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RIP Rik Mayall

'Happy, healthy Mayall had seizure'

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Rik Mayall was happy and healthy in the hours before his death, according to his Comic Strip Presents colleague Peter Richardson, whose son was one of the last people to see the actor alive.

Richardson, who directed Mayall in a series of TV shows, said the 56-year-old was "such a star".

He told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme that his son saw him around half an hour before he died at his London home yesterday.

He said: "He was happily chatting away and it was very quick and we still don't quite know what happened but it was a seizure of some sort."

Mayall, who leaves his wife, Barbara, and three children, Rosie, Sidney and Bonnie, survived an almost fatal quad bike accident in 1998 which left him in a coma for several days.

Richardson said: "H e had 16 years after the quad bike and at the time I don't think people thought he would survive that but he lived for another 16 years and it was just shocking that he went - he was so happy and seemed very healthy when he did go."

Mayall shot to fame playing poetry-writing anarchist Rick in The Young Ones, and enjoyed a glittering career which saw him appear in Britain's best-loved shows including Blackadder and Bottom.

Richardson said the star "loved playing the bad boy", but was very different in real life.

He said: "He always wanted to be a rebel but in fact was a lovely family man who did the washing up and was just a very warm person and not as selfish and vain as he liked to make out really."

Close friend and long-time collaborator Adrian Edmondson led the tributes to Mayall, saying he felt privileged to have shared "carefree stupid days" with him at Manchester University, where the pair studied.

He said: "There were times when Rik and I were writing together when we almost died laughing. They were some of the most carefree stupid days I ever had, and I feel privileged to have shared them with him. And now he's died for real. Without me. Selfish bastard."

Stephen Fry, who also starred in Blackadder, said on Twitter: "Simply distraught to hear of the death of Rik Mayall. An authentic comedy genius and a prince among men."

Ben Elton, who was also a university friend of Mayall, said: "I owe him so much. He changed my life utterly when he asked me to co-write The Young Ones with him and he was with me on the day I met my wife. He always made me cry with laughter, now he's just made me cry."

Mayall's Young Ones co-star, Nigel Planer, told the BBC he was "very, very sad and upset that we've lost Rik, who was inspirational, bonkers, and a great life force".

He described Mayall as "a brilliant comedian and someone who made everyone else's lives more fun. He will be really, really missed".

Student Rick in The Young Ones - a pompous wannabe anarchist who loved Cliff Richard - was one of Mayall's best-known characters.

Sir Cliff, who in 1986 recorded a charity version of his hit single Living Doll with the show's cast for Comic Relief, paid tribute to Mayall, saying : "I became a fan of his when he was in The Young Ones show and was always thrilled when he used my name during his series.

"I am so sad at his parting."

It is not yet known what caused Mayall's unexpected death and his wife Barbara Robbin - who is understood to have found his body at their home in Barnes, south west London - told the Daily Mirror she had no idea what had caused his death and would have to wait for a coroner's report.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said officers were called by London Ambulance Service to a house in Barnes where "a man, aged in his 50s, was pronounced dead at the scene".

He added that the death was not believed to be suspicious.

Mayall was born in Harlow, Essex, to drama teacher parents and launched his comedy career on stage in a duo, The Dangerous Brothers, with Edmondson.

He also appeared as the swashbuckling Lord Flashheart in Blackadder and played the conniving Conservative MP Alan B'Stard in The New Statesman.

http://news.uk.msn.com/uk/happy-healthy-mayall-had-seizure-1
 
One of his last pieces of work;

Don't Fear Death

Fucking dark, ironic - and funny.
This was posted today on Richard Metzger's blog Dangerous Minds:
I thought him the funniest, most joyous and fearless comic I’d ever seen, and someone who was admirable because of that. He never stuck with the “a man walked into a bar” jokes,” or easy targets of politics that many of his contemporaries did, or even tried to win over the audience and pick on people for a cheap laugh, no. Rather, Mayall made himself the focus of the comedy, he was his own punchline, and as such was exuberant, joyful, yes often juvenile, and daft, but never, ever dull.

