Would I Lie to You?


1:20 pm - 2:00 pm, Saturday, March 28 on U&Dave ja vu (74)

Average User Rating: 4.80 (25 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favourites

About this Broadcast

-

Season 6, Episode 4

Team captain David Mitchell is joined by comedian Rhod Gilbert and actress Sally Phillips, while his counterpart Lee Mack welcomes TV presenters Des O'Connor and Tess Daly. Host Rob Brydon oversees proceedings as the contestants try to hoodwink their opponents with absurd facts and plausible lies about themselves on the comedy panel show


HD subtitles 16x9
Comedy Game Show/Quiz/Contest Movie/Drama Show/Game Show

Cast & Crew

-

David Mitchell (Team captain)
Lee Mack (Team captain)
Rhod Gilbert (Panellist)
Sally Phillips (Panellist)
Des O'Connor (Panellist)
Tess Daly (Panellist)
Peter Holmes (Executive producer)
Ruth Phillips (Executive producer)
Rachel Ablett (Series producer)
Karen Murdoch (Series producer)

More Information

-

No Logo

Did You Know..

-

David Mitchell (Team captain)
Born: July 14, 1974 in Salisbury
Best Known For: Being one half of hysterical duo Mitchell and Webb.
Early-life: Born David James Stuart Mitchell in Salisbury on July 14, 1974. He has a younger brother called Daniel. His parents were hotel managers who later moved to Oxford, where they became lecturers in hotel management. He claims he always wanted to be an actor or comedian, but told people he planned to become a barrister to please his parents. In 1993 David went to Peterhouse College, Cambridge, to study history. He performed with the famous Cambridge Footlights, eventually becoming the society president. It was in his first year at university that he met Robert Webb at an audition for a student pantomime production of Cinderella.
Career: After graduating, Mitchell worked an usher at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith. He and Webb took a number of shows to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival before being asked to write for Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller and for surreal comedy series Big Train. In 2001, they made their first sketch show, The Mitchell and Webb Situation, which ran for six episodes on the now-defunct cable channel Play UK. Their next project came in 2003, with the award-winning Channel 4 sitcom Peep Show. They've also worked together on That Mitchell and Webb Sound, That Mitchell and Webb Look and the film Magicians. Solo, Mitchell has appeared on 10 O'Clock Live and numerous panel shows, including Would I Lie to You?, where he's a regular team captain. His autobiography, Back Story: A Memoir, was published in 2012.
Quote: 'I think, fundamentally, the people I want to make laugh are British. I can't ever imagine living abroad.'
Trivia: He writes columns for The Observer and The Guardian.
Lee Mack (Team captain)
Born: August 04, 1968 in Southport
Best Known For: His role as namesake Lee in BBC comedy Not Going Out.
Early-life: Born Lee Gordon McKillop in Southport, Manchester. He lived with his parents above a pub before their divorce and he relocated to Blackburn. He left school at sixteen and worked as a stable boy and a bingo caller before his talent for performing was realised. He joined Pontin's as a Bluecoat but was sacked for shouting profanities at the audience and going on stage drunk. He entered an open-mike competition in 1994 and his talent was so obvious that he was to become a full-time comic within 18 months.
Career: His success as a stand-up was crowned when he won an award at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. He came to the attention of TV bosses after a stint on the radio. Lee was cast in The Sketch show alongside long-term collaborator Tim Vine. After a short-lived stint presenting They Think It's All Over, Mack and Vine began work on Not Going Out. The series revolves around two friends with opposite backgrounds and personalities, much like the two comics themselves. Mack has recently become a regular on comedy panel shows such as Would I Lie to You? and Have I Got News for You. He also has sell-out tours and best-selling DVDs to his name.
Quote: 'I'm not as bothered about being as cool as I was 10 years ago. I quite like the idea of being phenomenally uncool.'
Trivia: In June 2012, Mack was one of the comperes at the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Concert outside Buckingham Palace.
Rob Brydon (Host)
Born: May 03, 1965 in Swansea
Best Known For: His chat show and Gavin & Stacey.
Early-life: Born Robert Brydon Jones in Swansea, South Wales, on May 3, 1965. His early years were spent in Baglan near Port Talbot before he and his family moved to Porthcawl. He attended two secondary schools, one alongside Catherine Zeta-Jones, the other with Ruth Jones. Under the guidance of his drama teacher at the local comprehensive school, his interest in acting grew, leading to him attending The Welsh College of Music and Drama in Cardiff. During the second year of his course, he quit to work for BBC Wales and enjoyed six years of presenting work on local TV and radio stations.
Career: While still presenting, Brydon ventured into comedy, and made ends meet by providing voices for adverts and animations. A small role in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels inspired him to make a short film of his comic characters; series of Marion & Geoff, A Small Summer Party and The Keith Barret Show followed. Other credits include Director's Commentary, Human Remains, Supernova, A Cock and Bull Story, Little Britain, Annually Retentive and Gavin & Stacey. He's also hosted his own BBC chat show and has chaired the comedy panel show Would I Lie to You? since 2009. In 2010, he starred alongside Steve Coogan in the partially improvised BBC Two sitcom The Trip and has since appeared in its follow-up.
Quote: 'I was always very good with girls, I could talk to them no problem at all. But I could never close the deal. You need Dutch courage to do that, to kiss them.'
