Hugh Dennis

Peter Hugh Dennis (born 13 February 1962) is an English comedian, presenter, actor, writer, impressionist and voice-over artist, best known for being one half of Punt and Dennis with comedy partner Steve Punt. He played Pete Brockman, the father in the BBC One sitcom Outnumbered and since 2014 he has played Toby in the long-running sitcom Not Going Out.

Hugh Dennis
Hugh Dennis in 2017
Birth namePeter Hugh Dennis
Born (1962-02-13) 13 February 1962[1]
Kettering, Northamptonshire, England
MediumStand-up, television, radio
NationalityEnglish
EducationUniversity College School
Alma materSt John's College, Cambridge
Years active1989–present
GenresPolitical satire, improvisational comedy, insult comedy
Subject(s)British politics, family, current events
Spouse
  • Miranda Carroll
    (m. 1987; div. 1993)
  • Kate Abbot-Anderson
    (m. 1996; sep. 2015)
Partner(s)Claire Skinner (2017–present)
Children2
Notable works and rolesThe Mary Whitehouse Experience
Mock the Week
Outnumbered
The Now Show
Not Going Out

Since 2005, Dennis has been a regular panellist on the BBC Two satirical comedy show Mock the Week. Since October 2014, Dennis has appeared in the sitcom Not Going Out as Toby. He also starred as the narrator in CBBC's The Zoo. In 2019, he was a narrator in ITV's Yorkshire Airport.

Early life

Dennis was born in Kettering, Northamptonshire, the younger son of schoolteacher Dorothy Mary (Hinnels)[2] and John Dennis.[3] His brother, also named John, was the British Ambassador to Angola from 2014 to 2018.[4][5] He grew up in Mill Hill in North London as his father was appointed as parish priest of Mill Hill soon after his birth. His father later became the Bishop of Knaresborough and then of Saint Edmundsbury and Ipswich.[6]

Dennis was educated at University College School in London. During his time at UCS, he played rugby with Will Self and was head boy in his final year.[7]

Subsequently, Dennis went on to read for the Geography Tripos as an exhibitioner at St John's College, Cambridge. His dissertation was titled "The Spatial Distribution of Elementary Education in 19th-century Wakefield".[8] He also joined the Footlights, where he first met Punt and club president Nick Hancock and the trio collaborated on a number of projects besides the annual revue.

In a 2016 interview with ITV's This Morning programme, Dennis said that he was approached by Britain's domestic intelligence service, MI5, whilst at Cambridge University and attended a preliminary interview; however, he eventually decided that he did not want to take the matter any further, particularly due to being told during the interview that the job would require him to "do people over".[9]

After graduating with a first (his nickname was "Desky"),[6][10] Dennis worked for Unilever for six years in the marketing department while performing comedy with Punt at venues including The Comedy Store on the weekends.[11][12] The duo then formed half of the team of The Mary Whitehouse Experience on BBC Radio 1. Dennis uses his middle name Hugh as his stage name because Equity already had a Peter Dennis when he first started.[13]

When the BBC commissioned the series for BBC Two, Dennis took a sabbatical as the rehearsal days changed to weekdays and eventually went into comedy full-time.[8]

Radio and television career

Dennis during a radio recording of
The Now Show, 2005

While an impressionist, Dennis did voices for Spitting Image[14] and appeared with Punt as resident support comics on two TV series hosted on the BBC by Jasper Carrott.[15][16] Dennis also appeared twice as a contestant on the topical panel show Have I Got News for You, including one opposite former schoolmate Self.

Punt and Dennis' radio career includes over a decade of performing Punt and Dennis, It's Been a Bad Week, The Party Line and the satirical radio comedy show, The Now Show. On The Now Show , Dennis is in a line-up including Punt, Mitch Benn, Laura Shavin, Jon Holmes and Marcus Brigstocke. He is friends with Chris Morris and has had cameos on Brass Eye as well as doing the narration for the CBBC show Sam and Mark's Guide To Dodging Disasters.

In December 2009, Dennis joined Oz Clarke in presenting the sixty minute Christmas special Oz and Hugh Drink to Christmas broadcast on BBC Two.[17] In December 2010 the pair returned for a four-part series called Oz and Hugh Raise the Bar, which puts them in a competition to create a bar featuring only local British food and drinks.[18]

Dennis has starred in a number of sitcoms, including My Hero, in which he played obnoxious GP Piers Crispin. From 2007 to 2014, he starred in Outnumbered, a semi-improvised sitcom based around family life[19] and won a BAFTA nomination in the comedy category for the 2009 Christmas special.[20] On Radio 4 he also featured in the sitcom Revolting People which, like Outnumbered, was co-written by Andy Hamilton.

