Established for the love of laughter
The Definitive Encyclopediaof British Comedy Legends
Discover the lives, careers and greatest performances of the UK’s most influential comedians, one carefully curated Laughter File at a time.
Featured Files
Comedians in the spotlight

Tommy Cooper
1947–1984 · British (Welsh-born)
The fez-wearing magician whose tricks were meant to fail. Tommy Cooper turned incompetence into an art form and became one of Britain's most beloved comic entertainers of the 20th century.

Ricky Gervais
1998–present · British (English)
The creator of The Office reinvented the British sitcom with cringe, silence and an unflinching eye for workplace absurdity.

Les Dawson
1965–1993 · British (English)
The Manchester master of the mother-in-law joke and the deliberately wrong note, a gifted pianist who chose to play badly for laughs.

Jimmy Carr
2000–present · British (Irish descent)
The one-liner machine of modern British comedy. A deadpan delivery, a distinctive laugh and a joke rate second to none.

Victoria Wood
1974–2016 · British (English)
A writer's writer with a poet's ear. Wood's songs and sketches turned everyday northern life into national treasure.

Lee Evans
1988–2014 · British (English)
A whirlwind of sweat, energy and observational storytelling, the arena-filling comic who left it all on stage every night.

Peter Kay
1996–present · British (English)
The Bolton storyteller who turned family weddings, biscuits and 'garlic bread?!' into record-breaking stadium comedy.

Bob Monkhouse
1948–2003 · British (English)
Britain's slickest host and one of its most respected comedy craftsmen, a walking joke library with impeccable timing.

Billy Connolly
1965–present · British (Scottish)
The Big Yin. A Glasgow shipyard welder turned folk singer turned storyteller, whose winding tales and gentle absurdity made him Scotland's most beloved comic export.

Michael McIntyre
2003–present · British (English)
The polished, arena-filling observational comic whose Big Show made Saturday night mainstream comedy feel event television again.

Caroline Aherne
1990–2016 · British (English)
The writer and performer who turned working-class family life into sitcom poetry with The Royle Family, and created one of British television's most unforgettable hosts in Mrs Merton.

Peter Cook
1959–1995 · British (English)
The founding father of modern British satire: a Cambridge Footlights star who co-created Beyond the Fringe, Private Eye and The Establishment, and redefined what comic intelligence could sound like.

Rik Mayall
1980–2014 · British (English)
The wild-eyed godfather of British alternative comedy: a human firework who turned student anarchy into sitcom gold with The Young Ones, The New Statesman, Bottom and Blackadder.
Latest Files
Recently added to the archive

Rik Mayall
1980–2014 · British (English)
The wild-eyed godfather of British alternative comedy: a human firework who turned student anarchy into sitcom gold with The Young Ones, The New Statesman, Bottom and Blackadder.

Peter Cook
1959–1995 · British (English)
The founding father of modern British satire: a Cambridge Footlights star who co-created Beyond the Fringe, Private Eye and The Establishment, and redefined what comic intelligence could sound like.

Caroline Aherne
1990–2016 · British (English)
The writer and performer who turned working-class family life into sitcom poetry with The Royle Family, and created one of British television's most unforgettable hosts in Mrs Merton.

Michael McIntyre
2003–present · British (English)
The polished, arena-filling observational comic whose Big Show made Saturday night mainstream comedy feel event television again.

Billy Connolly
1965–present · British (Scottish)
The Big Yin. A Glasgow shipyard welder turned folk singer turned storyteller, whose winding tales and gentle absurdity made him Scotland's most beloved comic export.

Bob Monkhouse
1948–2003 · British (English)
Britain's slickest host and one of its most respected comedy craftsmen, a walking joke library with impeccable timing.

Peter Kay
1996–present · British (English)
The Bolton storyteller who turned family weddings, biscuits and 'garlic bread?!' into record-breaking stadium comedy.

Lee Evans
1988–2014 · British (English)
A whirlwind of sweat, energy and observational storytelling, the arena-filling comic who left it all on stage every night.
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From the archive
"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious."
Peter Ustinov

