Tim Minchin

Tim Minchin
Minchin performing in 2007
Birth name Timothy David Minchin
Born (1975-10-07) 7 October 1975
Northampton, England[1]
Nationality Australian
Years active 2002–present
Genres Comedy music
Spouse
Sarah Minchin (m. 2001)
Children 2
Website timminchin.com

Timothy David Minchin[3][4] (born 7 October 1975) is an Australian comedian, actor, writer, musician, composer, lyricist and director.[5] He was born in Northampton, England, to Australian parents,[1] but raised in Perth, Western Australia.[6]

Minchin is best known for his musical comedy, including six CDs, five DVDs, and live comedy shows that he has performed internationally. He has appeared on television in Australia, Britain, and the United States. After growing up in Perth, he attended the University of Western Australia (UWA) and the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA), before moving to Melbourne in 2002. His show Darkside launched him into the public eye, achieving critical success at the 2005 Melbourne International Comedy Festival and the 2005 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. In 2013, Minchin played the role of rock star Atticus Fetch on Showtime's Californication.[7]

Minchin has a background in theatre and has appeared in various stage productions, in addition to some small acting roles on Australian television. A documentary film about Minchin, Rock N Roll Nerd (directed by Rhian Skirving), was released theatrically in 2008[8] and broadcast by ABC1 in 2009.[9] He is the composer and lyricist of the Olivier Award-winning, Tony Award-winning and Grammy Award-nominated show Matilda the Musical, based on the Roald Dahl book Matilda. His new musical Groundhog Day, based on the 1993 film, opened in London in 2016, winning his second Olivier Award, and opened on Broadway in spring 2017.

In 2013, the University of Western Australia awarded Minchin an honorary Doctor of Letters degree for his contribution to the arts, recognising his outstanding achievements and worldwide acclaim as a composer, lyricist, actor, writer, and comedian.[4] In 2015, he was awarded a second honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts.[10]

Personal life

Minchin was born in Northampton, England, to Australian parents[1] and raised in Perth, Western Australia.[11] His father David Ellison Minchin[12] and grandfather Max Ellison Minchin were surgeons in Perth, descendants of R. E. Minchin, founding director of Adelaide Zoo.[13] Minchin is a UK citizen due to being born in England.

He was educated at the private Christ Church Grammar School and started learning piano at the age of eight, but gave it up after three years because he did not enjoy the discipline. He redeveloped an interest in the instrument after he started writing music with his brother Dan Minchin—a guitarist—but still describes himself as a "hack pianist . . . a 'more you practise, the better you get' kind of guy".[14] Minchin graduated from the University of Western Australia (UWA) in 1996 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and theatre, and from the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts in 1998 with a Diploma of Music (Commercial Music).[15] In 2013, he was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Letters from UWA.[16] In 2015, he was awarded a second Honorary Doctor of Letters, along with Dennis Kelly, from Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts.[10]

He currently lives in Sydney[17] with his wife, Sarah.[18] They have two children: a daughter, Violet, and a son, Caspar.[19] Minchin often refers to his relationships in his songs and stand-up routines.

Musical comedy

Minchin playing the piano on stage

Minchin describes his act as a "funny cabaret show" and sees himself primarily as a musician and songwriter as opposed to a comedian; he has said that his songs "just happen to be funny."[20] His reasoning for combining the disciplines of music and comedy was revealed in one interview when he said: "I'm a good musician for a comedian and I'm a good comedian for a musician but if I had to do any of them in isolation I dunno."[21]

He draws on his background in theatre for his distinctive onstage appearance and persona.[11] In his performances, he typically goes barefoot with wild hair and heavy eye makeup, which is juxtaposed with a crisp suit and tails, and a grand piano. According to Minchin, he likes going barefoot in his shows because it makes him feel more comfortable. He considers the eye makeup important because while he is playing the piano he is not able to use his arms and relies on his face for expressions and gestures; the eyeliner makes his features more distinguishable for the audience.[14] He has said that much of his look and persona is about "treading that line between mocking yourself and wanting to be an iconic figure. Mocking the ridiculousness and completely unrealistic dream of being an iconic figure."[22]

