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JOHNNY VEGAS Veteran newcomer Vegas won an award for
Happiness BBC News Online looks at the rise to fame of comedian Johnny Vegas
- who won the Royal Television Society's best newcomer award on Tuesday
night. At first sight, best newcomer seems an odd award for the Royal Television
Society to have bestowed upon Johnny Vegas for his role in BBC Two's Happiness.
Vegas seems to be everywhere these days.
The past few years have seen him nominated for Golden Rose
of Montreux television awards for Happiness and for edgy comedy Attention
Scum, with fellow comedian Simon Munnery.
He has also starred in the BBC drama Staying Up, and starred
in Radio 4's adaptation of Marcel Pagnol's The Flump.
Switched on: Vegas with the ITV Digital monkey Vegas is a
pundit on BBC Two's I Love The... nostalgia-fests and appears on panel games
including Never Mind the Buzzcocks and They Think It's All Over.
Currently, he is fronting ITV Digital's advertising campaign,
where he stars with a knitted monkey. The impression of Vegas as something
of an old-stager is reinforced by his endurance as one of the country's
top stand-up comedians. He burst on to the comedy scene in 1997, winning
the critics' award at the Edinburgh Festival and being nominated for the
Perrier prize. Acting is just one string to Vegas's bow But there's no doubt
that, in a world whose biggest names often have careers of mayfly-like brevity,
the self-described "fat bloke" has shown remarkable staying power. 'From
the heart' Rob Newman has described Vegas as "the greatest live stand-up
I have ever seen". His act, Newman, says, is "like a cry from the heart".
Johnny Vegas, 31, began life as Michael Pennington, in the
Lancashire town of St Helens, where he still lives. Born into a strongly
Catholic family, he went through an extremely religious phase during his
early adolescence that culminated in a period training for the priesthood
at seminary school. His vocation wavered after around 18 months, and Pennington
returned to St Helens. Vegas has appeared on the BBC's Room 101 After school,
he studied ceramics at Middlesex University. Later he would go on to become
probably the first stand-up comedian to take to the stage armed with a potter's
wheel. After university, he did bar work as he tried to establish himself
on the comedy circuit. In 1996, Pennington was heckling an act at the Citadel
arts centre in St Helens in 1996 when he was invited to see if he could
do any better. He picked up the comedic gauntlet - and the seed that would
become Johnny Vegas was sown.