Jump to content

Kevin Cecil

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kevin Cecil
Born1969 (age 54–55)
London, England
OccupationScreenwriter and television producer.
Alma materUniversity of Oxford
Period1993–present
GenreComedy, adventure, science fiction

Kevin Robert Cecil (born 1969 in London) is a British screenwriter.

Writing alongside Andy Riley (with whom he has been friends since attending Aylesbury Grammar School), he has won two BAFTA awards, the first for writing the Comic Relief one-off special Robbie the Reindeer in 2000, and the second for Black Books in 2005.[citation needed]

He has also written for The Armando Iannucci Shows, Armstrong & Miller, Little Britain, Trigger Happy TV, So Graham Norton, Smack the Pony and Spitting Image and on radio he co-created The 99p Challenge.[citation needed]

The second Robbie the Reindeer special, "Legend of the Lost Tribe", which Cecil and Riley co-wrote won an International Emmy for best children's programme in 2003.[citation needed]

Kevin also co-created and wrote a Sci-Fi comedy series for television entitled Hyperdrive. The first series aired on BBC2 in 2006, and the second series aired on the same channel in 2007. The programme starred Nick Frost, Kevin Eldon and Miranda Hart who was nominated for best newcomer in the British Comedy Awards in 2006 for her role in the programme.

An animated series Slacker Cats he and Andy Riley created was broadcast on the ABC Family Channel in 2007.[citation needed]

He has worked on a number of feature films including Gnomeo and Juliet, the Aardman adaptation of Gideon Defoe's The Pirates! in an Adventure with Scientists and The Corpse Bride (uncredited).[citation needed]

In 2013, he co-wrote Gangsta Granny.[1]

In 2016 he won a Writers Guild of America award for his work on Veep.[2]

He has also appeared in the episode of the IT crowd 'Something happened', where he starred as Norman the geeky keyboard player.

Awards and nominations

[edit]
Year Award Work Category Result Reference
2012 Annie Award Gnomeo & Juliet (shared with Kelly Asbury, Mark Burton, Andy Riley, Emily Cook, Kathy Greenberg, Steve Hamilton Shaw, John R. Smith and Rob Sprackling) Writing in a Feature Production Nominated
2014 Online Film & Television Association Award Veep Best Writing in a Comedy Series Won
2015 Primetime Emmy Award Outstanding Comedy Series Won
Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Series Nominated
2016 Writers Guild of America Award Comedy Series Won
Producers Guild of America Award Veep, Season Four Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Comedy Nominated

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Eames, Tom (24 October 2013). "Miranda Hart, Joanna Lumley join David Walliams's 'Gangsta Granny'". Digital Spy. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  2. ^ 2016 Writers Guild Awards Nominees
[edit]