Hattie Hayridge (born 17 December 1959) is a British comedian and actress, best known for the role of the female version of Holly in Red Dwarf during the third, fourth and fifth series. She was described as a "cult figure in a beloved sit-com" by The List in 2007.
Career
Hayridge was a part of the late-1980s/early-'90s wave of alternative comedians on the British comedy circuit, appearing alongside Lee Evans, Jack Dee, Julian Clary, Paul Merton, amongst others. Julian Hall of The Independent later commented in August 2007, "Boom there it is, the deceptive and surprising edge for which she is renowned and applauded by so many of her fellow-comics."
Following a spontaneous five-minute spot in a London club, after "a bad day at the office", her first open spots were in a cabaret show (run by comics Cliff Parisi and Andy Lyndon) at the Edinburgh Festival in 1986, which then led to gigs on the London comedy circuit and an award for the Hackney Empire New Act of the Year (1987).
In 1989, after the departure of Norman Lovett from Red Dwarf, Hayridge took over the part of Holly, appearing in Red Dwarf series III, IV and V. She continues to be a guest at conventions and comic cons around the world.
Her television appearances include Have I Got News for You, Space Cadets with William Shatner and a winning performance on Celebrity Mastermind (2010). As a guest on Robert Llewellyn's Carpool in March 2010, Hayridge said that the previous year she was asked to tell a joke at US Immigration to prove her occupation as a comedian, she told the official: "The reason I'm here is I want to go to Disney Land. The nice bits obviously, not the touristy bits".[1]
Acting credits include Jonathan Creek (Series 3 episode 6, "The Three Gamblers")[2]Lexx[3] and various characters with Jon CulshawAlter Ego (1999) and Kevin Eldon, It's Kevin (2013). In 2015, Hayridge had a small cameo the film SuperBob.
Hayridge's 1997 autobiography, Random Abstract Memory tells the story "from her birth as a suspected appendicitis to her spontaneous leap into comedy".
In 2015 Hayridge deposited material at the University of Kent as part of the British Stand-Up Comedy Archive.[5] The collection contains DVD recordings of Hayridge's performances and a copy of her autobiography.[6]
References
^CarPool, [1], October 2010. Retrieved 14 August 2020
^"Hattie Hayridge Collection". Special Collections and Archives - University of Kent. 6 December 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2024.
^University of Kent Special Collections & Archives. "Hattie Hayridge Collection". University of Kent Special Collections & Archives Catalogue. Retrieved 15 May 2024.