Trivia: He released an autobiography, Small Man in a Book, in 2011.
Rhod Gilbert (Panellist)
Born: October 18, 1968 in Carmarthen
Best Known For: His brilliant performances on Live at the Apollo
Early-life: Born Rhodri Paul Gilbert in Carmarthen, Wales, on October 18, 1968. He has two siblings; their parents were both teachers. Rhod studied languages at Exeter University. On graduation he spent 18 months travelling around Australia before working as a qualitative researcher for various market research agencies in London. He got into professional comedy in 2002, after being nagged into taking a comedy course by his girlfriend. Within 18 months, he had won several different talent competitions.
Career: Gilbert was nominated for the Perrier Newcomer award for his first solo show in 2005 at Edinburgh entitled 1984. He has since performed worldwide, and was the first Western comedian to appear in Taiwan. He has featured several times on shows such as Mock the Week, Have I Got News for You, 8 Out of 10 Cats and Never Mind the Buzzcocks. Other TV projects include Live at the Apollo, Ask Rhod Gilbert and Rhod Gilbert's Work Experience. He also presents a weekly show on BBC Radio Wales and became the presenter of Never Mind the Buzzcocks in September 2014.
Quote: 'In the Bible, God made it rain for 40 days and 40 nights. That's a pretty good summer for us in Wales. That's a hosepipe ban waiting to happen. I was eight before I realised you could take a cagoule off.'
Trivia: Gilbert claims to have been so shy during his early days at university that he felt unable to eat in the students' canteen or befriend the guy living in the room next door.
Sally Phillips (Panellist)
Born: May 10, 1970 in Hong Kong
Best Known For: Smack the Pony
Early-life: Phillips was born in Hong Kong in 1970, the daughter of Tim Phillips, the chairman of the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club who host The Championships, Wimbledon. She was educated at the private Wycombe Abbey School, in Campbell House and then graduated from New College, Oxford with a 1st class degree in Italian. Keen for a career on the stage she was involved in nine consecutive Edinburgh festivals. Her first TV role was in Lee and Herring's Fist of Fun in 1994, shortly after followed by a cameo in Alas Smith and Jones.
Career: Her role as a receptionist in I'm Alan Partridge proved to be her big break and she was nominated for best female newcomer at the British Comedy Awards that year. She had a starring role in the short-lived 1999 British comedy series Hippies (with Simon Pegg and Julian Rhind-Tutt), and also co-created and wrote Smack the Pony, the all-female, double Emmy Award winning comedy show. She appeared in Bridget Jones's Diary as 'Shazzer', and has appeared in such success stories as Jam and Jerusalem and hit comedy Miranda.
Quote: 'Both my boys are obsessed with Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and I have spawned the greatest, tiniest Dick Van Dyke impersonators of all time. Me Ol' Bamboo has to be seen to be believed.'
Trivia: She has played the title role in Radio 4 sitcom Clare in the Community since 2004.
Des O'Connor (Panellist)
Born: January 12, 1932 in Stepney, London
Best Known For: His long-running chat show
Early-life: Desmond Bernard O'Connor was born on January 12, 1932, into an impoverished East End family. His mother was a cleaner, while his dad took whatever jobs came his way. O'Connor couldn't walk for several years of his early life following a car accident. His father encouraged him to walk by sitting across the room with pieces of banana and when the lad suggested he throw it to him, his dad replied: 'Bananas can't fly'. That became the title of his autobiography.
Career: Des was a winger for Northampton Town for three years before turning to entertainment. In the 1950s he appeared across the country in variety shows, and toured with Buddy Holly. In 1963 he was given his own series, The Des O'Connor Show, and has regularly appeared on prime-time TV ever since. Des also had an American TV show in the 1970s, which featured Jack Benny and Liberace, and has a huge following in Canada and Australia. He later co-hosted afternoon show Today with Des and Mel, alongside Melanie Sykes, and had a stint as the presenter of Countdown. More recently he appeared on stage in The Wizard of Oz.
Quote: 'Love, laughter and good health, there's nothing more to life than that, apart from enthusiasm - that's what I consider the oxygen of life.'
Trivia: He was awarded a CBE in 2008.
Tess Daly (Panellist)
Born: March 04, 1969 in Derbyshire.
Best Known For: Strictly Come Dancing.
Early-life: Helen Elizabeth Daly was born in Stockport on March 4, 1969, and grew up in Birch Vale near New Mills, Derbyshire. She went to Hayfield Primary School and New Mills Secondary school. She has a younger sister, Karen. After finishing her A Levels, Tess became a model and appeared in magazines and pop videos, including two for Duran Duran.
Career: Daly made her small-screen debut in 2000 as the host of the Find Me a Model slot on The Big Breakfast. She went on to present shows including Singled Out, Smash Hits TV, SMTV Live (with Brian Dowling), Back to Reality, and the first series of Make Me a Supermodel. Her big break came in 2004 when she began co-presenting Strictly Come Dancing with Bruce Forsyth. She also co-hosted Just the two of Us in 2006 with her husband, Vernon Kay. She became the main host of Strictly Come Dancing in 2014.
Quote: On her modelling career: 'I saw it all - eating disorders, drugs, young girls sitting on the knees of old, rich guys in nightclubs. A lot of it turned my stomach.'
Trivia: She released her first novel, The Camera Never Lies, in 2011.
Peter Holmes (Executive producer)
Ruth Phillips (Executive producer)
Rachel Ablett (Series producer)
Karen Murdoch (Series producer)

Before / After

-