Sean Hughes (10 November 1965 – 16 October 2017) was a British-born Irish comedian, writer and actor. He starred in his own Channel 4 television show Sean's Show and was one of the regular team captains on the BBC Two musical panel game Never Mind the Buzzcocks.
Early life
Hughes was born the middle boy in a family of three boys in Whittington Hospital in North London. He had an older brother Alan and a younger brother Martin. He was born in Archway, London, but spent most of his youth in Firhouse, Dublin. His mother was from Cork, while his father was from Dublin. At the age of six, Hughes moved to Dublin and lived with his paternal grandmother.[1] He attended Coláiste Éanna in Ballyroan.
[He] used to talk about how sounding like a Cockney in an Irish school was not easy. He later quipped that he spent "most of my childhood in a headlock". Not surprisingly his Mary Poppins accent soon developed a lilting local burr. Making schoolfriends laugh was a classic defence mechanism and he even set up comedy gigs at his school. What started out as a hobby quickly became a career.[2]
Career
In 1987, he began appearing at the Comedy Store. In 1990, aged 24, he became the youngest winner of the prestigious Perrier Comedy Award for his show A One-Night Stand with Sean Hughes.[3]
He marked his 30th birthday with the Sean Hughes Is Thirty Somehow tour, which was broadcast on Channel 4, in 1995. Hughes returned to stand-up, touring the UK and Australia in 2007 with his show The Right Side of Wrong.[4]
As well as comedy, he wrote collections of prose and poetry and worked on a number of films. He also presented weekend radio shows on the BBC's London radio station BBC GLR, and in 2002 joined BBC 6 Music, presenting the Sunday-morning programme. He left the station a year after its launch, proclaiming it had turned into everything he had wanted it to be. He also wrote two novels, The Detainees (1998) and It's What He Would Have Wanted (2000).[5]
It was reported Hughes was a close friend of the American comedian Bill Hicks, but Hughes stated this was not true. In a 2014 interview, he explained: "It says on my Wikipedia page that I was good friends with him. I wasn't! We were in Australia together, so we hung out. I did get to know him a little bit, which was a real pleasure. When I saw him I just went, 'That's the best comic I'm going to see in my lifetime.'"[6] Nevertheless, Hughes wrote the foreword to Cynthia True's biography of Hicks, American Scream: The Bill Hicks Story. He concluded his foreword by writing "being a genius is a heavy burden and he's the only one I'm ever likely to meet. I still miss you Bill."[7]
Film and television
Hughes had a small role in the film The Commitments (1991), playing a record producer.[8][9]
In 1992, he had his own TV show, Sean's Show, ostensibly set in his own home. It received a nomination for the 1992 British Comedy Award for Best Channel 4 Sitcom.[10][11] Series one of Sean's Show has been released on DVD. Later, he recorded a series of brief programmes called Sean's Shorts, in which he toured England, visiting many of the country's towns and cities, seeing local places of interest and meeting local people.[12] He appeared in the film Snakes and Ladders shot in Dublin, and released in 1996.[13]
In 2003, Hughes voiced the part of Finbar the clockwork Shark, one of seven plastic bath toys which come to life whenever no-one is watching in the children's television seriesRubbadubbers, shown on CBeebies in the United Kingdom for pre-school children.[20]
In early 2014, Hughes started a podcast called Under the Radar, which ran for approximately 57 episodes (excluding repeats and split episodes) until December 2016.[26]
Hughes was a vegetarian and proponent of animal rights.[28] Hughes was a heavy drinker most of his career. In 2012, it was reported that he had become a teetotaller.[29] However, he started drinking again before he died, stating "Apparently I’m tedious when sober".[30]
Death
Hughes died aged 51 on 16 October 2017 from the effects of cirrhosis,[31] at Whittington Hospital in North London (the same hospital he was born in).[32][33]
A funeral service was held at St Pancras and Islington Cemetery on 23 October 2017, where, after the mourning party heard eulogies to his memory, extracts of some of Hughes' poetry were recited, and recorded music from the Smiths and Lily Allen was played, his body was cremated. A wake was held afterwards in a nearby pub.[34]
^Williams, Ben (25 March 2014). "Stand-up countdown Sean Hughes". Time Out. London. ISSN1479-7054. It says on my Wikipedia page that I was good friends with him. I wasn't! We were in Australia together, so we hung out. I did get to know him a little bit, which was a real pleasure. When I saw him I just went, "That's the best comic I'm going to see in my lifetime."