One of the last things Rik Mayall did for TV before his untimely death was to voice an animation for Channel 4 called Don’t Fear Death. Written and produced by Louis Hudson and Ian Ravenscroft, this three-minute animation explores the “benefits” of being dead, ironically suggesting that death “is your passport to complete and utter freedom. No pulse, no responsibilities. Carpe mortem – seize death.”
http://dangerousminds.net/comments/rik_mayall_in_dont_fear_death_one_of_his_final_works
 
I'm not far from Barnes & I know a gardner who did some one-off fencing work a few years ago (probably about 10) for these guys & by his account Rik Mayall was as funny in real life as on TV but also a true gent.

Yep rings true, a family friend worked in a hotel he was a guest at when she was a student, he said "Hello, hotel lady person" or something like that to her, in his inimitable Rik voice.
 
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No, I'm not slagging the man, I'm slagging his work. Big difference. He wouldn't have wanted everyone licking his arse and saying it smelled nice.

Am I saying something so outlandish here? That he repeated the same act for decades? Didn't anyone else notice it? Are you saying you actually liked drop dead fred?
you implied that his career ended with drop dead fred...

alasdair
 
No, ddf was just an example from 9 years later where he was still using the young ones persona. I could've said he was doing the Bottom stage show in at least 2003 which was a good 2 decades later using the same schtick. But I'm not knocking it - he had a wife and 3 kids to feed. A mans got to do what a mans got to do etc
 
The thing about artists with popular - or particularly cult - followings - is that if you change your schtick, people give you grief for it.
Performers often get labelled sell-outs, told they've lost 'it' or whatever else, if they change or develop their style.
You're selecting particular programs where he used a comedic persona that pre-dates the Young Ones, which helped establish him (as well as his collaborators in making the Young Ones - such as Ben Elton, Adrian Edmonson, Alexei Sayle - now successful and well known writers, actors, comedians) - in television; which has never been the most accessible medium for young, inexperienced writers.
Like it or not, the Young Ones was very culturally significant in British comedy and television.
Why abandon a style he created and found great success with?
As an actor - like so many others, he may well have become typecast. This is a curse for so many in that game; the fact that he was able to have a career and a passionate following that spanned his entire adult life is some kind of testament to him doing something right.
There are plenty of examples of other work he did (be it comedic acting roles such as Alan B'Stard in The New Statesman, narration, voice-overs and children's storytelling amongst other things)
I don't know Mayall's career history to reference everything he worked on, but saying he did the same thing for decades is debatable.

Bringing up the "feeding his wife and kids" thing is just a patronising way of feigning some acknowledgement of his work, whilst criticising his artistic integrity.

Which was it - did he "sell out", or stick with the "same persona" he used in the Young Ones, like some kind of one-trick-pony?

You can't please everyone - and his style of humour clearly polarised audience responses.
to annoy some - and amuse (a great many) others. Bill Hicks was equally challenging to many audiences, as is every comedian worth his or her salt in modern times.
It's fine if you don't like his work, but to claim you are not denigrating the man - just his work - seems more than a little defensive, and inaccurate.
If you are going to now bring up his work with the Bottom stage show in the early 2000s - which was a few years after he was very nearly killed in a quad bike accident, you are getting into cheap-shot territory as far as criticism goes.

Several reports I've read today have mentioned the brain injuries he suffered, and the cognitive impairments that resulted, including his memory - something that is pretty vital for a stand-up comedian or an actor.
You claim you're not knocking him, but it certainly comes across that way.

Matters of opinion and taste in the arts are simply that - but what you're saying, and the way you are defending it dont seem really consistent.

Kicking a guy when he's down is one thing - and I'm not accusing you of that, I just think it is disappointing that someone always has to say negative shit about individuals that are the subject of a tribute thread.
Of course life would be very dull if we all liked/enjoyed the same forms of entertainment - and as far as these things go, this is hardly a serious matter.
If we were all bound to strict rules of politeness when it comes to showing respect for, and not speaking ill of, the dead - conversation would be a real drag.

It's fine if you don't like his work, but your criticisms are quite petty considering the guy almost had his life support turned off ~15 years ago, and battled through those years to recover and continue working - which he did.
All I am really suggesting is that a little respect would show a level of dignity that bluelight has been lacking somewhat lately. Then again, maybe nothing has changed, but lots of people have been dying so it has been more noticeable.
Either way, I think Rik was a good guy and will miss his unique style and humour.
 
