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Title: Steve Coogan interview Parkinson BBC
Description: Steve Coogan talks about the origin of his characters and using his impressionist skills to survive when growing up. Free video clip from the ...
Title: The Day Today Episode 1
Description: The Day Today is a surreal British parody of television current affairs news programs, created by Christopher Morris (also of Brass Eye). Only six ...

Title: Steve Coogan Paul/Pauline Calf
Description: Steve Coogan on Saturday Zoo as Pauline and Paul Calf

Title: Steve Coogan Friday Night with Jonathan Ross Part 1
Description: Steve Coogan appears on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross to promote his upcoming stand up tour and the film Tropic Thunder. Part 1 of 2.
Title: CalTV @ the Movies: Steve Coogan
Description: Rosa Kim Interviews Steve Coogan for the upcoming film Hamlet 2. Come check out what they have to say.
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Variety - Found Jun. 30, 2009 ... s short story collection and Armando Iannucci's political satire "In the Loop," starring James Gandolfini, Steve Coogan, and Tom Hollander.For... |
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MaleFirst Mens Magazine - Found May. 27, 2009 Steve Coogan is making an 'Alan Partridge' movie. |
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New Zealand Herald - Found May. 10, 2009 ... perhaps aware he's best known here for his Alan Partridge television character - British comedian Steve Coogan warned his stage humour would... |
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STV.tv - Found May. 27, 2009 Steve Coogan has revealed he is working on a movie based on his hit UK TV comic character Alan Partridge. Steve Coogan is making an 'Alan Partridge... |
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Daily Telegraph Australia - Found May. 10, 2009 THE speed with which UK comedian Steve Coogan sold out four shows in Sydney is proof he has a solid fan base in this city keen to lap up his cheeky |
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FemaleFirst.co.uk - Found May. 27, 2009 Steve Coogan is making an 'Alan Partridge' movie. |
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EDP 24 - Found May. 27, 2009 Creator Steve Coogan has revealed plans are under way for a film based on the cringe-worthy character and fictional Radio Norwich presenter... |
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Evening News 24 - Found May. 27, 2009 Creator Steve Coogan has revealed plans are under way for a film based on the cringe-worthy character and fictional Radio Norwich presenter... |
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Sydney Morning Herald - Found Apr. 26, 2009 ... to go off for Steve Coogan's character-comedy showcase. He tried, we tried, but somehow it didn't quite get there. There are four of Coogan's... |
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Glasgow Herald - Found Jul. 2, 2009 Over the years it has honoured some of the biggest names in comedy, including Rich Hall, Al Murray, The League of Gentlemen, Steve Coogan, Stephen |
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Steve Coogan
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| Steve Coogan | |
holding a producer credit for The 1 Second Film in January 2005 |
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| Born | Stephen John Coogan 14 October 1965 Alkrington, England, UK |
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| Occupation | Actor, Comedian, Writer, Producer |
| Years active | 1984–present |
| Spouse(s) | Caroline Hickman (2002–2005) (div) |
Stephen John "Steve" Coogan (born 14 October 1965) is an English comedian, actor, writer, and producer. His best known character in the United Kingdom is Alan Partridge, the grotesque sports reporter-turned-television chat show host-turned-regional radio presenter who featured in several television series, such as The Day Today, Knowing Me, Knowing You... with Alan Partridge and I'm Alan Partridge. Outside the UK, Coogan is better known for his film roles.
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Coogan is one of six children born to an IBM engineer father and a homemaker mother.1 He was born and raised in Alkrington,2 a suburb of Middleton, Greater Manchester, in a large Irish Catholic family.3 Coogan started out as a comic and mimic in Ipswich, as well as doing voice-over work for adverts and impressions on Spitting Image. In 1988, he did impressions of Prince Charles which featured on the Urban label release "Don't Believe the Hype" by Acid House artist Mista E. The impressions were also used as jingles in 1988/89 on the BBC Radio 1 FM Friday night dance music show Jeff Young's Big Beat.
He teamed up with Chris Morris and Armando Iannucci, amongst others, on the Radio 4 comedy show On the Hour, where he helped give birth to his most famous creation Alan Partridge. Alan went on to have his own radio show and also appeared on TV in The Day Today and his own chat show, Knowing Me, Knowing You... with Alan Partridge. In 1997 he returned with the sitcom I'm Alan Partridge, which was followed by a second series in 2002. Partridge is part of Coogan's 2008 stand-up tour, and an Alan Partridge movie is in production.4
Paul Calf has appeared in two video diaries, an episode of Coogan's Run, and in various stand-up performances. He is an unemployed Mancunian wastrel with a particular hatred of students. His catchphrase is "Bag of shite."
Paul lives in a council house in the fictional town of Ottle with his mother and his sister, Pauline Calf (also played by Coogan). His father died some time before the first video diary was made. For a long time he was obsessed with getting back together with his ex-girlfriend, Julie. Paul's best friend is "Fat" Bob (played by John Thomson), a car mechanic who eventually married Pauline. Paul supports Manchester City and is very partial to Wagon Wheels. He wears Burton suits, sports a bleached mullet and drives a Ford Cortina.
