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David Schneider (actor)

English actor (born 1963)


Summary

English actor (born 1963)

FieldValue
nameDavid Schneider
imageDavid Schneider 2015.jpg
captionSchneider at Web Summit, November 2015
birth_date
birth_placeLondon, England
occupationActor, comedian, director
yearsactive1980s – present
height5 ft
educationCity of London School
alma_materExeter College, Oxford

David Schneider (born 22 May 1963) is an English actor, comedian, and director. His acting roles include the role of Tony Hayers, in the Alan Partridge franchise.

Early life

David Schneider was born in London, England on 22 May 1963 to a Jewish family. He was educated at the City of London School, an independent school for boys in the City of London, before going to Exeter College, Oxford, where he studied modern languages, and studied for a doctorate in Yiddish Drama. During his time at university, Schneider performed a predominantly physical comedy act that contrasted with the trend towards stand-up comedy in live performance comedy in the 1980s. It was at this time that he met Armando Iannucci, who in 1991 recruited him for news-radio spoof On the Hour. He is a fan of Arsenal F.C.

Career

He performed in the BBC Sketch show Up to Something (1990) with Shane Richie, Suzy Aitchison, Frances Dodge, & Lewis MacLeod (actor).

Schneider performed in The Day Today, the television spin-off from On the Hour and also appeared in the spin-offs Knowing Me, Knowing You... with Alan Partridge and I'm Alan Partridge where he played the fictional BBC commissioning editor, Tony Hayers. In 1994, he made an appearance on Mr. Bean, in Back to School Mr. Bean, as the judo teacher. In 1996, Schneider wrote The Eleventh Commandment, a play for the Hampstead Theatre about a Jew marrying a gentile. In the late 1990s he appeared in the topical satire The Saturday Night Armistice (subsequently retitled The Friday Night Armistice) alongside Armando Iannucci and Peter Baynham. In 1997 and 2000, Schneider played the part of Bradley Wilson in the BBC sitcom The Peter Principle.

Schneider wrote the screenplay for the 2001 feature film All the Queen's Men, directed by Stefan Ruzowitzky and starring Matt LeBlanc and Eddie Izzard. Schneider has also performed in the BBC sitcom Gimme Gimme Gimme and appeared on BBC Radio 4 panel show The 99p Challenge. He had small roles in several movies, including The Saint, 28 Days Later, A Knight's Tale and Mission: Impossible, where he played the driver of the Eurotunnel train. In 2004, Schneider played Joseph Goebbels in the satirical tongue-in-cheek comedy Churchill: The Hollywood Years. Following this, in 2006 Schneider took his first lead role when he made Uncle Max, a series of 13 dialogue-free shorts for CITV. They focus on slapstick humour, with Schneider saying he wanted to be "a human cartoon".

In April 2008, he featured in an episode of Hotel Babylon as a magician, a character not dissimilar to Tony le Mesmer whom he played in an episode of Knowing Me, Knowing You... with Alan Partridge. Schneider provides the voice of Blink for the CBBC series One Minute Wonders. In 2008, he took part in BBC Three's Most Annoying People of 2008, relaying his views about celebrities including Prince William, Mark Ronson and Peaches Geldof. In 2009, Schneider explored his Yiddish heritage with a 30-minute documentary for BBC Radio 4, My Yiddisher Mother Tongue, with contributors including family members, academics, Colin Powell and Michael Grade.

He has written a play, called Making Stalin Laugh, based on the slaughter of the Moscow State Jewish Theatre on the orders of Joseph Stalin. He also directed a sitcom pilot in 2007 called Up Close and Personal, set in the offices of a celebrity magazine and starring Raquel Cassidy. The pilot was subsequently rejected by ITV2. In 2011, he played Soggy Sid in Horrid Henry: The Movie, and in 2012, appeared in ITV drama Whitechapel, series 3, as murder suspect and taxi driver Marcus Salter. His radio sitcom Births, Deaths and Marriages, set in a register office and starring himself, premiered on BBC Radio 4 in May 2012.

In 2014 he co-founded That Lot, a social media agency alongside writer David Levin and David Beresford. In 2018 they sold the company to the PR firm Weber Shandwick.

Schneider appeared in the fifth episode of the second season in the TV show Plebs in 2014, portraying a slave auctioneer called Agorix. In 2017, Schneider wrote the screenplay of The Death of Stalin with Armando Iannucci.

Filmography

Film

FilmYearTitleRoleNotes
1993The TrialKullich
1996Mission: ImpossibleTrain Driver
1997The SaintBar Waiter
1998Comic Act
1999You're DeadIan
2000If Looks Could Kill: The Power of BehaviourMr. TannerVideo short
2001A Knight's TaleRelic Seller
200228 Days LaterScientist
2003BlackballYoung Buck Reporter
CheekyTodd
2004Fat SlagsTanner
Churchill: The Hollywood YearsGoebels
2006The Battersea Ripper
ScoopJoe's Co-Passengers
2009Crazy HandsSpencerShort film
2010The InfidelMonty
2011Horrid Henry: The MovieSoggy Sid
Arthur ChristmasGeneralVoice
2012The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists!Scarlett MorganVoice
Also known as The Pirates! Band of Misfits
2013This Is IntercourseHenry's DadShort film
UnderdogsChesterOriginal title: Metegol
Voice, English version
2017The Death of StalinWriter
2022ForkDemon

Television

Television
1990
1991
1992
1994
Paris
The Day Today
1994–1995
1995
Lloyds Bank Channel 4 Film Challenge
The Friday Night Armistice
1995–2000
1996
1997
1998
2000
The Canterbury Tales
2001
2002
2004
Animate Tales of the World
2005
2006
2006–2008
2008
2009
2010
How Not to Live Your Life
2011
Doctor Who: The Monthly Adventures
2012
2013
2016–2017
2014
Plebs
2020

References

References

  1. Schneider, David. (9 May 2019). "Here's how to talk about Israel without sliding into antisemitism". The Independent.
  2. "Exeter welcomes David Schneider (1981, Modern Languages)".
  3. Lawrenson, Mark. (10 November 2013). "Premier League predictions: Lawro v comedian David Schneider". BBC Sport.
  4. (11 February 2006). "Shut up and make us laugh". The Times.
  5. Mahoney, Elisabeth. (16 October 2009). "My Yiddisher Mother Tongue". BBC.
  6. [http://www.curtisbrown.co.uk/david-schneider/making-stalin-laugh/ Making Stalin Laugh] Retrieved 29 October 2011.
  7. Hemley, Matthew. (5 September 2007). "Comedian Schneider directs new magazine-based sitcom". The Stage.
  8. [http://www.comedy.co.uk/guide/pilots/up_close_and_personal/ Up Close And Personal - Pilot] The British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 29 October 2011.
  9. (16 July 2018). "Weber Shandwick buys London agency co-founded by comedian and social star David Schneider".
  10. (11 February 2017). "'The Death of Stalin': IFC Films Buys Armando Iannucci's Upcoming Drama". [[Penske Business Media]].
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