Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Rosie Wilby

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Rosie Wilby

Role
  
Singer


Education
  
University of York

Albums
  
Precious Hours

Rosie Wilby one4reviewcoukwpcontentuploads201308Rosie

Rosie wilby


Rosie Wilby, born Liverpool in 1970, is an English stand up comedian and singer songwriter based in South London.

Contents

Rosie Wilby Rosie Wilby Host Performer May 2016

Rosie wilby at comedy camp


Career

Rosie Wilby Rosie Wilby The Conscious Uncoupling 3 star review on Broadway

Wilby grew up in Ormskirk, and studied at the University of York where one of her contemporaries was fellow comic Zoe Lyons. Moving to North London in 1993, she secured a place on the ft2 Film and Television freelance training scheme and worked on shows including Later... with Jools Holland, and was an extra in British television drama The Politician's Wife. She went on to work on the BFI/Maya Vision co-production A Bit of Scarlet before becoming a trainee reporter on BBC Radio 5 Out This Week. Between 1997 and 2000, Wilby became a regular music journalist for Time Out London as well as writing for NME, and had her own column called "Rosie's Pop Diary" in the now defunct Making Music magazine. As a music journalist, she interviewed, among others, Beth Orton, Suzanne Vega, Stereophonics and the band Muse.

Music

Rosie Wilby httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages1212663635ro

In 1996 she formed a band named Wilby who released an album called Precious Hours in July 2000 on her own label Cat Flap Recordings. The album launch gig at Ronnie Scott's was reviewed in The Guardian who praised her 'glorious' voice. Rosie went solo and supported artists including Bob Geldof, Jamie Cullum, Midge Ure, Glenn Tilbrook and John Grant's band The Czars. She also performed on the Left Field stage at the Glastonbury Festival in 2005.

Move into comedy

In 2004, after positive comments about her between song banter, she entered the stand up competition So You Think You're Funny and got through to the semi-finals. She also reached the Laughing Horse competition semi-finals in 2005 and then the Funny Women final in 2006, held at the Comedy Store, compered by Shappi Khorsandi. Other finalists that year included Holly Walsh and Susan Calman. In 2007, she reached the final of the Leicester Mercury Comedian of the Year and the semi finals of the Amused Moose competition.

She has taken several shows to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and on tour around the UK including a spoof lecture about memory called 'I am Nesia' and another spoof lecture about sex, 'The Science of Sex', which won a Fringe Report Award 2010 and saw her being invited onto Radio 4 Woman's Hour and Loose Ends. The show was revived in 2012 for two performances at 2012 Green Man Festival in Wales.

Her follow-up show, 'Rosie's Pop Diary', was based on her music career and later became 'How (not) to Make it in Britpop'. She spoke about it with Libby Purves on Radio 4 Midweek.

In 2011, she co-wrote and co-starred in the short film, The Bride and Bride, alongside fellow comic Sarah Campbell, which was screened at the 2011 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival.

In 2012, she appeared at the Bloomsbury Theatre alongside Jen Brister, Zoe Lyons and Susan Calman in aid of Stonewall UK charity event which was headlined by Sarah Millican. In August 2012, she appeared alongside Jenny Eclair and Ellie Taylor at the Hackney Empire, part of the season Ha Ha Hackney. She has appeared at Homotopia Festival in Liverpool every year from 2006 to 2012, where Diva Magazine editor Jane Czyzselska described her as a "lesbian Eddie Izzard". She now performs in comedy clubs across the UK and has also performed at Polari literary salon with Paul Burston in 2012 and at the South Bank Women of the World (WOW) Festival in 2013.

Radio

Wilby has appeared on Radio 4 Woman's Hour and Loose Ends, Radio 5, LBC and BBC London, but is best known for presenting a weekly LGBT magazine show, Out In South London, on London based non-profit community radio station Resonance FM. Notable guests on the show include k.d lang, Sarah Waters, and Peter Tatchell. She appears in the Sound Women 200 List featuring women working in the audio and radio industry.

Personal life

Wilby has written about being an openly lesbian performer, and her sexuality features heavily in her creative output. She wrote an article for The Guardian on being a lesbian comedian and an article in the Independent Online about 'coming out'. In 2011 she performed a fusion of stand up and film called 'I'm Dreaming of a Pink Christmas' at the Rich Mix in East London, which explored why Christmas is a far from conventional time for people who are LGBT.

References

Rosie Wilby Wikipedia