mag

Heeb Issue #14 : Chosen

God Save The Queen

Little Britain’s Matt Lucas

Text by Eliza Bent
For a gay, bald, chubby Jew, Matt Lucas is pretty comfortable in his own skin. Then again, the actor/comedian is perhaps better known for the multitude of other skins he inhabits in his BBC hit show Little Britain. These characters range from Daffyd, the self-proclaimed “only gay in the village,” to Vicky Pollard, a fast talking, gossip-spewing trashy teen, to Marjorie Dawes, a rude, overweight dietician and “fat fighter” who refuses to get on the scale yet has no problem commanding others to do so.

So, how did a kid with alopecia from Stanmore, Middlesex end up with a smash hit series on BBC, a cult following at home and abroad, and a version adapted for American audiences in the works for HBO? As Hereclitus said, “Character is destiny.” Part of it is, of course, the baldness. “I would always get cast in school plays in comic roles. I attributed this to the fact that i had no hair so it was easy to make me play an old man,” the 33-year-old says. “But even when it was time to do serious things on stage, people would kind of laugh.” During a remembrance service for World War I veterans, Lucas recalls being asked to read names of those who’d attended his school (the prestigious Haberdashers’ Aske’s boys’ School).
but instead of eliciting somber silence, he drew laughs from classmates and teachers.

Not surprisingly, school was “a hotbed of neurosis” for Lucas. “I didn’t enjoy it much at the time, but I wouldn’t have enjoyed any school,” he confesses. Nevertheless Lucas found humor to be “a great way to empower yourself when you’re at that sort of school—very academic—and when you’re at the bottom of the class, which was where I was.” But Lucas
wasn’t the only student to use comedy as a protective shield. In fact, there are five other Haberdashers’ alums of Lucas’s generation who currently make a living in comedy, including David Baddiel, Robert Popper and Sacha Baron Cohen (for whom Lucas has written).

If character is destiny, the rest is fate. At 16, Lucas attended the national youth theatre—a sort of summer camp for aspiring actors—where he met his Little Britain collaborator David Walliams. “He was always flamboyant and charismatic, very funny,” Lucas reflects. The two became fast friends and within five years were writing and creating shows for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. The pair is an ideal comedy match: Walliams’ dry wit and lean body type are the perfect complements to Lucas’s lower-brow posturing and hefty form, situating their show “squarely in the absurdist tradition of Monty Python and League of Gentleman,” according to Vogue critic Adam Green. Lucas says. “I mean, yeah, I’m the gay one, I’m the Jewish one, I’m the short one, I’m the fat one, I’m the bald one—but we have enough in common to make it work. we complete each other’s sentences.” And if the show’s success in the U.K. wasn’t proof enough of the duo’s compatibility, audiences on this side of the Atlantic will get a chance to see the them in action sometime next year, when HBO’s version of Little Britain debuts.

 

comments

submit a comment
logo_icons2_129 Facebook MySpace YouTube RSS Feed
heeb17ad_300
masa_ad_300_300

this issue

urban kvetch

Urban Kvetch

Mr. Met
Mets fans aren’t some sushi-rolling, lemonade-sipping pansy-asses. The blue in the team logo is a
(read more)

in the beginning

Jewdar

Fall Of Hope
We are rapidly approaching that special time of redemption and renewal—we speak, of course,
(read more)

honorary heeb

Ask A Black Man

Richard Pryor didn’t come up with all of those wildly provocative punch lines by himself. A large amount (read more)

in the beginning

King Of The Hill

Meet actor/writer Jonah Hill, Hollywood’s new leading man. No, really. (read more)

features

A Cut Above

Why would a grown man let a knife-wielding old Jew near his penis? Adam Bright investigates. (read more)

Joan of Snark

Love her or hate her, Joan Rivers is a comic force to be reckoned with. She’s well into her career’s third act and Jay Ruttenberg brings you the legend in all her glory. (read more)

storytelling

My Stalker

Mike Albo loves attention, but this isn’t really what he meant. A victim’s true, and truly hilarious, story. (read more)

photo feature

The Heeb Hundred

We give you portraits of the 100 up-and-coming stars in the Heeb pantheon. (read more)

chosen

The Gospel According to A.J.

The market for gimmick books—shtick lit, as it were—has enjoyed a surprising shelf life. There are (read more)

chosen/music

The Ballad Of Marissa Nadler

Marissa Nadler’s music seems to exist in a world of its own. Most songs consist of little more than a (read more)

chosen

Taking It To The Streets

“They just aren’t pretty,” my grandmother declared after walking in and quickly out of Zoe (read more)

God Save The Queen

For a gay, bald, chubby Jew, Matt Lucas is pretty comfortable in his own skin. Then again, the (read more)

Army@Love

The revolution’s gonna be graphic-novelized. In his Vertigo/DC monthly comic book, Army@Love, (read more)

everyone’s a critic

Good Chemistry

Remembered for her zany hats and pubescent troubles on the sitcom Blossom, Mayim Bialik could have easily (read more)

horascopes

Horascopes

Summary (read more)

past issues

mt_marla_300