Everything about Phill Jupitus totally explained
Phill Jupitus (born
25 June 1962) is an
English comedian and
broadcaster.
He is a regular on television and radio panel shows, including
BBC Radio 4's
I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue and
BBC Two/
BBC Four's
QI, and is a team captain on
BBC Two's
Never Mind The Buzzcocks. He was also a team captain on the BBC's television comedy panel show
It's Only TV But I Like It in 1999.
Jupitus is also a
disc jockey, both on the radio and at clubs and festivals, a fan of
alternative music styles. He presented the weekday breakfast show on
digital radio station
BBC 6 Music but left after 5 years, in March 2007. In recent years he's presented some of the BBC's television coverage of music events, such as the
Glastonbury Festival.
Early life
Born in
Newport on the
Isle of Wight to Dot and Bob Jupitus (an artist and self-employed surveyor respectively), he's the eldest of three children. His brother Richard was born in 1966 and sister Kate in 1970.
Christened 'Phillip Jupitus', he's said that the shortening of his first name to 'Phill' arose due to his mother's reminders that the name 'Phillip' is spelled with two 'L's, something he carried over to the short form 'Phill'. His paternal grandparents are
Lithuanian and claim that 'Jupitus' is an anglicised version of their original surname (supposedly 'Šeputis' [ʃəputis] which sounds somewhat similar to 'Jupitus') and was ascribed to them by an Immigration Officer when they emigrated to Britain from Russia in 1917.
In 1966 the family left the island and moved to
Horndon-on-the-Hill in Essex before settling in
Leigh-on-Sea. He attended Northbury Infants and Junior schools in
Barking and later attended
Woolverstone Hall near Ipswich as a private boarder.
He took eight
O-Level exams, failing four, and enrolled at a Technical College briefly to study at
A-Level.
After dropping out of college, he became a
Civil Servant for the then
Department of Health and Social Security (DHSS) (now the
Department of Work and Pensions) working in a
Jobcentre.
Career
During his 5 years at the DHSS, he began writing political poetry and drawing cartoons in distracted moments. He quit the DHSS in 1984, hopeful of a career move into the music industry.
Using the moniker 'Porky the Poet', he became a performance poet and approached local bands to offer himself as a support act for their tours:
I thought it looked easy, I was very cheap. If you got another band to support you, there are probably four of them and roadies and managers. But me - I just turned up and read poems. |
Both
Mark Lamarr and
Sean Hughes, with whom he appeared on
Never Mind The Buzzcocks, also started their careers as performance poets.
He toured the student scene of colleges, universities and student unions supporting bands such as
Billy Bragg,
The Style Council and
The Housemartins.
He supported
Billy Bragg once more on the
Labour Party sponsored
Red Wedge tour in 1985: "In the early 80s, I got involved with Red Wedge, in which
Neil Kinnock got various bands to stage concerts for Labour. The reason I got involved was 20% because I believed in the cause, 30% because I loved Billy Bragg, and 50% because I wanted to meet
Paul Weller".
After Red Wedge, he found it difficult to get other bookings due to the decline of political poetry as a mainstream art. He joined indie record label "Go! Discs" as a runner, which had signed Billy Bragg and other bands such as The Housemartins.
Bragg has since said: "We ended up managing to get him a job at Go! Discs, which was brilliant. I was concerned that the cut-throat nature of the record business would make him jaded - underneath that rhino exterior there's quite a sensitive person - but that was before I realised that he was going to come back and do gigs again. Working at Go! Discs got his confidence up."
He became
press officer and
compere for The Housemartins (appearing in the Music Video for "
Happy Hour" in 1986), using the compere role to continue trying out comedy in front of an audience, whilst also taking support slots for other artists. During this time he worked as a warm up act on the
Channel 4 TV show
The Show. He quit working for Go! in 1989 and fell back on his poetry and compereing to try and gain a foothold on the
London Comedy Circuit.
He conceived and directed the Brit-nominated video for Billy Bragg's track "Sexuality" in 1991 and wrote a parody version about
bestiality. He also made an appearance alongside
R.E.M. in Bragg's "You Woke Up My Neighbourhood" video and on the 2006 Hope Not Hate tour with Bragg- singing the parody. He has also appeared numerous times at the
Glastonbury acting as DJ and compere in
The Left Field tent.
Jupitus also produced the music video for
Kirsty MacColl's 1991 single release "All I Ever Wanted" from the album
Electric Landlady. He appeared at her Tribute Concert in 2002 as compere and also sang "
Fifteen Minutes" one of her songs.
He began hosting his own show on
BBC GLR in 1995, a regular job that would last until 2000.
After which he embarked on his first Stand-Up Tour of the UK
Jedi, Steady, Go, performing the
Star Wars story in a comedic fashion.
