British comedian and television executive
Caroline Beaton (born 17 March 1969) is a British stand-up comedian, podcaster, writer and former TV executive.
Early life
Beaton grew up in Dorset , the daughter of two teachers and was the only girl in an all boys school .[citation needed ] She studied English and Drama at Goldsmiths and is a Master Practitioner in neuro-linguistic programming .[ 1]
Career
Beaton worked as a TV executive at MTV and Carlton TV responsible for shows including South Park and SpongeBob SquarePants and as a senior vice president at Viacom . While working at Comedy Central in 2015 she began performing as a stand-up comedian.[ 1] [ 2] According to her website:
It was while working for Comedy Central that Cally was nudged into the sphere of performance after a chance conversation with the late, great Joan Rivers , then 81, and so it was that as a 45 year old single parent, Cally first took to the stage.[ 3]
Beaton has appeared as a guest on BBC Two's The Apprentice: You're Fired , a panellist on BBC Two's QI , Richard Osman’s House of Games , BBC NI 's The Blame Game and Live at the Apollo Christmas Special . She has been heard on BBC Radio 4's The Museum of Curiosity , The Unbelievable Truth, Radio 4's The Now Show' ' and on BBC Radio 6, Times Radio , Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio London .
Cally Beaton performing at Live at the Apollo Christmas Special
At the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2016, she gained 4-star reviews, together with comedian Catherine Bohart . For her solo show at the 2017 festival, Super Cally Fragile Lipstick , she gained further 4-star reviews and won the Piccadilly Comedy Club "New Comedian Of The Year" 2017/18.
Her 2019 Edinburgh Fringe solo show Invisible , inspired by the statement by Yann Moix that women over 50 years of age were invisible to him, was listed as unmissable by the Daily Express and received four-star reviews from The Scotsman and Funny Women . Beaton was on Episode 19 of the 2019 series of Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast . She featured on the Daily Mirror ' s and the Evening Standard 's best jokes lists.[ 4] [ 5] [ 6] [ 7] [ 8] [ 9] [ 10] [ 11] [ 12] [ 13] [ 14]
In Spring 2021, Beaton launched Namaste Motherf**kers , a podcast that mixes the genres of comedy, self-help and business.
In Spring 2023, Beaton appeared on Countdown in Dictionary Corner.[ 15]
Beaton has also written for The Guardian and the Financial Times .[citation needed ]
Personal life
Beaton has a son, who has Asperger syndrome , and a daughter. She also used to sky dive and is fluent in Dutch. [ 7]
References
^ a b "British Comedy Guide" . British Comedy Guide . 17 August 2017.
^ Coia, Paul. " 'It's a show asking if you can be a woman in her forties and have it all': 10 questions for comedian Cally Beaton" . ; "Edinburgh Festival Guide" . 22 July 2017. ; "Having Great Shows is No Longer Enough: Beaton" . Bloomberg News . ; Beaton, Caroline (19 June 2015). "Why niche is the new normal" . Television Business International. ; "Broad City: Power Comedy" . MyMIP.
^ "About Cally Beaton" . callybeaton.com . Archived from the original on 13 February 2024. Retrieved 13 February 2024 .
^ "Cat Call" . 23 August 2016.
^ "Cat Call – Catherine Bohart and Cally Beaton" . 8 August 2016.
^ "Cally Beaton: Super Cally Fragile Lipstick" . 20 August 2017.
^ a b "Edinburgh Fringe 2017 reviews: Tom Allen / Cally Beaton / Lauren Pattison / Trumpageddon" . theartsdesk.com . 15 August 2017.
^ "News: Piccadilly Comedy Club New Comedian Of The Year – Results" . Beyond the Joke . 30 December 2017.
^ "Comedy review: Cally Beaton: Invisible, Assembly George Square Studios, Edinburgh" . The Scotsman .
^ McCaffrey, Julie (23 August 2019). "36 of the funniest one-liner jokes from Edinburgh Fringe Festival" . Daily Mirror .
^ Thompson, Jessie (9 August 2019). "The 25 funniest jokes from Edinburgh Fringe 2019" . Evening Standard .
^ Kitchener, Shaun (23 July 2019). "Edinburgh Fringe 2019: 37 unmissable shows at this year's festival" . Daily Express .
^ Willsher, Kim (7 January 2019). "French author, 50, says women over 50 are too old to love" . The Guardian .
^ "Funny Women 22nd August 2019" . 22 August 2019.
^ "Countdown" . Sky . Retrieved 13 June 2023 .
External links