- Akmal Saleh
Infobox Comedian
name = Akmal Saleh
imagesize =
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pseudonym = Peter Saleh
birth_name = Akmal Abdul Malek Saleh
birth_date = 1964
birth_place =Egypt
death_date =
death_place =
medium =Radio ,television , stand-up comedy
nationality =Australia n
active = 1990–present
genre =
subject =
influences =
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spouse = Cate
domesticpartner =
notable_work =
website = http://www.akmal.com.au/
footnotes =Akmal Saleh ( _ar. أكمل صالح) (born 1964) is an
Australia ncomedian and actor. He was born inEgypt and arrived inSydney ,Australia with his family in 1975 at the age of 11. He has been performingstand-up comedy since the early 1990s and his live shows have toured comedy festivals both within Australia and internationally. He currently hosts the drive-time radio show "The Wrong Way Home" withCal Wilson andEd Kavalee on Nova, a slot he has held since early 2007. He has also made guest appearances on numerous Australian television shows.Background
Born in Egypt, Saleh moved to Sydney, Australia in 1975 at the age of 11. While his father Riyadh, a university professor, was fluent in English, neither Saleh nor his mother Marie could speak the language when they arrived. [cite web |author=Silkstone, Dan and Piera, Ebony | url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/little-english-but-plenty-of-scientists-and-entrepreneurs/2006/09/22/1158431902622.html | title=Little English but plenty of scientists and entrepreneurs |work=The Age |date=2006-09-23 | accessdate=2008-08-24] He grew up in Punchbowl,
New South Wales and describes himself as having been a quiet child who was "the class clown's assistant. I was the guy who got his props ready."cite web |author=Moses, Alexa | url=http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/07/18/1026898880312.html | title=Goodness, the Wright stuff's a real motivator |work=Sydney Morning Herald |date=2002-07-18 | accessdate=2008-08-24] He grew up in a "very right-wing fundamentalist Christian family", which he says contributed to his sense of humour. "My father... was a very witty man with a quick mind. My mother was neurotic and mad. I think the combination of those two turned me into who I am," he says. [cite web |author=Wyld, Ben | url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/Arts/Hes-the-bomb/2004/12/09/1102182408143.html | title=He's the bomb |work=Sydney Morning Herald |date=2004-12-10 | accessdate=2008-08-24]Saleh was 14 when his father died of a disease contracted years earlier when swimming in the
Nile River . Searching for something meaningful in his life, Saleh became very religious and joined theCoptic Orthodox Christian church. However, within a few years he says he grew resentful of the religion, finding it "corrupt and hypocritical".cite web |author=Lawson, Annie | url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/in-depth/our-fathers-who-art-inspirations/2006/12/18/1166290471388.html | title=Fathers lost |work=The Age |date=2006-12-19 | accessdate=2008-08-30] Saleh says that when he discovered comedy it "filled the void that religion left", and his disillusionment with Christianity became a subject of comedy in his stand-up routine from early on. [cite web |author=Staff writer | url=http://www.abc.net.au/queensland/conversations/stories/s1685952.htm?queensland | title=The Big Issue and Akmal Saleh |work=ABC Queensland |date=2006-06-13 | accessdate=2008-08-30]He began performing stand-up comedy in 1990, when he decided to take part in an Open Mike night at the Sydney Comedy Store. Prior to this, he started a number of university degrees and drove a
taxi . Saleh is married; his wife, Cate, is a social worker. He has said that they do not intend to have children, a decision he says which is probably influenced by his father's untimely death.Career
Saleh entered into stand-up comedy in 1990. For a time, he performed under the alias "Peter Saleh"—"so that people would think I was white," he says. "'Peter' seemed like a common name. 'Akmal' is such an awkward name, a very difficult name to remember."cite web |author=Romeo, Demetrius | url=http://standanddeliver.blogs.com/dombo/akmal_saleh/index.html | title=Sean Choolburra and Akmal Saleh |work=Stand and Deliver |date=2004-12-14 | accessdate=2008-08-24] In 1992 he co-wrote and starred in the show "All Aussies are Boofta" alongside fellow comedians
Anthony Mir andGary Eck , which enjoyed successful runs in various Sydney venues. This was followed by the live shows "Bound And Gagged" and "Hoot", the latter of which toured the 1996Adelaide Fringe Festival , theMelbourne International Comedy Festival , and theEdinburgh Fringe Festival . In 1999 the trio created the television show "The Fifty-Foot Foot Show" for Australia'sComedy Channel . [cite web |author= | url=http://www.akmal.com.au/pages/biography_split.html | title=Biography |work=Akmal.com.au |date= | accessdate=2008-08-30] Saleh was credited onscreen by his real name; he says he had not bothered to use his stage name because he did not expect that many people would watch an obscure cable television show. "But strangely enough, enough people saw it and saw me in the street and said, 'Hey Akmal, good show mate! Loved "The Fifty-Foot Show.'" He says he found it so much nicer to be called by his real name, and has performed under it ever since. Saleh has also collaborated with Mir and Eck on the 2002 film "You Can't Stop The Murders ", which he co-wrote and starred in.Saleh also performs solo stand-up shows and has toured numerous comedy festivals in both in Australia and internationally. He commonly jokes about his own ethnicity and negative stereotypes regarding Middle Easterners. However, he says that he does not want to become known as an "ethnic comic" and likes to be able to talk about "broad range of stuff". [cite web |author=Scott-Norman, Fiona | url=http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/03/24/1079939715658.html | title=Raw, racy and riotous |work=The Age |date=2004-03-25 | accessdate=2008-08-24] He says that he is most comfortable performing stand-up: "It's the thing that I do best. I'm not a radio guy. I'm a comedian doing radio." [cite web |author=Hargreaves, Wendy | url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/tv--radio/never-tired-of-comedy/2007/04/04/1175366249858.html | title=Never tired of comedy |work=The Age |date=2007-04-05 | accessdate=2008-08-24]
Saleh emerged on Australian radio in January 2007, filling in for
Merrick and Rosso on Nova for three weeks during the summer before receiving his own drive-time show. He was initially contracted to co-host the show alongside actorMatthew Newton , but Newton was unexpectedly dropped after news emerged that he was facing assault charges involving a former girlfriend and instead Saleh made a solo debut.cite web |author=Javes, Sue | url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/tv--radio/akmals-mission-impossible/2007/02/18/1171733604246.html | title=Akmal's mission impossible |work=Sydney Morning Herald |date=2007-02-19 | accessdate=2008-08-30] The show has since experienced several changes of co-hosts; as of February, 2008, Saleh co-hosts the drive shift with comedians Cal Wilson and Ed Kavalee. [cite web |author=Hargreaves, Wendy | url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/tv--radio/vega-sparkles-as-combos-settle/2008/01/29/1201369132047.html |title=Vega sparkles as combos settle |work=The Age |date=2008-01-31 | accessdate=2008-08-30]Saleh has appeared on numerous Australian television shows, such as "Rove Live", "
The Footy Show ", "The Glass House", "In Siberia Tonight ", "Thank God You're Here " , "Big Questions ", "Spicks and Specks " and "Good News Week ".ee also
*
List of Copts
*Egyptian Australian Notes
External links
*imdb name|id=0757962|name=Akmal Saleh
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