Sneha Girap (Editor)

Kitty Flanagan

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Australian

Parents
  
John Flanagan

Years active
  
1995-present

Medium
  
Actor

Name
  
Kitty Flanagan

Siblings
  
Penny Flanagan

Role
  
Comedian


Kitty Flanagan Upfront Events amp Entertainment Booking agency with

Genres
  
sketch comedy, autobiographical comedy, observational comedy, character comedy, multi-media supported comedy, comedy songs

Movies
  
You Can't Stop the Murders, Dating Ray Fenwick

Notable works and roles
  
Similar People
  

Melbourne international comedy festival 2013 gala kitty flanagan


Kitty Flanagan is an Australian comedian, writer and actor who works in Australia and the United Kingdom. She has also performed in France, Germany, the Netherlands, Japan, the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and Montreal Just For Laughs Festival.

Contents

Kitty Flanagan Kitty Flanagan Hello Kitty Squirrel Comedy

Kitty Flanagan #3 - 2017 Opening Night Comedy Allstars Supershow


Early life

Flanagan attended high school at Monte Sant' Angelo Mercy College in North Sydney. Flanagan got addicted to the laughs of comedy when she was in Year 5 at a school musical production of Alice In Wonderland, where she received plenty of laughs dressed up as a bunny who pretended to fall asleep during the performance. Flanagan says she "was an attention seeker from a young age and secretly wanted to be an actor, but knew she did not have the mindset for the training". Flanagan recalls that as a teenager, she would put on avant-garde performance shows with her younger sister Penny and they would involve their younger brother Michael by dressing him in tutus and giving him dance moves to do.

Career

Kitty Flanagan Kitty Flanagan Onya Magazine

Kitty Flanagan is best known in Australia for her work on various television programmes including Full Frontal, The Project, The Weekly with Charlie Pickering, Have You Been Paying Attention?, Utopia and in the United Kingdom for her work on The Sketch Show.

Kitty Flanagan The Project apologises for 39ruining39 Christmas after Kitty

At the age of 21, Flanagan road-tripped around Australia and liked Western Australia so much that she moved there and lived in Cottesloe for a couple of years then lived in Bunbury and Geraldton. Flanagan read news and weather at a country radio station, waited tables and lasted only three weeks cleaning and packing crayfish in a Geraldton crayfish factory before she resigned. Flanagan trained and worked as a PE teacher briefly before beginning a job in advertising.

Kitty Flanagan brisbanepowerhouseorgwpcontentuploads201411

In 1989, Flanagan began her five-year stint as an advertising agency copywriter, creating campaigns for products like Quik (Nesquik) chocolate drinking powder. After five years as a copywriter, Flanagan was fired in June 1993. Following her exit from advertising, Flanagan worked as a bartender in a hotel, where there was an open mic night, so she decided to try stand-up. Flanagan's first attempt was a success and it started her comedy career in 1994 doing stand-up at an open mic night at the Harold Park Hotel in Sydney. Flanagan's debut performance as a stand-up comic at the Harold Park Hotel led to a spot in the final of the hotel's Comic of the Year competition where she placed third and won a bottle of red wine. Flanagan had only been doing stand-up comedy for six months before she was spotted in December 1994 by the producer of Full Frontal. Flanagan joined the cast as both a writer and performer in 1995. Flanagan left Full Frontal in late 1996 to concentrate on her stand-up while she continued writing and acting for television in Shaun Micallef's World Around Him, The Micallef Program, The 50 Foot Show and The Fat.

Kitty Flanagan Kitty Flanagan on ladies going to the toilet The Project

Flanagan moved to the UK in 2001 to further her comedy career and to do more stand-up. She performed on television in The Sketch Show as well as making numerous stand-up appearances on The World Stands Up for Comedy Central. As well as performing, Flanagan produced a short film called Dating Ray Fenwick, in which she also had a small role, wrote material for her former Sketch Show co-star Karen Taylor's sketch comedy show Touch Me, I'm Karen Taylor and wrote for various other shows on the BBC, Channel Four and Sky Television. Flanagan also worked with author and screenwriter Sean Condon to develop his screwball comedy script Splitsville as a hook for a television series, which later evolved into an e-book. During her time in the UK, Flanagan would regularly return to Australia for short visits and appear on television shows including Rove, Good News Week, Spicks and Specks and The Sideshow.

Flanagan took her stand-up internationally and performed at all the major comedy festivals around the world including Edinburgh, Melbourne, Montreal, Kilkenny, Cape Town and Johannesburg. After eight years touring the world and performing stand-up in comedy clubs in England, Flanagan returned to live in Australia in 2009. Flanagan had three months worth of work lined up in Australia and more kept coming in so she decided to stay. Flanagan starred in the Comedy Channel's 2009 TV special I Can't Believe It's Not Better before being contacted to join The Project for segments on various trending news topics. Flanagan resigned from The Project in August 2014 but stayed for four months to finish the year. Charlie Pickering approached her to join his new TV show The Weekly with Charlie Pickering where she created the segments ‘Spectacular Failures of the 21st Century’ and ‘Problem Solver’. As the series progressed, Flanagan created two other segments called ‘Bandwagon Rider’ and ‘Human Barometer’.

Working Dog Productions asked Flanagan to work on their TV comedy series Utopia in 2013 and cast her in the role of Rhonda the public relations manager, which Flanagan played for three seasons. For two weeks during the end of 2014 and early 2015, Flanagan was a stand-in for Annabel Crabb's weekly newspaper column for Fairfax Media, and she continues to write for Fairfax Media occasionally. In 2010, Flanagan began touring Australia with her stand-up comedy show Charming and Alarming. Flanagan tours with her sister and show co-star Penny Flanagan, and tour manager and former Full Frontal co-star Glenn Butcher, who is the founding member of the 1980s Newcastle comedy troupe the Castanet Club. In 2013, the trio toured Australia again in the stand-up show Hello Kitty Flanagan. Flanagan, and her entourage of two, toured Australia with her third stand-up comedy show Seriously? in 2015.

