Apr
15
2010
0

Eddie Izzard joins election campaign

[from edp24.co.uk]

Comedian and marathon-running charity fundraiser Eddie Izzard joined the General Election campaign in Norfolk and Suffolk today.

Mr Izzard, who recently ran 43 marathons in 51 days to raise money for Sport Relief, visited Lowestoft this morning to meet Waveney Labour candidate Bob Blizzard.

He said: “It’s great to be here supporting Bob. We’ve almost got the same name, so it seemed only right that I support his campaign. I’ve always supported the Labour party and I firmly believe in our vision for the future of this country.”

Mr Blizzard said: “It’s fabulous to have Eddie here. The idea of Blizzard meeting Izzard will really set my campaign alight.”

After spending time in Lowestoft, Mr Izzard travelled to Norwich to meet Norwich South candidate Charles Clarke and Norwich North candidate John Cook.

The comic learnt about the city’s bid to become the UK’s first Capital of Culture in 2013 and said that if successful it would help to bring more people to the Eastern city.

Written by Momo in: Politics & Causes |
Apr
15
2010
0

Eddie Izzard: 10 things you need to know about the Labour Party member

[from mirror.co.uk]


1. He was born in South Yemen in 1962.

2. Eddie cycled solo from Sussex to Swansea when he was just 14.

3. As well as a comic, Eddie is also an accomplished actor and appeared alongside Hollywood giants George Clooney and Brad Pitt in Oceans Thirteen.

4. He describes himself as an action-transvestite or a male-lesbian.

5. He often does his full stand-up routine in French, a language in which he is fluent.

6. Eddie has appeared in two party political broadcasts for the Labour Party – first for the 2005 General Election and then for the 2009 European Elections.

7. The comedian has also been a panel guest on BBC’s Question Time where he described himself as

a British-European.

8. Marathon Man Eddie stunned the UK when he ran 43 marathons in 51 days for Comic Relief and received a special award at the 2009 BBC Sports Personality of the Year for his efforts.

9.. Eddie wanted to join the army, but decided to go into performing instead.

10. John Cleese referred to Izzard as “the lost Python” during television special Python Night: 30 Years of Monty Python in 1999.

Written by Momo in: News |
Apr
15
2010
1

Comic Eddie Izzard hails “Brilliant Britain” in Labour Party video

[from mirror.co.uk]

Comedian Eddie Izzard will hail “Brilliant Britain” in a Labour Party political broadcast.

In his TV message entitled ‘Have the Tories really changed?’, the 48-year-old will warn voters of the dangers of allowing the Tories to run the country again.

Talking about the film, Eddie, who has been a Labour Party member since the mid 1990s, says:

“I’m doing the broadcast because I take great offence at the Tories slagging off Britain, saying it’s broken.

“I ran around the country and I found that Britain is brilliant.

“People from all kinds of backgrounds ran with me. Kids from rural estates and kids from inner city areas.

“The country has a big heart, which I saw even while we were going through tough times.

“The Tory party have changed their suits, but still don’t believe in fairness, otherwise they wouldn’t be in the Tory party”.

> WATCH THE VIDEO

Written by Momo in: Politics & Causes |
Apr
14
2010
0

Eddie Izzard to visit Cambridge 04/15

[from cambridge-news.co.uk]

COMEDIAN and marathon-running star Eddie Izzard will be in Cambridge tomorrow (Thursday) – to back the city’s Labour contender in the general election.

He is due to arrive at Christ’s Pieces in Cambridge, along with candidate Daniel Zeichner, at 4pm.

A Labour Party spokeswoman said: “Eddie will be visiting other parts of the region earlier in the day, and is planning an open-air meeting with Daniel in the afternoon.”

Written by Momo in: Politics & Causes |
Apr
12
2010
0

Eddie Izzard’s idea has still got legs

[from newsandstar.co.uk]

Forty three marathons. 1,100 miles. Undertaken after just five weeks of training by a 47-year-old comedian.

Whichever way you look at it, Eddie Izzard’s fundraising epic for Sport Relief was hugely impressive and inspirational.

A recent three-part series on BBC3, condensed into a one-hour version on BBC1, gave a fascinating insight into his trek last summer.

