Jump to content

James Lamont (writer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Lamont
BornJames Deon Lamont
15 June 1982 (1982-06-15) (age 42)
London, England
Pen nameJ. D. Lamont
OccupationScreenwriter
producer
Notable awardsBAFTA EMMY

James Deon Lamont, also credited as J. D. Lamont, (born 15 June 1982) is a British screenwriter and producer known for his frequent writing collaborations with Jon Foster.[citation needed] and for writing the "Paddington meets the Queen" sketch for the Platinum Jubilee.

Career

[edit]

Television & film work

[edit]

James Lamont and Jon Foster are currently writing Paddington in Peru, after having worked on the two previous movies Paddington and Paddington 2.

In 2021 Lamont and Foster worked with Jimmy Fallon on the NBC special 5 More Sleeps 'Till Christmas which was an adaptation of Fallon's book of the same title.

Alongside writing partner Foster, Lamont wrote the Cartoon Network animated series The Amazing World of Gumball, for which he won a BAFTA Children's Award in 2011 and 2012. They left the show shortly into the third season.

In 2019, he co-developed the animated television series The Adventures of Paddington along with Foster for which the pair won an EMMY. The show premiered on Gulli,[1] M6, and Piwi+ in France, Nick Jr. in the UK, and Nickelodeon internationally and he will direct the third film with Foster.

In 2016 the pair wrote and created their own E4 sitcom WASTED, featuring Sean Bean.

Lamont and Foster wrote episodes for Cuckoo a BBC sitcom featuring Greg Davies.

In 2013 the pair wrote The Harry Hill Movie, along with Harry Hill.

Online

[edit]

Lamont has written and performed for various online productions such as Ted or Dead for Channel Flip, Dom Jolly's Joy Stick, Dawn Porter's Bad Girls Guides, Ashen's Tech Dump,[2] Normal Activity,[3] Sleep Terrorist[4] and Big Noises.[5] He worked on a 30-minute webisode for Kit Kat Chunky in 2012.[6][7]

Awards

[edit]

Lamont, along with Jon Foster, won the 2011 and 2012 British Academy Children's Award for writing on The Amazing World of Gumball.[8]

They also won the Emmy for The Adventures of Paddington.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Les aventures de Paddington".
  2. ^ "God's Source Code". Ashen's Tech Dump. BBC Comedy.
  3. ^ "Normal Activity". BBC Comedy.
  4. ^ "Sleep Terrorist". James Lamont & Jon Foster. 2 October 2009.
  5. ^ "Big Noises - The Piano Drop". BBC Comedy.
  6. ^ Kit Kat Chunky on YouTube[dead link]
  7. ^ Foster, Jon (30 January 2012). "Chunkies". James Lamont & Jon Foster.
  8. ^ Bell, Matthew. "Jon Foster & James Lamont: Interview". BAFTA Guru.
[edit]