The shows consist largely of Minchin's comedic songs and poetry, with subjects including social satire, inflatable dolls, sex fetishes, and his own failed rock star ambitions. In between songs, he performs short stand-up routines.[20] Several of his songs deal with religion, a subject with which Minchin—an atheist and a fan of Richard Dawkins—says he is "a bit obsessed".[23] He argues that, as one of the most powerful and influential forces in the world, religion should never be off-limits to satirists. He says that his favourite song to perform is "Peace Anthem for Palestine", which reflects his feelings about religious conflict.[24] In October 2010, he was made a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association. His comedy also deals with taboos more broadly.[25] A prime example of this is the song "Prejudice", which parodies the power awarded to something as simple as a word.

Early career (1998–2007)

After graduating from WAAPA in 1998, Minchin started out composing music for documentaries and theatre. In 2000, he wrote and starred in the musical Pop at the Blue Room Theatre in Perth.[26] He released a CD titled Sit with his band Timmy the Dog in 2001 but achieved little success.[27] In 2002, after only one professional acting job, he moved from Perth to Melbourne to pursue work.[28] Minchin struggled initially; he could not get an agent for a year and had been unable to find any acting work.[27] While several record companies gave him positive feedback, they were not sure how his music—a mixture of satirical songs and more serious pop songs—could be marketed. He decided to compile all of his humorous songs into a single live show to "get the comedy stuff off my chest" before going back to more serious music.[29]

Minchin says he entered into comedy "naively", having never even attended a live comedy gig before performing one himself.[23] His break-out show Darkside (co-produced by Laughing Stock Productions) achieved critical success at the 2005 Melbourne International Comedy Festival, where it won the inaugural Festival Directors' Award and attracted the notice of Karen Koren, the manager of the well-known Gilded Balloon venues.[30] Koren backed the show's run at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, where Minchin received the Perrier Comedy Award for Best Newcomer.[11][31] His 2006 show So Rock was nominated for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival's top prize, the Barry Award, and in 2007 he was given the award for Best Alternative Comedian at the HBO US Comedy Arts Festival.[20][32]

Live recordings of his 2005 and 2006 shows, Darkside and So Rock, have been released as CDs. In 2007, he released a DVD titled So Live, featuring a live recording in the Sydney Opera House Studio with material from both of his previous shows.[22] As this DVD was only released in Australia, he released a DVD in 2008 entitled So F**king Rock Live in the UK, containing largely the same material as So Live.

Ready for This? (2008–2010)

In August 2008, Minchin debuted his third solo show, Ready for This?, at the Edinburgh Fringe and subsequently took it on tour across the UK. During the Edinburgh run, he contributed to The Guardian newspaper's podcasts,[33] despite his new show containing a song about a Guardian critic who once gave his show a negative review.[34][35] Responding to the song, which contains graphic violence, the critic laconically remarked that he had not yet had time to listen to it: "Life's too short and I've already done my bit by sitting through that show in Edinburgh."[36]

A live recording of this at Queen Elizabeth Hall in London, was released as an album for download via iTunes on 20 July 2009. An Australian recording was released solely in Australia on DVD on 9 September 2009, and then as a United Kingdom release in the second half of 2010.

It was announced at the end of 2009 that one of Minchin's beat poems, "Storm", was to be made into a short animated movie. A blog was launched to accompany the film-making process, and a short trailer was released on 8 January 2010.[37][38] The full movie was launched on YouTube on 7 April 2011.[39]

Minchin was the subject of the winning entry in the 2010 Archibald Prize, Australia's most important portraiture competition. The winning entry was painted by Sam Leach.[40]

Tim Minchin and the Heritage Orchestra (2010–2011)

Minchin embarked on a new arena tour starting with Birmingham on Wednesday 8 December 2010. A departure from the structure of his previous live shows, his act was scaled up to be performed with the Heritage Orchestra. It contained a mixture of material, including new songs on the subject of prayer and of rationality (themes which often appear in his previous work). Minchin stated that the aim of incorporating the orchestra into his act was to create a comedy show that would not be ruined by being performed in arenas, as stated in the special features of the DVD and Blu-ray. The show toured the UK and Australia, and was filmed at the Royal Albert Hall in London for a Blu-ray and DVD that was released in November 2011.[41]

