Adam Buxton: Difference between revisions

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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (born [[7 June (people)|7 June]] [[1969 (people)|1969]]<ref>[https://www.famousbirthdays.com/people/adam-buxton.html Famous Birthdays]</ref>) voiced [[Assembler]] 1 in the [[Big Finish Doctor Who audio stories|Big Finish ''Doctor Who'']] audio story ''[[The One Doctor (audio story)|The One Doctor]]''.
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (born [[7 June (people)|7 June]] [[1969 (people)|1969]]<ref>[https://www.famousbirthdays.com/people/adam-buxton.html Famous Birthdays]</ref>) voiced [[Assembler]] 1 in the [[Big Finish Doctor Who audio stories|Big Finish ''Doctor Who'']] audio story ''[[The One Doctor (audio story)|The One Doctor]]''.


== Career ==
Buxton has been at the forefront of [[British]] comedy since at least the 1990s. His skills as a writer, director and actor have not only seen him in steady work since his early twenties, but have also transformed him into a personality equally likely to appear on British television as himself or as a character. In 2011, he hosted the long-running musical quiz show {{wi|Never Mind the Buzzcocks}} with [[Phill Jupitus]].
Buxton has been at the forefront of [[British]] comedy since at least the 1990s. His skills as a writer, director and actor have not only seen him in steady work since his early twenties, but have also transformed him into a personality equally likely to appear on British television as himself or as a character. In 2011, he hosted the long-running musical quiz show {{wi|Never Mind the Buzzcocks}} with [[Phill Jupitus]].



Revision as of 09:53, 7 June 2022

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Adam Buxton (born 7 June 1969[1]) voiced Assembler 1 in the Big Finish Doctor Who audio story The One Doctor.

Career

Buxton has been at the forefront of British comedy since at least the 1990s. His skills as a writer, director and actor have not only seen him in steady work since his early twenties, but have also transformed him into a personality equally likely to appear on British television as himself or as a character. In 2011, he hosted the long-running musical quiz show Never Mind the Buzzcocks with Phill Jupitus.

He first came to light in a comedy duo with longtime friend Joe Cornish, with whom he wrote and starred in The Adam and Joe Show. He was a writer on Big Train, a Simon Pegg sketch comedy show that was also one of Catherine Tate's first gigs.

As an actor, he guest-starred in some of the biggest British comedies of the 2000s, including Randall & Hopkirk (Deceased) with Tom Baker and Matt Lucas; Look Around You with Olivia Colman and Andrew Burt; The IT Crowd with Katherine Parkinson; and Hot Fuzz with Simon Pegg.

External links

Footnotes