Besides his regular television work, Dennis is a panellist on Mock the Week and has appeared in every episode since its inception. He is a regular guest on various BBC-broadcast comedy panel game shows such as They Think It's All Over, Would I Lie To You?, QI and has guest hosted Have I Got News for You. In 2011, Dennis hosted the short-lived improvisational comedy series Fast and Loose.

Beginning on 16 February 2012, Dennis and Julia Bradbury hosted a four-part BBC One documentary series The Great British Countryside.[8] From October 2014, Dennis has started appearing in the sitcom Not Going Out as Toby.

In 2016 Dennis appeared as the Bank Manager in the acclaimed BBC Three series Fleabag, acting alongside Phoebe Waller-Bridge in the first and final episodes of series 1.

In 2019 he was a narrator in ITV's series Yorkshire Airport.

Personal life

Dennis lives in London. He has been married twice: to Miranda Carroll (married in 1987; divorced in 1993), and to Catherine "Kate" Abbot-Anderson (married in 1996; separated in 2015), with whom he has a son (Freddie, born in 1997) and a daughter (Meg, born in 1999).[6][21] In June 2018, it was confirmed that Dennis was in a relationship with actress Claire Skinner, who starred opposite him in the sitcom Outnumbered.[22]

In July 2008, Dennis received an Honorary Fellowship from the University of Northampton.[23]

Dennis took part in the 2007 L'Étape du Tour, cycling an open stage of the Tour de France for amateurs which was held in the mountains two weeks before the main event. He completed it in 11 hours and 7 minutes. He said: "I was an hour ahead of the broom, the vehicle that gathers the slower riders and disqualifies them."[24] In October 2011, Dennis completed the Great South Run in Portsmouth for the Alzheimer's Society.[25]

Dennis was the subject of the BBC One programme Who Do You Think You Are? (broadcast on 12 September 2012) in which he tries to find out more about his two grandfathers and their backgrounds.[26] His paternal great-grandfather was a miner at Kiveton Park Colliery near Rotherham whose younger son, Dennis' grandfather, served as an officer during World War I, and was coincidentally trained at Dennis' alma mater St John's College.

His maternal grandfather also served in France during the Great War and was in the Suffolk Regiment.

His father was the bishop John Dennis, and he has an older brother, also called John Dennis, who is a diplomat and was the British Ambassador to Angola from 2014 to 2018.[27]

Dennis is a supporter of Arsenal F.C.,[28] and also a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.[29]

Filmography

YearShowRoleNotes
1989–1991Spitting ImageVarious charactersVoice only
1991–1992The Mary Whitehouse ExperienceVarious charactersCo-creator/writer
1992Me, You and HimHarry DunstanCo-creator
A Word in Your EraPrince John1 episode
Springing LeninPeterTV Short
1994The Easter StoriesGardener1 episode
1994–1995The Imaginatively Titled Punt & Dennis ShowVarious characters12 episodes
1996The DetectivesSeth1 episode
1997Brass EyeDr Balb Kubrox1 episode
2000DoctorsNick Browning1 episode
Jack Dee's Happy HourJed CakeVoice only; 8 episodes
2000–2006My HeroDr Piers Crispin
2002TV to GoVarious charactersSeries 2
2005–Mock the WeekHimself, regular panellist
2007–2014, 2016OutnumberedPete BrockmanSeries Regular
2009New TricksTony Granville1 episode
Hotel BabylonJim Doody1 episode
2009, 2010QIHimself, guest panellist2 episodes
2011Fast and LooseHimselfHost
2013Agatha Christie's MarpleMajor Phillpot"Endless Night"[30]
2014–presentOver to Bill[31]Bill Onion
2014–presentNot Going OutTobyAlso portrayed Captain Morris in 1 episode
2015Ballot MonkeysMartin Frost
2016Drunk HistoryNapoleon/Richard III2 episodes
Midsomer MurdersMilo CravenEpisode 19.1 "The Village That Rose from the Dead"
Britain's Classroom HeroesPresenter
2016, 2017Insert Name HereGuest panellist2 episodes
2016–2019FleabagBank Manager4 episodes
2017The Red Nose African ConvoyHimselfOne-off special
TaskmasterContestant8 episodes
The ZooNarrator15 episodes[32]
Possibly... The Best Adverts in the WorldPresenterOne-off special
2018Richard Osman's House of GamesContestant5 episodes (won)
TrolliedJerome1 episode
Nativity Rocks!Robert Hargreaves
2019Urban MythsRichard Asher1 episode
2019Yorkshire AirportNarrator6 episodes