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The thing about artists with popular - or particularly cult - followings - is that if you change your schtick, people give you grief for it.
Performers often get labelled sell-outs, told they've lost 'it' or whatever else, if they change or develop their style.
You're selecting particular programs where he used a comedic persona that pre-dates the Young Ones, which helped establish him (and his collaborators in making the Young Ones - such as Ben Elton, Adrian Edmonson, Alexei Sayle - successful and well known writers, actors, comedians - in television; which has never been the most accessible medium for young, inexperienced writers.
Like it or not, the Young Ones was very culturally significant in British comedy and television.
Why abandon a style he created and found great success with?
As an actor - like so many others, he may well have become typecast. This is a curse for so many in that game; the fact that he was able to have a career and a passionate following that spanned his entire adult life is some kind of testament to him doing something right.
There are plenty of examples of other work he did (be it comedic acting roles such as Alan B'Stard in The New Statesman, narration, voice-overs and children's storytelling amongst other things)
I don't know Mayall's career history to reference everything he worked on, but saying he did the same thing for decades is debatable.

Bringing up the "feeding his wife and kids" thing is just a patronising way of feigning some acknowledgement of his work, whilst criticising his artistic integrity.

Which was it - did he "sell out", or stick with the "same persona" he used in the Young Ones, like some kind of one-trick-pony?

You can't please everyone - and his style of humour clearly polarised audience responses.
to annoy some - and amuse (a great many) others. Bill Hicks was equally challenging to many audiences, as is every comedian worth his or her salt in modern times.
It's fine if you don't like his work, but to claim you are not denigrating the man - just his work - seems more than a little defensive, and inaccurate.
If you are going to now bring up his work with the Bottom stage show in the early 2000s - which was a few years after he was very nearly killed in a quad bike accident, you are getting into cheap-shot territory as far as criticism goes.

Several reports I've read today have mentioned the brain injuries he suffered, and the cognitive impairments that resulted, including his memory - something that is pretty vital for a stand-up comedian or an actor.
You claim you're not knocking him, but it certainly comes across that way.

Matters of opinion and taste in the arts are simply that - but what you're saying, and the way you are defending it dont seem really consistent.

Kicking a guy when he's down is one thing - and I'm not accusing you of that, I just think it is disappointing that someone always has to say negative shit about individuals that are the subject of a tribute thread.
Of course life would be very dull if we all liked/enjoyed the same forms of entertainment - and as far as these things go, this is hardly a serious matter.
If we were all bound to strict rules of politeness when it comes to showing respect for, and not speaking ill of, the dead - conversation would be a real drag.

It's fine if you don't like his work, but your criticisms are quite petty considering the guy almost had his life support turned off ~15 years ago, and battled through those years to recover and continue working - which he did.
All I am really suggesting is that a little respect would show a level of dignity that bluelight has been lacking somewhat lately. Then again, maybe nothing has changed, but lots of people have been dying so it has been more noticeable.
Either way, I think Rik was a good guy and will miss his unique style and humour.

Like

Evey
 
Rik Mayall suffered heart attack after jogging: Comedian's wife reveals he died from 'an acute cardiac event' after returning from a morning run

Announcement from Barbara Mayall follows 'inconclusive' post-mortem
West London Coroners Court said more tests will have to be carried out
The 56-year-old was found dead at his home in Barnes, London, on Monday
His wife Barbara said she did not know how The Young One's star died

