Birth name Susan Grace Calman Role Comedian Movies On Loop Name Susan Calman | Nationality British Spouse Lee (m. 2012) Medium Stand-up Height 1.5 m | |
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Parents Anne Wilkie, Kenneth Calman Similar People Kenneth Calman, Sandi Toksvig, Fred MacAulay, Miles Jupp, Jeremy Hardy Profiles |
Comedian s comedian tv episode 1 susan calman interviewed by stuart goldsmith
Susan Grace Calman (born 6 November 1974) is a Scottish comedian, television presenter and panellist on a number of BBC Radio 4 shows including The News Quiz and I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue. She has written and starred in two series of her radio sitcom Sisters, two series of stand-up show Susan Calman is Convicted and a series of stand-up show Keep Calman Carry On, all on BBC Radio 4. She was one of the relief presenters for Fred MacAulay on his BBC Radio Scotland show MacAulay and Co which ran until March 2015.
Contents
- Comedian s comedian tv episode 1 susan calman interviewed by stuart goldsmith
- Susan Calman Live at The Pleasance HD
- Education and legal career
- Comedy career
- Personal life
- Stand up DVD releases
- Book
- References

Other television work includes presenting the CBBC programme Extreme School and providing the comic voiceover on the CBBC series Disaster Chefs. She is a team captain on the BBC Northern Ireland comedy panel show Bad Language.

She has presented the children's game show on CBBC, Top Class, quiz show The Lie on STV, and the BBC One show The Boss. In 2017 Calman became a contestant on BBC's Strictly Come Dancing.

Susan Calman: Live at The Pleasance HD
Education and legal career

Calman went to a fee-paying independent school, The High School of Glasgow, and then went on to study law at the University of Glasgow, winning a Judge Brennan scholarship and a three-month stint in North Carolina working with criminals on death row. During her seven-year career in corporate law, she gradually became dissatisfied with working as a specialist in freedom of information and data protection and developed her stand-up comedy during evenings, eventually giving up her job with Dundas & Wilson to develop her career in comedy.
Comedy career

Calman reached the semi-finals of the BBC New Comedy Awards in 2005 and was a finalist in the Funny Women competition in 2006. The Channel 4’s sketch show Blowout won a Scottish BAFTA in 2007, with Calman amongst the cast. In 2009, she won Best New Scottish Comedian at the Real Radio Variety Awards.
Between 2011 and 2013, Calman played therapist Nadine in the comedy Fresh Meat. Her debut Radio 4 solo series, Susan Calman is Convicted won the 2013 Writers' Guild of Great Britain Awards for 'Best Radio Comedy'. She also featured in the 2012 sitcom Dead Boss for BBC Three.
In 2013, Calman wrote about receiving online abuse after joking about the Scottish independence referendum on the Radio 4 satirical comedy programme The News Quiz, including accusations of betraying her country, and of being "racist" towards other Scots.
Since 2014, Calman has been a regular panellist on the CBBC panel show The Dog Ate My Homework, Calman appears in 10 episodes of the show.
In July 2014, Calman appeared in the BBC Scotland one-off stand-up/sketch show Don't Drop the Baton which featured sketches about the 2014 Commonwealth Games and narrated the BBC Three dating show Sexy Beasts.
In 2017, she became the presenter of the BBC One daytime quiz show The Boss and a contestant on the fifteenth series of Strictly Come Dancing. She will also present Armchair Detectives, a new BBC One daytime show in late 2017.
Personal life
Calman is the daughter of Sir Kenneth Calman, chancellor of the University of Glasgow and former chief medical officer for Scotland, then England and Wales. Her mother is Anne Wilkie. She has a sister and brother.
Calman came out as a lesbian in 1993 at the age of 19 and has spoken of her difficulties growing up gay in Glasgow. "It wasn't easy, not at all. Glasgow is a lovely city, but when I was growing up there was one lesbian bar, and there was a club for men, but there was no internet, there was no way of finding out [about other people]." The Times commented in 2009 that Calman's "status as a diminutive lesbian — she is 4ft 11in — gives a certain grist to her mill but, her Hobbit-like stature aside, what strikes you about her is her chirpy, optimistic level-headedness."
After nine years together, Calman and her partner, who is also a lawyer had a civil partnership ceremony in 2012. They married in 2016.