skeptical of human beings ? especially scientists ? claims to ultimate knowledge"....
. Fort had famously declared: "Whether fact is stranger than fiction I am unable to say, not being acquainted with either." And had suggested that science resembles an octopus whose tentacles had been clipped: "Were its tentacles not clipped, it would find itself led into some disturbing places." Campbell poked in those places. He became a star turn at the annual Fortean Times
Fortean Times

Fortean Times - "The World of Strange Phenomena" - is a United Kingdom monthly magazine devoted to the Anomaly popularised by Charles Fort....
 convention, UnCon. At the time of writing, numerous episodes of his popular science documentaries are available online via such services as YouTube
YouTube

YouTube is a Video hosting service website where users can upload, view and share video clips. Three former PayPal employees created YouTube in February 2005....


Later career & one-man shows

From the late eighties onwards Campbell wrote and performed a series of one-man shows, each a mélange of autobiographical stand-up comedy
Stand-up comedy

Stand-up comedy is a style of comedy where the performer speaks directly to the audience, with the absence of the theatrical "fourth wall". A person who performs stand-up comedy is known as a stand-up comic, stand-up comedian or more informally stand up....
, ontological
Ontology

Ontology in philosophy is the study of the nature of being, existence or reality in general, as well as of the basic category of being and their relations....
 speculation and popular-science rant. They include Recollections of a Furtive Nudist, Pigspurt, Jamais Vu, Mystery Bruises and The History of Comedy Part One: Ventriloquism
Ventriloquism

Ventriloquism is an act of stagecraft in which a person manipulates his or her voice so that it appears that the voice is coming from elsewhere....
. Several were published by Methuen. He toured them worldwide.

Three of them, what became known as The Bald Trilogy, were first commissioned by the National's director Trevor Nunn
Trevor Nunn

Sir Trevor Robert Nunn Order of the British Empire is an England theatre director and film director....
. This despite the fact that some years earlier, when Nunn was boss of the Royal Shakespeare Company
Royal Shakespeare Company

The Royal Shakespeare Company is a British theatre company. Located primarily at Stratford-upon-Avon, with bases also in London and Theatre Royal, Newcastle, it is one of the United Kingdom's two most prominent publicly-funded theatre companies, alongside the Royal National Theatre....
, the two had fallen out spectacularly. Campbell had carefully concocted a press release and a string of personal letters complete with forged signature: Nunn appeared to be announcing that henceforth, as a consequence of the huge success of its recent adaptation of Nicholas Nickleby, the Royal Shakespeare Company would be changing its name to the Royal Dickens
Charles Dickens

Charles John Huffam Dickens, Royal Society of Arts , pen-name "Boz", was the most popular English people novelist of the Victorian era, as well as a vigorous Reform movement....
 Company. Several grandees of the English theatre had been taken in by the hoax. Only when an exasperated Nunn called in Scotland Yard
Scotland Yard

New Scotland Yard is the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police Service, responsible for law enforcement within Greater London, excluding the City of London, which is covered by the City of London Police....
 did Campbell finally 'fess up.

In 1999, Campbell starred with Warren Mitchell
Warren Mitchell

Warren Mitchell is an England actor....
 and John Fortune
John Fortune

John Fortune is a United Kingdom satirist, comedian writer and actor, best known for his work with John Bird and Rory Bremner on the TV series Bremner, Bird and Fortune....
 in Art
'Art' (play)

?Art? is a French language play by Yasmina Reza that premiered on 28 October 1994 at Com?die des Champs-?lys?es in Paris. The English language adaptation, translated by Christopher Hampton opened in London's West End theatre on 15 October 1996....
 in London's West End.

In 2001 Campbell staged a version of Macbeth
Macbeth

Macbeth is a tragedy by William Shakespeare about a regicide and its aftermath. It is Shakespeare's shortest Shakespearean tragedy and is believed to have been written some time between 1603 and 1606, with 1607 being the very latest possible date....
 in pidgin
Pidgin

A pidgin is a simplified language that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups that do not have a language in common, in situations such as trade....
 English. It was the big gun in his campaign to get Bislama, first language of 6,000 inhabitants of the South Pacific
Oceania

Oceania is a geography, often geopolitics, region consisting of numerous lands—mostly islands in the Pacific Ocean and vicinity. The term "Oceania" was coined in 1831 by French explorer Jules Dumont d'Urville....
 islands of Vanuatu, formally adopted as a world language (wol wantok). The virtue of Bislama was that with a bit of determination you could pick it up in an afternoon. Campbell argued that, in certain respects, Macbeth in pidgin was better than the original. If nothing else, the campaign had the effect of bringing to a wider public the Bislama for Prince Philip
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh

The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh is the husband of Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom since 20 November 1947, and her prince consort since 6 February 1952....
: "Nambawan bigfala emi blong Misis Kwin" (Number one big fellow him belong Mrs Queen).