Actor and comedian Rik Mayall had a heart attack after coming back from his usual morning run, his wife said today.
Barbara Mayall said the 56-year-old suffered an 'acute cardiac event' when he returned to his home in Barnes, south-west London, on Monday.
She said: 'We now know that our darling Rik suffered an 'acute cardiac event' at our home around midday on June 9th.
'He had just returned from his usual run and many people had seen him that morning.'
Mrs Mayall thanked the press 'for their discretion' and 'all the wonderful coverage', adding: 'It would have made him very happy.'
She added: 'I am sure that you all know Rik's response would be something along the lines of....."well thanks very much all of you.............now f*** off!!!"'
The announcement from his devastated wife came just hours after a post-mortem into his death proved inconclusive.
Earlier today, a spokesman for West London Coroners Court said today that more tests will have to be carried out to determine exactly how the 56-year-old died.
Yesterday fans began an online campaign to get his unreleased World Cup song to number one.
DJ Jon Morter, who calls himself the ‘charts hijacker’, has appealed to people on Facebook to get the 'lost' track, Noble England, to the top of the charts.
Speaking yesterday he urged people to buy Mr Mayall's song which features him reciting the stirring speech from Shakespeare's Henry V over a football chant.
The track, which he recorded for the 2010 tournament, failed to chart initially, but it jumped 27 places overnight according to data from the Official Charts Company and is now just outside the top 10 at number 11.
Just a day before he was found dead at his home, Mr Mayall was photographed walking his dog.
Following the Blackadder star's death, his wife, said he had a 'strong heart' and added: 'I don't think it was a heart attack, but we just don't know until the coroner's report.
The mother of Mr Mayall's children, Rosie, 28, Sidney, 26, and Bonnie, 18, said: ‘Maybe he had a fit, maybe it was his heart. We just don’t know.’
His devastated family used social media in the aftermath to pay tribute to the ‘wonderful, generous, foul-mouthed’ comedy star.
As friends revealed that Mayall appeared happy and healthy only half an hour before his death, his daughter Bonnie, 18, wrote: ‘My dad was loved not only by my family, but by many, many others.
article-2656159-1EA4BFF300000578-100_306x489.jpg


‘We will never forget him and neither will the world. RIP to the man, the myth, the legend – my wonderful, generous, foul-mouthed and hysterical father. My idol now and forever. We love you daddy.’
Their tributes came after family friend and Comic Strip founder, Peter Richardson, 62, told how his son spoke to Mr Mayall just half an hour before he died, saying he 'chatted away happily' and 'seemed so happy and so healthy'.

Mr Richardson, 62, spoke of his 'shock' at his friend's sudden death, and added: 'We still don't know quite what happened, but it was a seizure of some sort. It was very quick.'
Referring to Mr Mayall's 1998 quad bike accident, which left him in a temporary coma, Mr Richardson said: 'Well, he had 16 years after the quad bike - at the time I don't think people thought he would survive that.
'But he lived for another 16 years, and it was just shocking that he went: he was so happy and seemed very healthy when he did go.'

Speaking Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Richardson added: 'He's got a very wonderful family, he was a very loving father. All I can say is Rik's had a very happy life.'
A Scotland Yard spokesman confirmed that police officers were called by the London Ambulance Service to a house in Barnes, south-west London, at around 1.20pm on Monday where a man in his fifties was pronounced dead at the scene.
A London Ambulance Service spokesman said: 'We sent two single responders by car, an advanced paramedic and an ambulance crew to the scene.
'Sadly, the patient died at the scene.'

[video]http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2656159/Post-mortem-examination-death-Rik-Mayall-proves-inconclusive-online-campaign-fans-leads-World-Cup-song-heading-number-one-week-death.html#v-3619018836001[/video]
 
That sums him up, i think he practically single handeldly invented that kind of comedy (with a little help from ben elton and ade edmonson). Really sad that he died at no age at all. That's 2 of my favourite comedians who were at their peak during my teens dead now (Mel Smith being t'other). God i feel older and older every time i hear some public figure from my youth has died.

Most cruelly ironic that doing something that should in theory have benefitted his health and life expectancy ended up killing him in his middle age. :\ Whilst Tony Benn who famously declared that he NEVER did ANY physical exercise at all and smoked a pipe lived to be 88 or something like that.
 
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I didn't think Rik looked the picture of health in the pic of him they took the day before he died. Big gut hanging over his belt - what he was doing running on what could have been a pretty hot day god only knows.
 
^ Why does anybody run on a hot day? Or a cold day? Or a windy day? Or a wet day? Or any day really? Presumably cos they want to go for a run. Think everytime I've seen stock footage of Rik Mayall he's jogging for some reason. Very bad for you. Fella that popularised it in the 70s died whilst jogging didn't he? Probably a myth but sounds about right. All that jiggying about can't be good for a person.

