- Nacimiento
- Nombre de nacimientoDavid James Stuart Mitchell
- Altura1.82 m
- David Mitchell nació el 14 de julio de 1974 en Salisbury, Wiltshire, Inglaterra. Es un escritor y actor, conocido por That Mitchell and Webb Look (2006), Peep Show (2003) y Gun Shy (2017). Está casado con Victoria Coren Mitchell desde el 17 de noviembre de 2012. Tienen dos niños.
- CónyugeVictoria Coren Mitchell(17 de noviembre de 2012 - presente) (2 niños)
- NiñosBarbara Elizabeth June MitchellJune Violet Mitchell
- PadresIan MitchellKathy Mitchell
- He worked as Dictionary proofreader for a living before getting into entertainment writing.
- Studied History at Peterhouse, Cambridge University.
- Was a member of Cambridge Footlights, a contemporary of Robert Webb, Matthew Holness and Richard Ayoade.
- Father, with Victoria Coren Mitchell, of daughter Barbara Elizabeth June Mitchell, born on May 22, 2015.
- He once made Olivia Colman wet herself during a stage production of the "Miser" when the hilarious way he had tied his bow-tie made her lose her control from the laughter. As a revenge she wiped her legs on his costume.
- I've only ever bought one album for myself and it was "But Seriously" by Phil Collins, and if there's a better reason never to buy another album then I'd like to hear it.
- [on bankers] I think there's a lot of anger at them because I think basically not only have they cost us a lot of money but they've shown very little remorse. I've not heard bankers say sorry. I've heard a lot of bankers say it's time we stopped saying sorry but I've not heard them say sorry.
- [on Doctor Who (2005)] It's a children's programme; it's not for me, and I was a fool to think my opinion of it mattered. Though not as much of a fool as I would have been if I was an adult thinking that about the original series, which was proudly and unambiguously a children's show - whereas now, for some reason, we're all encouraged to weigh in. My parents never watched Doctor Who (1963) - it wouldn't have occurred to them to do so. They might have been fond of it, they might have said 'Oh yes, I used to watch that as a child'. What they wouldn't go on to say was '...and I still do now'. Whereas these days, a huge amount of stuff seems to be aimed at children, but with the assumption that adults - and not just parents - will consume it too. No-one in the 1920s surely, was reading Winnie the Pooh unless they had a child to read it to.
- [on Downton Abbey (2010)] I think it's terribly written but still enjoy watching it and I don't know why. I'll watch and think: 'No one would say that, why's that happening?' Maybe the enjoyment of the sets and costumes is enough to sustain it.
- I've never gone in for one of the Personality Tests, but largely because I think I'm too feeble-minded and I'd probably become a Scientologist. I'd probably go in all "Oh, this is going to be absolute nonsense" and then they'd say something and I'd go "Ah!" So I'm afraid of them, basically.
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