Eddie’s adventure took him through Cumbria and the documentary covered much of this in some depth.

He struggled over mountain passes and did a stand-up show at Theatre by the Lake in Keswick and visited the Outward Bound centre at Ullswater, which brought back fond memories of a childhood holiday. But Carlisle was conspicuous by its absence.

One minute, Eddie was trudging up a dauntingly steep hill on the A6 between Penrith and Carlisle.

The next, we saw a caption saying ‘Carlisle’, marking the end of that day’s run. But there were no crowds or brass bands to herald his arrival.

The News & Star journalist who ran with Eddie for part of his journey recalls him entering the city up Botchergate before making his way through the centre and up to Scotland Road with little or no ceremony.

But it’s not too late to show your appreciation for his remarkable endeavour. Donations are still being accepted at www.comicrelief.com/donate/eddie

Written by Momo in: Politics & Causes,Sport Relief |
Apr
08
2010
0

Eddie Izzard And The Nature Of Believing

[from Huffington Post]

Why do we believe?

Is it a learned skill?

Or is it a gift, like faith or joy or grace?

Can we lose the ability to believe, or never have it to begin with, depending on the hand life deals us?

I’ve been ruminating on the nature of believing since watching and re-watching the new documentary film, Believe: The Eddie Izzard Story. The 90-minute film, released on DVD last month, deconstructs the career of comedian Eddie Izzard, a man who is, perhaps, the funniest person alive.

Izzard has been a favorite of mine for years. His seemingly stream-of-consciousness ramblings on everything from jam to Jesus are infectiously funny and imminently smart. I’ve seen Izzard perform live and watched, I believe, everything he’s ever committed to film — from comedy stand-up and feature-film roles (such as the voice of Reepicheep in Prince Caspian) to his virtuoso turn in the (sadly) short-lived TV series The Riches.

He is, in a word, brilliant.

Izzard, who is a transvestite and often performs in women’s clothing and full makeup, first won my heart when I watched his 1999 stand-up film, Dress to Kill. It was his mercilessly funny (and frighteningly astute) take on religion and faith that grabbed my attention and my funny bone.

Jesus: “Look Dad, I went down there, I taught ’em to hang out, be groovy, drink a bit of wine, they split into different groups! You’ve got the Catholics, the Protestants, the Jesuits, the Methodists, the Evangelicals, the free Presbyterians, the locked up Presbyterians … the Quakers, the Bakers, the Candlestick Makers … The Mormons are from Mars, Dad, we’ve had that checked out.”

God (in the voice of James Mason): “And what does the Holy Ghost think of all this?”

Jesus: “Oh, he’s useless, Dad. Got a sheet over his head these days.”

(God, in Izzard’s acts, is always Mason. And Moses — and sometimes also King Henry VIII — sounds like Sean Connery.)

>> REST OF ARTICLE

Written by Momo in: News |
Apr
08
2010
1

New Toronto Dates Added

Due to popular demand two shows have been added in TORONTO – MAY 30 & 31

Presale Now! Password: BEES
Public On-sale April 10 @ 1.00pm EST

Written by Momo in: Tour |
Apr
08
2010
0

Cross-dressing, cross country

[from the New Statesman]

The other evening I saw Eddie Izzard, the celebrated Jack-and-Jill of all theatrical trades, complete 43 nearly consecutive marathon runs. Obviously I didn’t witness him doing this in the flesh – it took him 50 days – rather, I sat in a well-upholstered chair in the desiccated warmth of my own home and watched his astonishing feat on television.

I witnessed Izzard jiggling along the verges of arterial roads, I watched him serving ice creams to fans from his special van, and then, as the long miles began to take their inevitable, crippling toll, I looked on while he writhed in agony beneath the competent hands of his sports therapist, Jo, as she massaged his legs on the unsettling coverlets of mid-price provincial hotels.

