Rock Profile
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Rock Profile was a British television show written by and starring comedy partnership Matt Lucas and David Walliams (both now widely known for the sketch show Little Britain).
The show comprises a series of spoof interviews, involving Jamie Theakston questioning Lucas and Walliams, who play famous musicians. The interviews are often bizarre and involve broad, unflattering caricatures or just downright fictional characteristics. They are often interspersed with videos by the featured artist, including humorous captions and congratulations from other impersonated celebrities.
Paul Putner appears in the second series as Robbie Williams, as well as Phil Daniels (in the Blur episode). Steve Furst plays Robin Gibb in the Bee Gees episode, and David Foxxe plays Nick Rhodes in the programme devoted to Duran Duran.
Rock Profile first appeared on the UK Play channel in 1999 with a second series following in 2000. A further six-episode series was aired on BBC2 in late 2001.
A special, Rock the Blind, followed Gary Barlow (Lucas) and Ronan Keating (Walliams) as they recorded a charity single. Ted Robbins appears as Pete Waterman, and Sara Cox as herself.
Examples of characters
- Ringo Starr (Walliams) believes himself to be Thomas the Tank Engine's representative on earth. He claims that Thomas has asked him to do both good and bad things.
- Bono (Walliams) is an irritating Englishman, who loves to phone Salman Rushdie and can't understand why his fellow U2 bandmates persist in speaking with an Irish accent. The Edge (Lucas) points out that it is because they were Irish.
- Elton John (Lucas) is a moody, temperamental primadonna.
- George Harrison (Lucas) speaks with a strong Indian accent and keeps a poppadum in his top pocket, yet cannot understand why people keep talking about his Indian influences. He also produces bizarre films plots, for example, one man's love for his sandal.
- Lee and H from Steps (Walliams and Lucas respectively) are portrayed as five-year-olds.
- Liam Gallagher (Walliams) is a put-upon house husband whose wife, Patsy Kensit (Lucas), constantly embarrasses him and ruins his 'hard-man' image by exposing him as a friend of Mary and Jeffrey Archer.
- Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees is portrayed as a bully who bosses his brothers Maurice (Lucas) and Robin around. As the episode goes on, Barry begins to resemble the Cowardly Lion for The Wizard of Oz. He even grows a tail.
- Geri Halliwell (Lucas) is a patronising moron who stalks and has delusions about marrying George Michael (played by both Lucas and Walliams on separate occasions).
- Paul McCartney (Lucas) is a scruffy, meat-eating Scouser who is sick to death of people asking about his solo-career. He announces "People keep asking me... what's the hidden message at the end of 'Simply Having a Wonderful Christmas Time'?... y'know, 30 years ago I was in a band called The Beatles... but no one ever wants to talk about that!". When Theakston, overjoyed at Paul's apparent willingness to talk about the Beatles, questions him on John Lennon, McCartney soberingly muses "Y'know the saddest thing? No-one ever mentions him."
- Dave Stewart (Lucas) of Eurythmics is portrayed as a mad scientist who claims to have created Annie Lennox (Walliams) — a creature similar to that from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein — from parts of corpses.
- Bez of The Happy Mondays is portrayed as a professionally trained dancer who went to the Ramhurst School, claiming that he was in the year above Darcey Bussell.
- Gary Barlow (Lucas) and Howard Donald (Walliams) from boy band Take That dream of reforming the band. Gary is portrayed as a mean-spirited bully, upon whom the child-like Howard waits hand and foot. When Theakston asks Gary if he still speaks to Robbie Williams, Gary responds "Yeah, I phone Robbie up every week — don't tell him it's me though".
- Graham Coxon of Blur (Walliams) is portrayed as a musically inept, paranoid pyromaniac who speaks in hushed tones until he catagorically states he didn't "start the fire".