In 2007 he appeared along with Alan Moore
Alan Moore

Alan Moore is an English writer most famous for his influential work in comics, including the acclaimed graphic novels Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell....
, Bill Drummond
Bill Drummond

William Ernest Drummond is a Scotland musician, media personality, record producer, writer and artist. He is best known as co-founder of The KLF, the avant-garde "pop group" of the late eighties, the K Foundation, its nineties "avant-art" media-manipulating successor, and for K Foundation Burn a Million Quid in 1994....
, Coldcut
Coldcut

Coldcut are an England dance music duo comprising Matt Black and Jonathan More. They are well known for their pioneering technique of using of hip hop style samples in dance music....
 and Mixmaster Morris
Mixmaster Morris

Mixmaster Morris, real name, Morris Gould, is an ambient disc jockey and underground musician....
 at the Royal Festival Hall
Royal Festival Hall

The Royal Festival Hall is a 2,900 seat concert, dance and talks venue within Southbank Centre in London, England. It is situated on the South Bank of the River Thames, not far from Hungerford Bridge....
 in a memorial tribute to the co-author of the Illuminatus! novels, Robert Anton Wilson
Robert Anton Wilson

Robert Anton Wilson or RAW was an United States novelist, essayist, philosopher, psychonaut, futurologist and libertarian.Wilson described his writing as an "attempt to break down conditioned associations?to look at the world in a new way, with many models recognized as models or maps and no one model elevated to the Truth." ... ...
.

Private life

Campbell married the actress Prunella Gee
Prunella Gee

Prunella Gee is an England actress.Her first major role was in 1974 alongside Sidney Poitier and Michael Caine in The Wilby Conspiracy and in 1983 she starred in the unofficial James Bond film Never Say Never Again opposite Sean Connery....
 in 1978, and they had a daughter, Daisy. Though they later divorced, they remained close friends.

Bibliography

  • 1972 - You see the thing is this: a one act comedy (ISBN 0-237-74966-1)
  • 1972 - Old King Cole (ISBN 1-870259-12-2)
  • 1975 - Skungpoomery (ISBN 0-413-67520-3)
  • 1976 - Jack Sheppard (ISBN 0-333-19623-6)
  • 1991 - Recollections of a Furtive Nudist (ISBN 1-871503-03-5)
  • 1993 - Pigspurt: Or Six Pigs from Happiness (ISBN 0-413-68100-9)
  • 1995 - The Bald Trilogy (ISBN 0-413-69080-6) - a volume collecting together Furtive Nudist, Pigspurt and Jamais Vu
  • 1996 - Violin time; or, the Lady from Montségur (ISBN 0-413-70960-4)
  • 2000 - Wol Wantok (ISBN 1-84166-039-6) - a pidgin
    Pidgin

    A pidgin is a simplified language that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups that do not have a language in common, in situations such as trade....
     English version of Macbeth


See also

  • Toki Pona
    Toki Pona

    Toki Pona is a constructed language first published online in mid-2001. It was designed by translator and linguist Sonja Elen Kisa of Toronto....


External links

  • & Jeremy Beadle
    Jeremy Beadle

    Jeremy James Anthony Gibson Beadle Order of the British Empire was an England television presenter, writer and Television producer....


Interviews



Obituaries

  • from Simon McBurney
    Simon McBurney

    Simon Montagu McBurney, OBE is an English actor, writer and director....
     of Complicite
    Complicite

    The United Kingdom experimental theatre company Complicite was founded in 1983 by Simon McBurney, Annabel Arden, and Marcello Magni. Its original name, Th??tre de Complicit?, is French language for Theatre of Complicity....
  • Danny O'Brien
    Danny O'Brien

    Danny O'Brien is an England technology journalist. He wrote weekly columns for the The Sunday Times and the Irish Times; and before that for The Guardian, and acted as a consultant in helping The Guardian formulate its online strategy....