For infinitesimal moments I wondered why it was that Izzard chose to stumble-stump for day after day within inches of lorries vomiting fumes – but of course, I knew the answer: if he had gone off-road, it would have been impossible for his support crew of vans and rickshaws to remain with him, filming every pace of this very modern odyssey. On the one occasion when he did divert along a canal towpath, Izzard had to film his own progress using his camera-phone, wonky footage that duly ended up in the finished documentary.
Gorilla tactics

Still, there was a grim fascination to the tale, the watching of which was itself a kind of endurance – I mean to say, he was mad to be doing it, and I was equally deranged to be watching him doing it, when there were thousands of things more profitable and enjoyable I could have been doing. There were further parallels between Izzard and I; while he was proximately solo – the only transvestite comedian to be running 43 consecutive marathons – in the wider scheme of things he was part of a crowded field, for not a day goes by without some celebrity or other embarking on
a punishing go-round.

Nor is it the notorious alone who do such things; the great commonality of our nation – if such a thing exists at all – often appears to me to be bound together by nothing so much as a bizarre collective impulse to run, jump and skip about the place, usually en masse, preferably while dressed up as gorillas and waving little flags. From an anthropological perspective, an observer would be forced to conclude that if these inutile and painful exertions have any purpose at all, it must be a sacred one.

Such an alien philosophe would be right. There was a religious impulse driving Izzard on his round-Britain hobble, the same one that drags the rest of the Volk sportlich out on to the highways and byways: charity sponsorship. Sponsorship is the alpha and omega of contemporary beneficence – its sole commandment: Thou Shalt Sponsor (and be sponsored).
Sponsored fun

Do it, because not to do it is to be marked out as someone who is, ipso facto, both mean and mean-spirited – because it’s fun, isn’t it? Fun for the fundraisers, and fun for those for whom the funds have been raised. Fun even for the fund donors, for they can join vicariously in these noble achievements while funnily toggling their mobile phones so as to donate.

But what is sponsorship, really? My late mother was wont to observe that if people really want to help, say, dementia sufferers (as Izzard did), why don’t they do a sponsored bedpan emptying, or Complan-feeding, thereby killing two birds with one altruistic stone? The answer is that, by and large, the people who solicit sponsorship couldn’t give a toss about the eventual use of this money. It’s a colossal displacement activity, this charity sponsorship lark, for if all these kilojoules of energy were geared to the commonweal, we’d be living in a far happier and more equitable society.

Moreover, charity-sponsored events tranquilise those unquiet spirits who might question the prevailing status quo. Worse still, the activities that are sponsored decouple achievement from the realm of the meaningful. In place of martial prowess, we substitute speed-eating Melton Mowbray pork pies; in lieu of discovering new worlds, we pogo-stick along the M62; instead of agonisingly bringing news of a crushing naval defeat by the Persians just the once, Izzard scrapes his soles over the bitumen again and again – ad tedium, and ad nauseum.

Written by Momo in: Politics & Causes,Sport Relief |
Mar
29
2010
2

Radio Times Interview

Added RADIO TIMES INTERVIEW (.pdf) to Eddie’s Sport Relief page and Articles page.

Written by Momo in: Interview,Sport Relief |
Mar
23
2010
0

SARAH TOWNSEND CHRONICLES THE IZZARDIAN MIND

[BY SUSAN MICHAL for Venicemag.com]

Most filmmakers know that a documentary is a long-term commitment, sometimes years in the making, but not Sarah Townsend. She had no idea what she was in for when she embarked on her film, Believe: The Eddie Izzard Story, some years back. But the fruits of her labors have paid off in spades, as well as a lot of laughter, and even a few tears.

Having known her subject for most of his adult life, Townsend has worked with Izzard to produce a number of his shows, including “Stripped” and “Eddie Izzard: Live from Wembley.” Needless to say, she seemed the perfect candidate to shoot a film about the struggles that actor/writer/comedian Izzard faced, not only finding his way as a comedian in his early years, but, after being accused of reusing old material, finding himself all over again. It turned out to be not that easy. “I started out to make a more personal film … the difficulty with him is, he will talk endlessly but he won’t tell you very much, and nobody ever calls him on it. He was always great and very funny, but that won’t work for a documentary. [Initially,] we didn’t have a film. It took us four years to get a generally revealing interview.”

>> REST OF ARTICLE

Written by Momo in: Interview,Movies |

 


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