BACK (2019)

On 30 August 2018, Minchin announced he would be returning to touring his musical comedy (after a 7 year break) in a new tour called BACK, also billed as "Old Songs, New Songs, F*** You Songs". The tour will start in Adelaide, touring Australia and New Zealand in March and April 2019, followed by a tour of the UK in October and November 2019.[42]

Television and radio

Minchin has made appearances on Australian TV shows, including the ABC's Spicks and Specks and The Sideshow. He has also made appearances on Network Ten's panel shows Good News Week (February 2010)[43] and Talkin' 'Bout Your Generation (March 2010).[44]

Minchin has also appeared on various British radio and television shows, including the BBC's Never Mind the Buzzcocks (four times, once as guest host),[45] BBC Radio 4's Mark Watson Makes the World Substantially Better,[46] and two specials on BBC Radio 2. He often performs on his TV appearances, such as his spots on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross in October 2009 and July 2010.[47] He performed a specially-written song entitled "Five Poofs and Two Pianos", a parody of the show's house band, 4 Poofs and a Piano. Minchin also appeared as a special guest on the 2009 edition of The Big Fat Quiz of the Year, performing a song written for the show ("It's Like 1984") in reference to a question regarding Google Street View. On Saturday 13 August 2011, Minchin hosted Prom 40, the first BBC Comedy Promenade Concert at the Royal Albert Hall. He appeared on Desert Island Discs on 6 May 2012.[48]

A heavily cut-down version of the show released on DVD as So F**king Rock Live has aired several times on British TV channel E4, first on 23 July 2009. It aired at the start of 2011, forming E4's New Year's coverage.[49]

On 8 May 2010, Minchin's musical sitcom pilot Strings was broadcast on BBC Radio 2. Well received as it was by Radio 2, he decided against creating a full series.[50]

In December 2011, Minchin performed a specially written song called "Woody Allen Jesus"[51] on The Jonathan Ross Show. However, despite the show's producers and ITV's lawyers approving the composition for broadcast, it was removed at the last minute. Responding on his blog, Minchin stated:[52] "Someone got nervous and sent the tape to ITV's director of television, Peter Fincham. And Peter Fincham demanded that I be cut from the show. He did this because he's scared of the ranty, shit-stirring, right-wing press, and of the small minority of Brits who believe they have a right to go through life protected from anything that challenges them in any way."[53]

In August 2012, Minchin appeared on Chain Reaction, first being interviewed by Derren Brown, and later interviewing Caitlin Moran.[54]

In 2015 Minchin guest starred in the Australian comedy television series, No Activity.[55]

In 2018, Minchin acted in Squinters, an ABC comedy.

Acting and theatre

Minchin's background is in theatre and he has appeared in various stage productions. He played the title role for the 2006 Perth Theatre Company production of Amadeus, a fictional play about the downfall of Mozart at the hands of the reigning court composer, a character based on and named after Antonio Salieri.[27] His other stage acting roles have included the title role in the 2004 Perth Theatre Company / Hoopla production of Hamlet, and The Writer in the original PTC production of Reg Cribb's The Return. He has also acted for The Australian Shakespeare Company (Twelfth Night), the Black Swan Theatre Company (Così, One Destiny), and in various other plays, short films, and television commercials. Roles from his days in musical theatre include Don Quixote in Man of La Mancha and Pontius Pilate (and understudying Judas Iscariot twice) in Jesus Christ Superstar. He has also appeared playing small parts on the ABC telemovie Loot and on the show Comedy Inc..[56]

Minchin also plays the role of Tom in the contemporary family drama Two Fists, One Heart, released 19 March 2009. He also wrote the song "Drowned" for the film's soundtrack.[57]

