British poet (born 1956)
Michael C. Burgess
Burgess in 2018
Born Michael Charles Burgess
(1956-12-08 ) 8 December 1956 (age 68) Nationality British Other names Michael Burgess Mike Burgess Byronik Baron Husk Burgess & Lane Alma mater London College of Communication Occupations Actor editor poet activist comedian Years active 1978–present Employer The Star-News Organization OutRage! Known for
Journalism
Political activism
Notable credits Movement Father Geoffrey Burgess Relatives
Hannah Burgess (great-great-great-grandmother)
Lord Byron (ancestor)
In office May 1990 – 4 September 1990
In office 29 March 2002 – 23 September 2004
Website byronik .com
Michael Charles Burgess (born 8 December 1956) is a British actor , poet , activist , comedian , and former editor of The Star-News who appeared in the films Friend of the World (2020), Hacksaw (2020), South of 8 (2016), and Twelve Views of Kensal House (1984). He helped assemble the Non-Stop Picket of South Africa House with the demand that Nelson Mandela be set free and is believed to be a descendant of Lord Byron .
Personal life
Burgess was born to Geoffrey Burgess, an Oxford Times freelance writer and accountant at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford . He and his father became the topic of an article for The Daily Telegraph after Christina Hardyment read Byron's Children by Susan Normington.
The Burgesses are presumed to be direct descendants of Lord Byron through Hannah Burgess, Byron's probable granddaughter and Geoffrey's great-great-grandmother. Hannah said she is the daughter of William Marshall, who claimed he was the illegitimate son of Byron.[ 1]
Career
Anti-Apartheid Movement
In the 1980s, Burgess was a City Group committee member, later reading The Leninist and aiding The Non-Stop Picket of South Africa House that called for Nelson Mandela 's release from prison.[ 1] He said the Picket became part of his daily routine and noticed early picketers lost their motivation and gave up.[ 2]
Burgess and Steve Stannard were elected co-treasurers for OutRage! in May, 1990 when it became a not-for-profit organization .[ 3] Stannard was ousted on September 4.[ 4]
From 2004 to 2011, Burgess performed in plays in San Diego County such as Arcadia , The Engagement of Marjorie and Hay Fever .[ 5] [ 6] [ 7] He acted in the films South of 8 (2016), Hacksaw (2020) and Friend of the World (2020).[ 8]
Journalism
In 1988, Burgess interviewed several British black gay men and women in an article he wrote for The Voice .[ 9] He became the editor of The Star-News in California, United States on March 29, 2002.[ 10]
In 2003, Burgess wrote a column about Steve Padilla , quoting him from a Mid-Bayfront speech at San Diego Country Club .[ 11] Padilla claimed Burgess made wrong interpretations about his statement.[ 12] [ 13] In 2004, Burgess gathered lawsuit information from City Council candidate Steve Castaneda who wanted legal action on his opponent, Dan Hom. After Burgess received hard copies of liens and court cases, his publisher told him to kill the story.[ 14] The next day, Burgess was removed from his duties as Editor.[ 15]
Poetry
Burgess is a Brixton bedsit poet[ 1] and his verse, Blue Rhapsody , was published in Once I Was a Washing Machine by Ken Worpole in 1989.[ 16] He talked about how difficult it is waiting for literature to be published for those that do not take up writing at a young age.[ 17] Another verse, The Victims , was published in the 1990 book The Cream of the Troubadour Poets by David Stuart Ryan.[ 18]
Publishing
In 2015, Burgess was editor and publisher for Damsels in Distress , Bailey Among The Angels and The Rican Eye Detective Agency by author Neil Raymond Ricco .[ 19] [ 20] [ 21]
Stand-up comedy
In 1986, Burgess did stand-up comedy as Baron Husk at Shepherd's Bush Pavilion with Ian Macpherson and Kevin Day ,[ 22] and the Bearcat Club in Twickenham with Rory Bremner , Phil Cornwell , and Arnold Brown .[ 23] On October 19, 1991, he did a show at the Hackney Empire with Tommy Cockles , Hattie Hayridge , and Mark Steel .[ 24] In 1994 and 1995, Burgess had a duo residency for Upstairs at the Redan in Queensway, London with John Lane,[ 25] hosting for comedians like Shaun Pye as Burgess & Lane .[ 26]
2023–present
In 2023, Burgess posted on social media, "The very idea of human trials for Elon Musk 's Neuralink chip is going to be a freak show that posterity will judge to be more horrific than the Holocaust ."[ 27]
Filmography
Short films and music videos
Year
Title
Role
Notes
2011
Stones of Fire
Lance Altman
48 Hour Film Project
2013
News Travels Fast
Prof. Michael
48 Hour Film Project
RAVEN: The American Dream
Reginald Grimes
2014
Albatross
Boss cop
48 Hour Film Project
GunzXGreen – "Jungle Music"
Evil white dude
Music video
New Mexico – "Alpha Male"
Dad
Music video
2017
Insurance
Jameson
by Rob Padilla Jr.
2018
Last Vacation
Ron
Stage credits
Accolades
Award
Year
Category
Title
Result
Notes
San Diego Press Club J-Awards
2002
Non-Daily Newspapers-Essay / Commentary / Opinion
Is that a banana in your pocket?
3rd Place
[ 32] [ 33]
Aubrey Awards
2006
Actor / Major Support / Comedy
Birthday Suite
Nominated
Published works
"Miriam Beadle" Jim Anderson , Black Tooth Press. 1987.
