Eddie Kadi

Eddie Kadi (born 18 May 1983 in Kinshasa) is a British-Congolese comedian, presenter, actor and MC.

Early life

A resident of Little Ilford School, West London since 1992, he is a past student of Fulham Primary School, Henry Compton Secondary School, William Morris Academy and Kingston University from which he graduated with BSc Honours in Media Technology.[1][2] Kadi served as President of the Afro-Caribbean Society at the University.[3]

Comedy

In 2006 Eddie Kadi won the BECA Award for Best Comedy Newcomer. He went on to stage a series of sold-out solo concerts – two of those during 2009 at the indigO2.[2][4] In September 2010, he performed at London's O2 Arena where he sold out the 13,000 arena according to his numerous (2) appearances on Fighting Talk.[4] He has also released a 4 disc DVD collection, and completed numerous radio, television and film projects.

Broadcasting

Kadi is a presenter on BBC 1Xtra and co-presents the OHTV series It’s All Good.[5] He has fronted documentaries with Current TV in France and MTV Base in Mali as well as station idents for MTV and the BBC. He appeared on Fighting Talk on 27 November 2010, where he finished in the traditional debutant's position of last. He made his second appearance on 22 January 2011 and was involved in provoking Tom Watt to produce the immortal line “I’m not here to talk about real-estate”. In February 2016, he came second on his first episode of BBC quiz show QI.

Acting

Kadi's work as a voiceover artist includes a characterisation in the Tiger Aspect[6] produced animated TV series Tinga Tinga Tales. His film projects include the lead role in the short film Area Boys,[7] shot in Africa and premiered at the 51st London Film Festival.[8]

Eddie also appears as Reggy in the film Shank,[9] set for release in 2010.

Eddie has also made an appearance in the UK movie Anuvahood released in March 2011

Music

Eddie Kadi has also featured vocally alongside top UK Hip Hop Artist Sway and worked with Senegalese rap artist Akon on his "Konfidence Foundation" in Senegal.[10]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 29, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.