Alan Partridge is a fictional character portrayed by English comedian Steve Coogan. Two radio and three television series have presented this spoof television and radio presenter through his career - as well as several TV and radio specials, plus appearances on BBC's Comic Relief.
According to the fictional world of Alan Partridge, he was born Alan Gordon Partridge on April 2 1955 in King's Lynn, and spent his childhood in Norwich. Alan was bullied at school by a boy named Stephen McCoombe, who called him 'smelly Alan Fartridge'. Alan won an essay writing competition on the subject of sport (his first foray into the sporting world) and later went on to attend East Anglia Polytechnic.
After graduating, and working his way upwards from hospital radio DJ, Alan garnered a slot presenting sports news on BBC Radio 4's On the Hour programme (1991) presented by Chris Morris. In On The Hour Alan suffered from a severe lack of any sporting knowledge. And it is here that he first developed his amazing talent for mixed and/or nonsensical metaphors.
There was also a one off spoof-documentary about the show called Knowing, Knowing Me, Knowing You. It gave a behind-the-scenes look at how the show was put together and the antagonism between Alan and those who worked for him, as well as giving insight into the problems with his marriage to his wife, Carol.
In reality, KMKYWAP was a huge success — but in the fictional world of Alan Partridge, it suffered from terrible ratings (‘It started badly and went downhill from there’). In the end the show was taken off the air at the end of the first series, but fate was to give Alan a ticket for one last ride on the 'Chat anooga Choo Choo'.
In 1995, Alan hosted a Christmas special of KMKYWAP, humorously titled Knowing Me, Knowing Yule. One of his guests was the (fictional) Director of Programming at the BBC, Tony Hayers (later to become Alan's nemesis, played by David Schneider). Alan, with a characteristic lack of subtlety, was seen probing for a new series of KMKYWAP. However, the show was an unmitigated disaster for Alan, as his product placement was blatantly exposed, and the show climaxed with Alan punching both a man in a wheelchair and Tony Hayers (twice) with a turkey stuck on his hand. As Alan cried at the end of the show, ‘I'll never chat again’, Mick Hucknall of Simply Red played the show out. It was the end of his chat-show career at the BBC.
(Note: in the fictional world of Alan Partridge, this was not a documentary, but actually a ‘post-documentary’. In the commentary on the DVD, Alan explains that all the events depicted in the series actually occurred, but everyone in the show, apart from himself and his Personal Assistant Lynn Benfield (played by Felicity Montagu who went on to play a vicar's wife in Nighty Night (2004)), were actors hired to portray the events in the Linton Travel Tavern after they had actually occurred.)
Alan's next appearance was in a 1999 half hour special filmed for Comic Relief in which Alan started to ‘lose the plot’, forshadowing his mental breakdown in the second series of I'm Alan Partridge. A simulcast between BBC2 and Radio Norwich, Alan appears incoherent and incapable of keeping track of the format of his own show. A second Comic Relief appearance followed in 2001, showing him interviewing a boxing manager, played by Peter Kay. Eventually, this resulted in Alan taking on one of the boxers in the ring and being beaten by the boxer, the manager and his friend Michael.
Coogan was apparently reluctant to continue playing the character, but returned for a second series of I'm Alan Partridge in 2002. This time around, Alan was temporarily living in a caravan while waiting for his new house to be built. Despite his five-year contract with the BBC, according to Alan there was ‘bad blood’ between them and they were ‘shits’, so they had to let him go.
Alan had returned to radio, but had secured the ‘third best slot on Radio Norwich’, presenting as he does Norfolk Nights, a big leap from his former timeslot of 4 to 7am, when he presented Up With the Partridge. Alan also presents a military based quiz show called Skirmish on the (fictional) cable station UK Conquest, and has a deal with Meteor Productions to make the Crash! Bang! Wallop!... What a Video/Scum on the Run series of car crash videos.
In the period from his time at the Linton Travel Tavern to his residence in the ‘temporary static home’, Alan suffered a severe mental breakdown and increased in weight, or as he put it, he was ‘clinically fed up for two years’. This collapse culminated in Alan driving a Vauxhall Vectra to Dundee in his bare feet, while gorging himself on Toblerones (in a similar incident, Alan recounts throwing all his tax receipts off a North Sea ferry). However, by 2002, his life was firmly back on track, save for the odd glitch. He even had a Ukrainian girlfriend called Sonja, who was 33 years old - 14 years younger than himself. This period in Alan's life is documented in his autobiography Bouncing Back, which Alan claims has been described as 'Lovely stuff' by entertainer Shakin Stevens.
