Griff Rhys Jones is taking his new show across his beloved Suffolk and Norfolk, including staging some charity events for East Anglia’s Children’s Hospices, before he begins a nationwide tour. He speaks to Rachel Banham.
When Griff Rhys Jones tells you he’s sorting his material for his latest tour and his colleagues have warned him that he doesn’t have five hours on stage, it somehow comes as little surprise.
Griff is known for his TV and stage work, yet he recalls his travels with such clarity and humour that he could surely easily be on stage all night and still hold an audience spellbound.
He appeared in Not The Nine O’Clock News in the early 1980s and enjoyed more success with Alas Smith and Jones with the late Mel Smith. More recently, he has been known for his TV travel documentaries. But Griff is also a born storyteller.
Now he has a new live show, ‘Where Was I?’, which takes as its starting point some of his personal jaunts from the past 15 years. He has sailed a boat to St Petersburg and around the Med. He has travelled in Morocco, the Galapagos, India and Australia. But mostly he has ventured forth to work for TV, making Greatest Cities, A Slow Train to Africa, In Search of the Black Rhino, Burma and The Forgotten Army, several series of Three Men In A Boat and programmes on mountains, rivers, lost routes and tribal art.
Griff says: “I realised, when I came to tot up all the programmes I’ve made about travelling around recently, that I’ve done an awful lot and I’ve been all over the world.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2017-Ausgabe von Let's Talk.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2017-Ausgabe von Let's Talk.
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