Arnab Chanda
Arnab Chanda is a 30 years old English born writer, producer, and actor.[1][2]
Career
He was born in England in Pontefract, but grew up in Saudi Arabia and the U.S. After graduating from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he started doing stand-up comedy in New York City, and after moving back to London in 2004, won the Jongleurs New Act Competition in 2005 and the Amused Moose Comedy Awards in 2006, and was nominated for Best Newcomer in the 2007 British Chortle Awards.[1][3] He stopped performing stand-up in 2010.
Performances
He has performed stand up on the Comedy Central UK shows The World Stands Up in 2007, Edinburgh & Beyond in 2007, and the Comedy Store in 2008, Russell Howard's Good News (BBC Three, Series 2, 2010), The Stephen K Amos Show (BBC Two, Series 1, 2010), and Chris Moyles' Comedy Empire (BBC Three, 2012) . He has also appeared on The Jon Richardson Show (BBC 6 Music), The Comedy Cafe with Janice Forsyth (BBC Scotland), Out to Lunch (BBC Radio 2), 28 Acts in 28 Minutes (BBC Radio 4), and "Many Questions" (The Guardian Unlimited Podcast).
His live performances include the Edinburgh Festival in 2006 in "The Comedy Bucket" (with Matthew Crosby, Joe Wilkinson, Al Stick, and Dave Nichols), "Tickets Still Available" with Greg McHugh (Edinburgh Festival, 2007),[4] Rich Fulcher's "Tiny Acts of Rebellion" (Edinburgh Festival, 2011), the Mighty Boosh Festival in 2008,[5] the Latitude Festival in 2007 and 2008,[6][7] the Leeds Festival in 2008, The Big Chill Festival in 2008. He was the tour support act for Simon Amstell from 2007–2009,[8][9][10] as well as Stephen Merchant in 2008.
Acting
His credits include Raj Puri in the ITV2 series Trinity (TV series),[11][12] Chanda in independent short film Chandide alongside Trinity (TV series) co-star Elen Rhys,[13] Edward in the BAFTA nominated independent film Black Pond (2011), Ned in Julia Davis's Hunderby (Sky Atlantic, 2012), Danny Bullet in series 2 of Noel Fielding's "Luxury Comedy" (2014), Kris in Series 1 of Dan Clark's How Not to Live Your Life on BBC Three, and was a writer/performer in Comedy Cuts (ITV2, Season 3), "Splitting Cells" (BBC Three), and co-wrote and acted in the short film "Old Sea Dog" (London Short Film Festival, 2012).
Writing
He was a staff writer for the MTV Europe Music Awards (MTV Int'l, 2010),[14] the BAFTA nominated BBC2 show Never Mind the Buzzcocks (Series 22, 2008), the MTV show "Celebrity Bites" (Co-Head Writer, Series 1, 2010), and has written for Dan Clark's How Not to Live Your Life (BBC Three, Series 2 (2009) and 3 (2010)), "Comedy Cuts" (ITV2, Series 3), and "Splitting Cells" (BBC Three).[15] He was also the writer of Chandide, which Trinity co-star Christian Cooke directed.
Producing
He became a Producer at BBC Radio Comedy in 2013, making Radio 4 series for John Kearns, Liam Williams,Alex Edelman Alem, as well as series 10 and 11 of NewsJack, and series 10 of Chain Reaction.
References
- 1 2 "Arnab Chanda: Comedian Profile".
- ↑ "LITERARY Book Reviews - The 4-ACO-DMT Issue".
- ↑ "edinburghtimes.co.uk" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 9, 2008.
- ↑ "A few of our favourite things".
- ↑ "The Kills and more join Mighty Boosh Festival".
- ↑ Deansway, Harry (19 July 2008). "Comedy preview: Latitude Festival, Southwold". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 25 April 2010.
- ↑ "Sold out Latitude ready for return".
- ↑ "Simon Amstell: Comedy Review".
- ↑ WP:journaltynetheatre
- ↑ "Simon Amstell + Arnab Chanda".
- ↑ "Trinity Characters".
- ↑ "ITV Press Centre".
- ↑ "Chandide" Vimeo
- ↑ MTV, 11 September 2011
- ↑ Comedy review: Simon Amstell The Scotsman, 3 November 2009