Memorable moments of this series include Alan dry-vomiting his way through a speech about fireplaces, Alan mistakenly getting involved with swingers, Alan attacking a six-foot stuffed Beefeater bear, Lynn's Christening at her Baptist church and of course, the sad pulping of his autobiography which, despite him spending four weeks of his life writing, simply wasn't selling well. (Every anecdote ended with the phrase "Needless to say, I had the last laugh".) Unfortunately, Alan tells us, it seems the general public was more concerned with buying gangster autobiographies like Bad Slags.
Beyond this, Alan doesn't appear to have a particularly rich or detailed personal life, and seems to while away the hours fixating on trivialities. In one episode, whilst still living at the Linton Travel Tavern, he walks to a service station to acquire twelve bottles of windscreen washer fluid for no apparent reason. Most of his interests appear to reflect his taste for the superficial and flashy; it is perhaps notable that he once described Paul McCartney's band Wings as ‘The band the Beatles could have been’.
Politically, Alan leans towards the conservative. His favourite newspaper is the Daily Mail, a right leaning publication. He describes himself as being a 'homosceptic', but appears to possess some hidden homoerotic or bisexual tendencies; in the first season of I'm Alan Partridge, he frequently finds himself fantasizing about performing an erotic dance for a selection of men (usually those who can help further his career in some way, such as Tony Hayers) in a peephole Pringle jumper and vulcanised rubber codpiece. Sexually, he appears rather repressed, illustrated by the lengths he goes to deny his interest in 'Bangkok chick-boys". He can be prudish, too, when, in one episode, he seems protective of Lynn - when they encounter a swinging couple Alan describes as "sex people".
In 2004 Coogan also gave an interview with Now magazine, and when asked "Is it true that you're killing off Alan Partridge?", Coogan replied: ‘No, not at all. What's he up to at the moment? Well, I'd say he's being cryogenically preserved next to Walt Disney. Don't worry - when the day comes that I feel like I need to do something else with him, I'll defrost him and make him funny again.’
This occurred briefly for Comic Relief 2005, when Alan appeared to interview a grown up, openly gay Milkybar Kid (played by Simon Pegg). This involved a lot of recycled material from previous live appearances. However, there was some bizarre homoeroticism between Alan and the 'Milky Bar Kid' which resulted in Alan agreeing to rent a caravan and go hiking with him.
Armando Iannucci hinted in a BBC Radio 2 interview with Jonathan Ross in May 2005 that the idea of making a one-off special episode of Skirmish (Alan's fictional military based game show on 'UK Conquest') has been discussed, but no firm plans, script, or rules of the show exist.
However in August 2004 a small piece appeared in the Metro newspaper which claimed that: ‘Steve Coogan got the green light from a US studio to play the spoof DJ on the big screen.’ Coogan reportedly said: ‘It's always been my plan to make Alan go global. It's what he lives for really, not just doing the show on Radio Norwich.’ Other sources confirm the film will be going ahead and ITV has reported that Victoria Beckham will be playing a ‘demanding diva’ in the film. Coogan has since denied that Beckham will appear.
In mid 2005, the Internet Movie Database submitted that an Alan Partridge movie was in pre-production, and rumours circulated that it may involve a plot with Al-Qaeda (the terrorist organisation) as a feature, or Alan as a go-between in a hostage situation of some sort, but this speculation has not been verified.
Although not appearing per se, Alan Partridge does feature in the 2006 film, A Cock and Bull Story. In a complex, multi-layered film which blurs the viewers' perception of fact and fiction, Steve Coogan plays an egotistical, philandering film actor (called ‘Steve Coogan’) who is most famous for his television work in the guise of ‘Alan Partridge’. Despite his best efforts to leave Partridge in the past and move onto new projects, other characters in the film constantly remind Coogan of Partridge, even going so far as to mimic Partridge to mock Coogan. In one incredibly self-referential scene, famous journalist Tony Wilson (who Coogan played in the film 24 Hour Party People), playing a journalist called ‘Tony Wilson’, insists on interviewing Coogan's character, actor ‘Steve Coogan’, in Alan Partridge's ‘Knowing Me, Knowing You’ style. The self-referencing here is particularly dense because Coogan's earlier portrayal of Wilson had been reminiscent of Alan Partridge, and it has been speculated that the Partridge character was partly based on the real Wilson [http://www.manchesterad.com/html/interviews/tonyw0.php?content=4.
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