Television
Jupitus' big television break came in 1996 when he joined BBC Two's pop quiz
Never Mind The Buzzcocks as a regular team captain. He also frequently appears on
QI as a guest panellist; during the Vodcast for one 2007 episode, he showed off an impressive
Dalek impersonation and also has a history of doing impersonations of QI host
Stephen Fry while on the show.
His second UK Tour 'Quadrophobia' in 1999 was released on VHS and later DVD.
He was the Breakfast DJ on
BBC 6 Music from 2002 until
2007-03-30. The last song played, by listener request, was "Broadway", by
The Clash, but has made brief returns to the station during the summer of 2007, sitting in for
Stephen Merchant on Sunday afternoon &
Liz Kershaw on Saturday mornings.
Other works
Away from his comedy and DJ work, Jupitus has also worked on
Radio 4 as a regular contributor to
Loose Ends,
I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, presented 'Best Sellers' - a series on the life and work of
Peter Sellers - and wrote and presented 'Disneyfied', a documentary on the work of
Walt Disney.
He has presented several editions of the popular 'Top Ten' series for Channel 4, while also joining another comedy panel game -
It's Only TV But I Like It - as a team captain, alongside
Jonathan Ross and
Julian Clary.
He has made one appearance in an Episode of
Holby City as a patient (Episode titled 'Men are from Mars' Season 4 Episode 3). As a voice actor he's provided the voices for
Dandelion in an ITV adaptation of
Watership Down and also performing a selection of voices for
Rex the Runt by
Aardman Animations.
He appeared as a sports journalist in the movie .
Jupitus made a guest appearance on the
Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band 40th anniversary DVD performing with the band on the track 'Mr. Apollo' and has toured with them around the UK. He appears on the Bonzos' 2007 album
Pour L'Amour Des Chiens.
He will be performing with
The Blockheads (and has done so sporadically over the last few years since Ian Dury's passing) on their 30th anniversary tour in 2007.
He co-wrote and starred in the play
Waiting For Alice with
Andre Vincent which had a run at The Edinburgh Fringe Festival. The world-premier took place on
16 July 2007 at the St. Ives Theatre in Cornwall, a regular holiday spot of his for the last 25 years.
He is also a continuity announcer for the UKTV channel
Dave during the channel's evening schedule.
Jupitus has also appeared on the Radio 4 show
The Unbelievable Truth twice.
Personal life
Jupitus was born in Newport on the Isle of Wight. He currently lives in
Leigh-on-Sea, Essex. Indeed, he's spent his life gradually moving along the
A13. He has stated on air that his dying act should be being shot out of a cannon off
Shoeburyness, at the eastern end of that road. He is married with two daughters.
Trivia
- Like Billy Bragg, he's a devoted supporter of West Ham United, having regularly watched the team play as a child and teenager and has even worn West Ham shirts on Never Mind The Buzzcocks. He had, under the pseudonym of "Porky the Poet", drawn cartoons for the now-defunct West Ham fanzine Fortunes Always Hiding.
- Jupitus is also a fan of American sports. He is a devout fan of the Boston Red Sox, often wearing Red Sox apparel during television appearances. He also follows the Pittsburgh Steelers. On Never Mind The Buzzcocks, he went through a phase of wearing various National Hockey League jerseys. He also has a tattoo of the Red Sox logo on his left forearm.
- His left ear is pierced.
- He was the continuity announcer for Paramount Comedy 1 (then known as The Paramount Comedy Channel) in the late 90s.
- He is arachnophobic.
- Billy Bragg attended the same school in Barking and played one of his early gigs in a Pub owned by Jupitus' grandparents. Phill has since toured with, and directed videos for, Bragg. They continue to have a close friendship.
Bragg's first band had done an early gig at my granddad's pub, the Brewery Tap, and we went to the same school. He is possibly the most affable person I've ever met in the music business so, coupled with having a few location things in common, I was always very fond of the man. |
- He has played guitar live with Billy Bragg, one photo of which is here
on kirstymaccoll.com.
- He is a big fan of ska and reggae music, even going so far as to have the Trojan Records logo tattoed on his arm.
- Phil occasionally acts as guest-singer for London band The Blockheads.
- Some sources state his birth name as 'Phillip Swann'.
- He is also a keen sci-fi fan and was one of only 30 people to be at the first showing of Terminator 3
- He occasionally wears apparel by Canadian prog band Rush.
During 1999, Phil Jupitus was featured but uncredited in a number of short films by little known cult director, Paul Garish. He was later put into the credits after demands from his publishers, simply with the character title "Eddie Bigmac".
He isn't a fan of many "real" quiz shows and can't bear Noel EdmondsFurther Information
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