Other Coogan creations include Tommy Saxondale, Duncan Thicket, and Portuguese Eurovision winner Tony Ferrino. Duncan Thicket has appeared on a tour of live shows. Other TV shows he has starred in include Coogan's Run, Dr. Terrible's House of Horrible, Monkey Trousers and Saxondale. Coogan has provided voices for the animated series I Am Not an Animal, the one-off BBC2 comedy about sheep Combat Sheep, two Christmas specials starring Robbie the Reindeer, and an episode of the BBC Radio Four spoof sci-fi series Nebulous.
He starred in BBC2's The Private Life of Samuel Pepys in 2003, and Cruise of the Gods in 2002. In 2006, he had a cameo in the Little Britain Christmas special as a pilot taking Lou and Andy to Disneyland. In 2007, Coogan played a psychiatrist on HBO's Curb Your Enthusiasm and in 2008 starred in the BBC1 drama Sunshine.
He provided the voices of Philip Masterson-Bowie (a horse) and Mark Andrews (a sparrow) from animated comedy series I Am Not an Animal.5
Notable film roles include Factory Records boss Tony Wilson in the film 24 Hour Party People, Mole in Terry Jones' The Wind in the Willows, Phileas Fogg in a remake of Jules Verne's Around the World in 80 Days with Jackie Chan, Ambassador Mercy in Marie Antoinette, Bruce Tick in Sweet Revenge, and Octavius, the first Roman Emperor and nephew to Julius Caesar, in Night at the Museum. He has also played himself twice on screen. First, in one of the vignettes of Jim Jarmusch's 2003 film Coffee and Cigarettes, alongside Alfred Molina. Second, in 2006 Coogan starred with Rob Brydon in Michael Winterbottom's A Cock and Bull Story, a self-referential film of the "unfilmable" self-referential novel Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne. In the film, Coogan plays a fictional, womanizing version of himself.
The first film he co-wrote with Henry Normal was The Parole Officer. He also acted in this alongside Ben Miller and Lena Headey. Coogan has an uncredited cameo in Hot Fuzz, scripted by Shaun of the Dead writers Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright. He stars as a failed actor turned high school drama teacher in the 2008 film Hamlet 2 and had a role in Tropic Thunder. It was announced on 8 August 2007, that he is also to star in a film adaptation of the life of Eddie 'the Eagle' Edwards,6which is still in pre-production.7 He was also recently in Finding Amanda alongside Brittany Snow and Matthew Broderick. He returned as Octavius in Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian, out on 22 May 2009 - Memorial Day. He will also play Hades in the upcoming Percy Jackson out February 12, 2010.
He has won numerous awards for his work in TV including British Comedy Awards, BAFTAs, and The South Bank Show award for comedy. In 2003, he was listed in The Observer as one of the 50 funniest acts in British comedy. In 2005, a poll to find The Comedians' Comedian saw him being voted amongst the top 20 greatest comedy acts ever by fellow comedians and comedy insiders.
In March 2008, it was confirmed that Coogan would return to doing stand-up comedy as part of his first stand-up tour in ten years. The tour, named "Steve Coogan is Alan Partridge and other less successful characters", saw the return of some of his old characters including Paul Calf and Alan Partridge.4 Reviews of the opening night were mixed8 and such reviews continued as the tour progressed.910
Coogan, along with writing partner Henry Normal, founded Baby Cow Productions in 1999. Together they are the executive producers for such shows as The Mighty Boosh, starring Noel Fielding and Julian Barratt, Nighty Night, starring Julia Davis, Marion and Geoff, starring Rob Brydon, and Human Remains, starring Davis and Brydon. Baby Cow Productions latest venture is Where Are the Joneses, an online sitcom which uses wiki technology to allow the audience to upload scripts, storyline ideas.11
One of his brothers, Brendan, is a former Top Gear presenter, and another, Martin, was the lead singer of the early 1990s band The Mock Turtles. All the brothers attended the Cardinal Langley RC High School.
A favourite of the British tabloids, Coogan's personal life has made headlines since the early 1990s. In August 2005, the News of the World stated that rock star Courtney Love had claimed to be pregnant with Coogan's child, following a two-week long fling the pair allegedly had while staying at the same hotel, although this claim has been dismissed by both parties.12 The news came a month after Coogan had divorced his wife, Caroline Hickman,13 whom he married in 2002, on the grounds that the marriage had irretrievably broken down. He lives in Brighton to be close to his daughter, Clare, from a previous relationship with Anna Cole.14
On the commentary for Season 2 of I'm Alan Partridge, Coogan states that he is a socialist who enjoys paying taxes, whilst discussing the eponymous character's investigation by the Inland Revenue.
A well noted car enthusiast, he has had a succession of Ferraris, but stopped buying them after realising that the depreciation and running costs were greater than hiring a private plane.15 Coogan currently drives one of the final air-cooled Porsche 911 Carrera 4s.14
In August 2007, the New York Post wrote that Coogan was being "blamed" in a story following Owen Wilson's suicide attempts for allegedly supplying the actor with hard drugs. Courtney Love said after Wilson's failed attempts, "I was just out of rehab, and he was right there with the drugs. I tried to warn Owen. I tried to warn his friends. I hope from the bottom of my heart that Owen stays the hell away from that guy." Steve Coogan responded through Access Hollywood, denying Love's accusations and offering support to Wilson. "My thoughts are with my friend Owen at this difficult time, but I do want to set the record straight and say that the allegations...are completely and utterly false," he said.16