10 things we learned from Stephen Merchant's Desert Island Discs
Stephen Merchant is an award-winning writer, director, comedian and actor. He is the co-creator of The Office with Ricky Gervais which is credited with changing much of British comedy. He went on to make Extras and Life's Too Short. He also performs as a stand-up comedian and has written and starred in the HBO series Hello Ladies.
Here are 10 things we learned about Stephen Merchant from his Desert Island Discs:
1. He does lots of things – acting, writing, directing, producing – but what would he choose if he could only do one?
“I love this business that I’m lucky enough to be in. I just love every aspect of it, the creativity of it. I sometimes worry that I’m a jack-of-all-trades-master-of-none. If I’m acting I wish I was at home writing, and if I’m directing I’m wishing I’m acting because the directing’s very stressful and as an actor you get to sit in your trailer and somebody brings you a cup of tea. So I’m always impatient for whatever I’m not doing, if I had to choose a lane I think writing would be the thing that I find most satisfying. That’s got the most nutrients!”
2. How would he describe himself as a child?
“I think I was always quite a happy kid. My comedy heroes like Richard Pryor grew up with a tough life. I think he grew up in a bordello and his mother was a prostitute. He was obviously growing up in a time of racism and it fuelled the anger and passion in his comedy and I don’t have that really. I had quite a pleasant life. As far as I’m aware my mother wasn’t a prostitute and it was always quite nice.”
3. His dad is in The Office
Stephen’s father has a cameo role in The Office where he “plays the caretaker who will periodically walk into a shot and stare like a rabbit in headlights. Which occasionally he’ll get recognised for in a carpark at Asda which he’s very thrilled about. Plays it cool but you know he’s excited.”
4. He studied comedy classics as a child
Stephen grew up watching a golden age of television comedy. His dad introduced him to Laurel and Hardy and the Marx Brothers and they used to watch Fawlty Towers, Monty Python and Last of the Summer Wine together. “I would tape TV comedy shows and play them back,” says Stephen. “Sometimes I would even transcribe them and write out the script. I remember writing out the script of an episode of Some Mothers Do ‘Ave ‘Em which is an odd one to choose because it’s mainly Frank Spencer falling over and I don’t know what I thought I could learn from that one. I thought that maybe there was some sort of formula or some secret code or some way of unlocking the comedy secrets of the people I admired.”
I used to joke with him: ‘Open your mouth wider, Gervais, we can’t hear the words you’re saying!’
5. He was a mobile DJ in his youth
In his days as a mobile DJ he and his partner couldn’t afford to buy all the records that people wanted to hear so they’d tape the songs off the radio and try to fade out before it reached the bit with the Radio 1 DJ talking over the track. One such much requested track was Prince’s Raspberry Beret, Stephen’s second choice for his desert island. He would like to take the opportunity to apologise to anyone whose wedding he ruined.
6. Stephen met Ricky Gervais when he applied for a job at a new radio station
He met Ricky Gervais in 1997. He sent in his CV to the newly launched radio station XFM and Ricky Gervais read it. Stephen says: “I always joke with him that it was probably on the top of the pile because he was a very lazy man, so he called me up for an interview because he had got a job somehow as the head of speech. That was absurd, particularly if you’ve heard him speak. It’s not that he’s not a good speaker, he's just not a refined speaker. I used to joke with him: ‘Open your mouth wider, Gervais, we can’t hear the words you’re saying!’”
7. He trained at the ´óÏó´«Ã½
Initially he turned down a ´óÏó´«Ã½ training scheme because he was having so much fun with Ricky Gervais but having talked to his parents he called the ´óÏó´«Ã½ back and accepted the offer of a place on the trainee scheme. This is where he filmed what became The Office as one of his training projects. He learned radio and TV production and was sent to Nairobi to make a piece for the World Service.
8. What was the inspiration for The Office?
“At the time it didn’t feel like [producers] were doing anything different to what had gone before in the world of TV comedy,” says Stephen. “Things were still shot in front of a live audience, aside maybe for The Royle Family, and here comes a show that’s very dour and we used to joke that we’d drain the colour out of it so it looked like it was lying on the shelf at the ´óÏó´«Ã½ for years and they’d put it on to fill up some hours.”
9. How did they get such amazing guests to appear in Extras?
“We began to discover that these famous people were fans of The Office,” explains Stephen. “The idea that Samuel L. Jackson had got the DVD of The Office and had put it on one night in his slippers with his cocoa and had thought it was funny and was willing to do a show with us was extraordinary.”
10. He’s never met his all time comedy hero, John Cleese, but his parents have…
“My parents got into cruises as they got older and they were on a cruise ship from New York to London and John Cleese was on board and they were hoping to get a book signed for me. They asked somebody on the cruise if there was any way they could get it signed.”
On his parents return they played Stephen the camcorder footage they’d made of the voicemail message John Cleese had left on the phone in their cabin: “‘Hello there Mr and Mrs Merchant, I’d be more than happy to sign your book. I was just wondering is your Stephen Merchant the same Stephen Merchant who collaborated with Ricky Gervais on The Office? Because I’m an enormous fan and please pass on my best regards.’ I don’t feel I need to meet him now. That’s all I needed.”