He co-wrote Matilda the Musical—an Olivier Award-winning musical version of Roald Dahl's novel Matilda—with Dennis Kelly and the Royal Shakespeare Company, which is produced by the RSC. It showed at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon, running from 9 November 2010 to 30 January 2011, and it began its West End run at the Cambridge Theatre on 25 October 2011 to great critical acclaim.[58][59] In 2013, Matilda opened on Broadway at the Shubert Theatre,[60] and earned 12 Tony Award nominations.[61]

Minchin was cast in the role of Judas in the 2012 UK and Ireland arena tour of the musical Jesus Christ Superstar.[62] The tour extended into various other countries due to popular demand, with Minchin reprising the role in the world, with a filmed version being released in Spring 2013. The filmed version, much to Minchin's annoyance, had his voice autotuned.[63] The production toured Australia from May to July 2013.

Minchin made his Sydney Theatre Company debut in 2013 in Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead alongside Toby Schmitz.

In 2015, it was announced he had teamed up again with the creative team from Matilda to write the music and lyrics for the new stage musical Groundhog Day.[64] The musical had its premiere at The Old Vic in 2016, before transferring to Broadway.[65][66] Groundhog Day began previews in July 2016, with a scheduled run until 19 September 2016.[67] The musical ran on Broadway from 16 March 2017 in previews, officially on 17 April 2017 and closed on 17 September 2017 after 176 performances and 31 previews.[65] A planned US tour was later cancelled, however the musical is expected to return to London's West End.

In October 2017 during a Facebook Live Q&A with The Guardian discussing Matilda with Dennis Kelly, Minchin expressed interest in the idea of adapting the Neil Gaiman novel Stardust into a stage musical, but also revealed it's unlikely he would ever do a family musical again.[68]

Film

In 2013, Minchin moved with his family to Los Angeles so that he could work on Larrikins, a planned Australian-themed animated musical film for DreamWorks Animation, which he wrote the songs for and was set to co-direct with Chris Miller.[69] The film was set to have an all-star Australian voice cast, headed by Hugh Jackman.[69] However, in March 2017, the project was cancelled, possibly in a decision by Comcast, who had bought DreamWorks Animation a year earlier.[69] Minchin called the outcome "unbearable", noting that he had turned down many projects during those four years, and that "there were 120 people working on that film."[69] He and his family moved to Sydney in January 2018.[69]

Minchin is set to appear as Friar Tuck in the 2018 American film Robin Hood.[70]

Atheism and skepticism

During his 2009 interview for Australian Skeptics' podcast The Skeptic Zone, Minchin addressed his performance style as one that allows bringing up issues that can be upsetting or judgemental to others, such as the "moral hypocrisy about the idea that the Bible is perfect, the only place that you need to go to for your moral guidance...and about, obviously, prejudice in the church, its role in ostracising homosexuals...your defences are down when you're laughing as well and it's couched in music. All I'm doing is making things consumable that are otherwise difficult to consume."[71]

As the son and grandson of medical surgeons, Minchin addressed "alternative medicine" claims by relating that unbiased tests for efficacy are the key:

You're in such a strong position when you understand the scientific process because all you say is, "Do you understand that the great breakthrough of humanity was figuring out how to make decisions about things whilst discarding human foibles? So, anecdotal evidence involves all your subjectivity—if we do it like this we don't have that anymore. Why, surely do you understand how powerful that is?" And if they don't, then that's what you have to explain to them. It's an extremely powerful thing and a very basic thing.[71]

Minchin further explained his skeptical outlook:

I've always been an atheist; I've always been an empiricist really. I've never believed in ghosts or psychics or anything like that 'cause it's quite simple—you don't have to know much to go, "Really?" Or, to just apply Occam's Razor, to go, "Is it more likely that souls do circus tricks, or more likely that they're talking to dead people? And if the latter, by what process? What do you mean talking to dead people? Aren't their voice boxes rotten? So without a voice box, how do they talk, and by what means?" It doesn't take much to be skeptical about that. But really understanding, as I'm still learning, why science is powerful, is a new step towards being boring at dinner parties.[71]