Was/am a big fan of Rik Mayall and pretty much all he's done. Yes there is a certain similarity between a number of his series (the ones with Ade Edmonson anyway) but that's cos he (or they) were bloody good at it. I used to love silent films when I was a nipper - slapstick, silliness and stunts kinda things - and would say it's much the same only with nob gags. What's not to like?

RIP to a great guy.

This just showed up on my feed today:


Don't watch if tripping - I suspect that would be a Bad Thing. All those 90s video effects are a bit nauseating. As are all the standard drug myths (heroin in ecstasy, strychnine in acid) but the odd bit is it does rather appear to recommend people take mushies if they are going to take anything. Apparently bad trips are rare and they probably won't kill you. Often. Very odd, very 90s. The apparent drug-using yoofs seem to be actors too - sure I recognised several of 'em from various bobz. Most seemed rather clueless and unconvincing cast as they are as wall to wall druggies who have tried everything, been addicted to everything, now aren't addicted to anything but still take drugs whilst saying they're both brilliant and terrible. Gotta <3 drug "info" campaigns <3
 
I tend to agree but there are some weirdos out there :sus:

In general Rik Mayall-related news, just finished first episode of a documentary series he did about levels of violence over time - Violent Nation. Never saw it at the time but is interesting enough. It never ceases to amaze me how unrelated to reality so many folks' outlook on the world is.
 
Cheers for that, needed something interesting and easy on the brain - looks just the ticket.
 
Rik Mayall makes top 10 with 2010 Word Cup song Noble England following social media

The comedian died on Monday aged 56 and despite a post-mortem proving 'inconclusive', his wife said he died from an "acute cardiac event"

Rik-Mayall-Main.jpg


Comedian Rik Mayall has made the top 10 with his 2010 Word Cup song Noble England following his death on Monday.

The Young ones star was found dead by wife Barbara at their southwest London home, and while a post-mortem examination proved 'inconclusive', she has since said her husband died from an "acute cardiac event".

Following a social media campaign this week, the track - which was originally recorded for the last World Cup and failed to chart the first time around - has gone in at number seven.

Mayall said of the track in 2010: "Football chants are one of the great traditions of following football and Shakespeare is also part of our national heritage.

"It seemed only natural that they should go together.

"I'm doing my bit, just like every other Englishman. As we stand shoulder-to-shoulder, doing out bit, stiff upper lip - apart from when you're screaming out the lyrics to Noble England."

Rik-Mayall.jpg


Rik with his wife Barbara

The campaign to get the song into the charts was kicked off by Jon Morter - the man behind Rage Against The Machine's victory over X Factor winner Joe McElderry in the 2009 Christmas number one race, the Official Charts Company said.

Barbara Mayall said her family had received "thousands and thousands of messages of condolence" from around the world.

She said: "We always knew that Rik was well loved but we are all overwhelmed by so many joining us in our grief."

Rik's youngest daughter paid a touching tribute to her dad this week too, describing him as "my wonderful, generous, foul mouthed and hysterical father".

Writing on Facebook, his daughter Bonnie Mayall, 18, said : "My dad was loved not only by my family, but by many many others.

"We will never forget him and neither will the world.

Rik-Mayall-and-Family.jpg


With his loving family

"R.I.P to the man, the myth, the legend - my wonderful, generous, foul mouthed and hysterical father. My idol now and forever.

"We love you daddy."

The couple had three children, Rosie, 28, Sidney, 26, and 19-year-old Bonnie.

Meanwhile, former X Factor contestant Ella Henderson has described going straight in at number one on the official singles chart as "incredible".

And the official anthem of the World Cup, We Are One (Ole Ola), by Pitbull, Jennifer Lopez and Claudia Leitte is at 29.

Ed Sheeran slides one place to number two with Sing, while Tiesto is new in at number three with Wasted FT Matthew Koma.

It is the Dutch DJ's highest charting UK single to date. The top five is completed by Stay With Me by Sam Smith at four and Waves by Mr Probz at five.



http://www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/rik-mayall-makes-top-10-3699678#ixzz34kMibWXQ
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