Accolades

Year Award Category Nominated work Result Ref.
1994 Writers' Guild of Great Britain Awards Light Entertainment Canned Carrott Won
2010 BAFTA TV Awards Best Male Comedy Performance Outnumbered: The Christmas Special Nominated
2011 British Comedy Awards Best TV Comedy Actor Outnumbered Nominated [33]

References

  1. {England and Wales Birth Index 1916–2005}
  2. Dod's Parliamentary Companion 1995, Dod's Parliamentary Companion Ltd, p. 297
  3. "Hugh Dennis: My family values". The Guardian. 16 January 2015.
  4. "Change of Her Majesty's Ambassador to Angola". Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  5. "Change of Her Majesty's Ambassador to Angola". Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  6. "Hugh Dennis on working with the kids of Outnumbered". Daily Record. 26 December 2009.
  7. Have I Got News for You. Season 13. Episode 2. 25 April 1997. BBC Two.
  8. "Hugh Dennis: I'm a happy rambler". Radio Times. 16 February 2012.
  9. Dara O Briain And Hugh Dennis Talk 150 Episodes Of Mock The Week | This Morning, 14 June 2016, retrieved 27 July 2017
  10. "Outnumbered's Hugh Dennis: 'It's not good for my image but I like cardigan's". Daily Express. February 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  11. "Why Footlights is a breeding ground for double acts". BBC. 6 December 2010.
  12. "In your funnybone rather than your face: Punt and Dennis". The Independent. 3 July 1994.
  13. Hardwick, Viv (7 April 2007). "A headline act". The Northern Echo (Newsquest North East): p. 26.
  14. Deans, Jason (17 May 2004). "Spitting Image plans TV comeback". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  15. Rampton, James (3 July 1994). "Show people: In your funnybone rather than your face: Punt and Dennis". The Independent. London.
  16. "Impressions are back in fashion: The great pretenders". The Guardian. 30 September 2003.
  17. "Oz And Hugh Drink To Christmas". BBC. 20 December 2009. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
  18. The BBC (21 December 2010). "Oz and Hugh Raise the Bar". BBC. Retrieved 26 December 2010.
  19. "Outnumbered Press Pack". BBC. 17 August 2007. Retrieved 22 December 2009.
  20. "BAFTA Awards 2009". Bafta.org. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  21. "Marriages England and Wales 1984–2005".
  22. "'Outnumbered' Actor Hugh Dennis Confirms Relationship With On-Screen Wife Claire Skinner". HuffPost. 1 July 2018. Retrieved 1 July 2018.
  23. Hugh Dennis welcomed to The University of Northampton Archived 18 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Northampton.ac.uk
  24. "Punt and Dennis – The right stuff". Edinburghfestival.list.co.uk. 8 August 2007. Retrieved 27 December 2018.
  25. "Great South Run: £3m raised at Portsmouth event". BBC News. 30 October 2011. Retrieved 27 December 2018.
  26. "Hugh Dennis" Who Do You Think You Are? Episode 5 of 10, Series 9. Broadcast 12 September 2102.
  27. "Hugh Dennis: My family values". The Guardian. 16 January 2015. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  28. "Hugh Dennis on being a 'complete idiot' around Hugh Laurie". Radio Times. 16 June 2013.
  29. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 13 May 2012. Retrieved 20 June 2017.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  30. "Filming begins on ITV's Agatha Christie Marple adaptation, Endless Night". ITV. 17 March 2013.
  31. "Can Comedy Playhouse save the British sitcom?". The Daily Telegraph. 29 April 2014. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  32. "Hugh Dennis to narrate new CBBC comedy lifting lid on zoo animal antics". Basingstoke Gazette.
  33. "The British Comedy Awards - Past Winners". Retrieved 8 April 2020.
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