When asked if he thought the universe is full of life, Minchin summarised: "The chances of this happening might be one in infinity. Put it this way: the chance that there being intelligent alien life are, for me, infinitely higher than the chance there being a creator god."[71]

In an interview with Independent Investigations Group member John Rael, Minchin explains that what upsets him most about paranormal beliefs is "special pleading" by people who say vague things such as "there is no harm in it". Minchin states that there is very little harm in something like reiki, but asks "where do you draw the line?" when it comes to needing real evidence if a therapy works or not. He states that he is an atheist as well as a skeptic, and cannot understand how someone can be a skeptic and still be religious. "If you apply doubt to anything...the whole religion thing is obviously a fantasy."[72]

In 2012, Minchin appeared in a video hosted on the homepage of the British Humanist Association, describing Humanism as important "because having a non-superstitious worldview allows you to go about your own business, making ethical decisions based on a general desire to do the most possible good."[73]

Alternative medicine: Minchin's Law

Minchin has set to verse a scientific-skeptical definition of alternative medicine:

"By definition", I begin
"Alternative Medicine", I continue
"Has either not been proved to work,
Or been proved not to work.
You know what they call "alternative medicine"
That’s been proved to work?
Medicine."

Tim Minchin, Storm[39]

Protest songs

"Come Home (Cardinal Pell)"

In 2016, during the course of Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Minchin wrote "Come Home (Cardinal Pell)", which criticized Cardinal George Pell. Launched on Channel Ten's The Project, it received wide publicity, but was highly controversial.[74] Immediately after its debut, journalist Steve Price criticised the piece, describing it as "personal abuse" of Pell.[75] Liam Viney described it as being a protest song and analysed its mechanics.[76] Minchin later described it as "the most overt piece of activism I've done".[77]

The royal commission had been called to investigate how institutions like schools, churches, and government organisations have responded to allegations and instances of child sexual abuse.[78] When the royal commissioner granted the 74-year-old George Pell permission to appear as a witness via video link from Rome, rather than attend in person as he had previously done, Minchin wrote the song "Come Home (Cardinal Pell)". In response, a statement from Pell's office said the cardinal had led the battle against child abuse in the church for 20 years.[79] Attorney General George Brandis told ABC TV that giving evidence by video was "not at all unusual".[80]

The song helped fund journeys to Rome for victims of sex abuse so they could watch the cardinal deliver his evidence,[81] with a GoFundMe account set up by The Project hosts Meshel Laurie and Gorgi Coghlan.[82] The ABC 7.30 programme noted on 17 February 2016: "the song's going viral with almost 200,000 YouTube views" but "supporters of Cardinal Pell say it's verbal abuse set to music."[74] Jesuit human rights lawyer Frank Brennan said it risked endangering the integrity of the royal commission.[83] Columnist Andrew Bolt described the song as a "hymn of hatred".[84]

"Come Home (Cardinal Pell)" reached No. 11 on the Australian Singles Chart, for the week of 20 February 2016.[85][86] Later, it was nominated for APRA's Song of the Year,[87] and Kate Miller-Heidke performed the song at the APRA Music Awards ceremony.[88]

"I Still Call Australia Homophobic"

During the Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey Minchin sang "I Still Call Australia Homophobic"[89][90] a re-work of Peter Allen's, "I Still Call Australia Home"[91] that refers to those supporting the "No" case as homophobic and "bigoted cunts". He was criticised by politicians Tony Abbott and Mitch Fifield.[92][93]

Discography

Albums

  • Sit (with band Timmy the Dog) (2001)
  • Darkside (2005)
  • So Rock (2006)
  • Ready for This? (2009)
  • Live at the O2 (2010)
  • Tim Minchin and The Heritage Orchestra (2011)
  • So Fucking Rock (2013) (adapted from the 2008 DVD So Fucking Rock Live)

Singles

Compilations

  • Laugh-a-poolooza (featured artist) (2005)
  • "So Long (As We Are Together)" Californication Season 6 Soundtrack (2013)

DVD

Filmography

Actor

Literature

Author

Stage

Actor

Writer (composer and lyricist)

Awards

References

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