In 2015, Flanagan was the third Ambassador for the Adelaide Fringe Festival, succeeding singer Katie Noonan and inaugural Adelaide Fringe Ambassador and fellow comedian Paul McDermott. Flanagan is an advocate of writing and writers in the screen industry, and she sponsored the Best Narrative Award at the 2015 Heart of Gold International Short Film Festival in Gympie, and helped to judge the film scripts in that category.

In 2017, Flanagan and her sister Penny contributed as writers for the TV series Drop Dead Weird. Flanagan began an Australian national tour of her fourth standup show named 'Smashing' in 2017.

Singles

  • 2014: Middle Age Lady
  • Published contributions

  • 2014: 'Sharing the things we don't like makes a good date' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2015: 'Being child-free is no reason to keep mum' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2015: 'Is so much noise really necessary?' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2015: 'Here's the tip: US customs is a grey area' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2016: 'Ankle-biters are a total walk in the park' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2016: 'The stupid appliances we waste money on' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2016: 'Modern houses don't need so many bathrooms' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2016: 'Assimilation won't happen overnight but it will happen, just like Pantene' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2016: 'Here's a fact: an opinion is not the same as a fact' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2017: 'When I look at Donald Trump, I see a bit of myself' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2017: 'Teenagers know absolutely everything, except...' (Fairfax Media)
  • 2017: 'Donald Trump has taught me anyone can be a dictator' (Fairfax Media)
  • Corporate Work and Literary Events

    Flanagan tailors her comedy material to suit corporate events, galas, award nights and launches. Flanagan has written and presented videos for clients such as Nokia and Subaru. An accomplished Master of ceremonies, Flanagan hosted countless awards nights and provided after-dinner hilarity for companies as diverse as Australia Post and the Australian Pharmaceutical Association. Flanagan was Master of ceremonies at 2015 Art of Music Live which is a music concert held every two years, where a group of Australia’s top visual artists come together to create an original exhibition and each artist chooses an iconic Australian/New Zealand song to inspire an artwork. The work is then auctioned at a gala dinner in the Art Gallery of New South Wales with all proceeds from Art Of Music Live going to Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy, who transform lives through music.

    In 2012, Flanagan joined a panel of writers, musicians and artists for the literary event called 'Women of Letters', an interactive talk that examines the lost art of letter writing and also celebrates women in writing. Funds raised go to a Victorian not-for-profit charity animal rescue centre called Edgar's Mission Farm Sanctuary. In 2013, Flanagan was invited to be part of Adelaide's new literary festival called Word Adelaide, where she participated in two events during the four-day programme. Flanagan hosted 'Yarn Spinning', the opening event of Word Adelaide that celebrates two sacred Australian traditions: telling tall stories and going to the pub. Flanagan also featured in the event 'In Their Own Words', sharing the stage with Matt Lucas of Little Britain fame, Professor Roly Sussex and musician Guy Pratt who performed in bands Pink Floyd and Icehouse, to explore how the language of comedy has changed our lives and culture.

    Hosting

    Flanagan hosted and performed stand-up at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala in 2010. Flanagan hosted and performed stand-up comedy at the 'Opening Night Comedy Allstars Supershow' to launch the Melbourne International Comedy Festival in March 2017, which then screened on the ABC and ABC iview in April 2017.

    Community and charity work

    In 2013, Flanagan and her dog Henry became ambassadors for Delta Society which involves taking trained therapy dogs to visit hospitals, care facilities and schools across Australia. As ambassador, Flanagan helped the Delta Society to spread the word and promote Delta Society's charitable programs including Delta Therapy Dogs, Classroom Canines and Delta Dog Safe. Flanagan is particularly fond of Delta’s Classroom Canines program which uses the principles of dog therapy to assist children with reading difficulties and gets children excited about reading and writing.

    Flanagan has donated her time and talent to perform at charity and fundraising events such as Comedians Unite for the Premier's Disaster Relief Appeal to help victims of Queensland's 2011 floods, and she donated half of the profits from her 2013 Bundaberg show to the Queensland Red Cross Flood Appeal. In 2009, Flanagan performed in Sydney at the Jerry Lewis 'Laugh For Life' Charity Concert to support Muscular Dystrophy Foundation Australia (MDFA) in their fund raising and awareness efforts to fight the devastating muscle wasting disease. Flanagan appeared alongside fellow Australian comedians Julia Morris, Paul McDermott, Mikey Robins, Peter Berner, Fiona O'Loughlin, and Tom Gleeson in the fundraising gig at Sydney's Enmore Theatre. In 2003 while Flanagan was living and working in the UK, she joined some of the UK's top comedians for a charity fundraiser hosted by fellow comedian Steve Coogan. Flanagan appeared alongside Ross Noble, Johnny Vegas, Simon Pegg, Tim Vine, Lee Mack, Matt Lucas, Rob Brydon and Mark Williams in Coogan's 'Drugathon 2' to raise funds for the Chemical Dependency Centre (now named Action on Addiction) and RAPt (The Rehabilitation of Prisoners Trust).

    Personal life

    Her father, John Flanagan, is an Australian author, best known for the Ranger's Apprentice and Brotherband novel series. Flanagan is the sister of Penny Flanagan, who is a musician and one half of 1990s indie band Club Hoy and often appears in her shows. She also has a brother named Michael, who is a chef and runs a coffee shop in the snowfields of Japan. Flanagan lives with her two pets; a Burmese cat named Sarge and a Havanese dog named Henry.

    References

    Kitty Flanagan Wikipedia