"Blue Rhapsody" Ken Worpole , Once I was a Washing Machine . Federation of Worker Writers and Community Publishers. 1989. p. 14. ISBN 0-906411-02-5
"The Victims" David Stuart Ryan, The Cream of the Troubadour Poets. Kozmik Press. June 30, 1990. ISBN 0-905116-194
References
^ a b c Hardyment, Christina (1995-06-29). "Byron's lost family: a poetic mystery" . The Daily Telegraph . p. 13. Retrieved 2023-08-26 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Brown, Gavin; Yaffe, Helen (2017). Youth Activism and Solidarity: The non-stop picket against Apartheid (1st ed.). Taylor & Francis . ISBN 9781138828865 – via Google Books .
^ Lucas, Ian (1998). OutRage!: An Oral History . London: Cassell & Co . p. 22. ISBN 9780304333578 – via Google Books .
^ "OutRage!: An Oral History | OutRage!" . 1999-02-06. Retrieved 2023-10-08 .
^ a b Dupuis, Kelley (2004-05-28). "Noel Coward comedy a hit at OnStage" . The Star-News . p. 9. Retrieved 2023-09-01 .
^ a b Saenger, Diana (2004-12-15). " 'The Engagement of Marjorie' winsome and fun". East County Gazette . p. 18.
^ a b Welsh, Anne Marie (2007). "Cygnet's revival of Stoppard classic combines wit, warmth" . San Diego Union Tribune . Archived from the original on 2010-09-19 – via Cygnet Theatre Company .
^ a b c d e "Michael C. Burgess - Rotten Tomatoes" . Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved 2023-10-08 .
^ Burgess, Michael (1988-01-19). "Why We're Proud to be Gay". The Voice . p. 19.
^ "Let's get fiscal" . The Star-News . 2002-03-29. p. 6. Retrieved 2023-09-01 .
^ Burgess, Michael C. (2003-02-14). "Mid-Bayfront may be Padilla's legacy" . The Star-News . p. 6. Retrieved 2023-08-24 .
^ Mallgren, Laura (2003-02-21). "Chula Vista mayor disowns country club quotes" . The Star-News . p. 3. Retrieved 2023-08-24 .
^ Mallgren, Laura (2003-02-21). "Chula Vista mayor disowns country club quotes" . The Star-News . p. 4. Retrieved 2023-08-24 .
^ Oakes, Amy (2004-09-22). "Financial dealings spotlighted in race" . The San Diego Union Tribune . p. B-10:1. ProQuest 272353912 . Retrieved 2023-08-26 .
^ "South County Opinion | Letters" . The San Diego Union Tribune (6th ed.). 2004-09-30. p. B-13. ProQuest 272372291 . Retrieved 2023-08-26 .
^ Worpole, Ken (1989). Once I was a Washing Machine . Federation of Worker Writers and Community Publishers. p. 14. ISBN 0-906411-02-5 .
^ 'Once I was a Washing Machine' . London: Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! . 1989. p. 14. ISSN 0143-5426 – via Internet Archive .
^ Ryan, David Stuart (1990). The Cream of the Troubadour Poets . Kozmik Press Centre. ISBN 0-905116-194 .
^ Ricco, Neil Raymond (November 21, 2015). Burgess, Michael (ed.). Damsels in Distress . Byronik. ASIN B018DBXEB4 .
^ Ricco, Neil Raymond (2015). Burgess, Michael (ed.). Bailey Among The Angels . San Diego, California: Byronik. ASIN B01A2NGDBE .
^ Ricco, Neil Raymond (2015). Burgess, Michael (ed.). The Rican Eye Detective Agency . San Diego, California: Byronik. ASIN B019R5RYKC .
^ "Conkers Cabaret" . Acton Gazette . 1986-04-04. p. 19. Retrieved 2025-04-06 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Baron act leaves crowd cold" . Horncastle Target . 1986-01-09. p. 9. Retrieved 2025-04-06 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Hackney Empire" . The Guardian . 1991-10-19. p. 92. Retrieved 2025-04-06 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Comedy Choice" . The Guardian . 1994-12-17. p. 140. Retrieved 2025-04-06 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Upstairs at the Redan" . The Independent . 1995-05-26. p. 53. Retrieved 2025-04-06 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Khan, Nilofer (2023-10-17). "Neuralink: Elon Musk's human-AI merger is an Orwellian nightmare. Here's why you should care" . Mashable ME . Archived from the original on 2023-10-22. Retrieved 2025-04-06 .
^ "12 Views of Kensal House" . BFI Southbank Programme Notes . 2022-08-18. Retrieved 2023-09-01 .
^ "Michael Burgess | BFI" . British Film Institute . 2023-08-29. Archived from the original on 2023-08-29. Retrieved 2023-10-08 .
^ Noonan, John (2023-04-21). "Friend of the World" . FilmInk . Retrieved 2023-09-01 .
^ "OnStage Playhouse - Current Show" . OnStage Playhouse . 2005-11-18. Archived from the original on 2005-11-18. Retrieved 2025-04-29 .
^ "The Glittering Prizes: A Winning Team" . The Star-News . 2002-11-01. p. 3. Retrieved 2025-04-29 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Is that a banana in your pocket?" . The Star-News . 2002-06-07. p. 6. Retrieved 2025-04-29 – via Newspapers.com .
External links