Born:
November 03, 1971
in
Navan, Co Meath, Ireland
Best Known For:
Black Books and his award-winning stand-up comedy.
Early-life:
Dylan Moran was born in Navan, Co Meath, Ireland, on November 3, 1971. He attended St Patrick's Classical School in Navan, where he experimented early on with stand-up, with fellow comedians Tommy Tiernan and Hector Ó hEochagáin. After leaving school, he spent the next four years unemployed "drinking and writing bad poetry". After watching Ardal O'Hanlon and other comedians perform at Dublin's Comedy Cellar, he began his stand-up there in 1992.
Career:
In 1993, Moran won the So You Think You're Funny award at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. He went on to become the youngest person to win the Perrier Comedy Award in 1996 at the Edinburgh Festival when he was 24. In 2000, he starred in Black Books, a Channel 4 sitcom about a miserable, unsociable, drunken, chain-smoking, and disorganized book shop owner called Bernard Black. Based on Moran's original idea, the series was brought to life by co-writer and fellow Irishman Graham Linehan. Two more series followed, and his stand-up tours and DVDs remain best-sellers, while his movie career continues to blossom. On the big screen, he has appeared in Shaun of the Dead, A Cock and Bull Story, and Run, Fatboy, Run.
Quote:
"I can't swim. I can't drive, either. I was going to learn to drive but then I thought, well, what if I crash into a lake?"
Trivia:
He once worked for a week as a florist.