David Schneider
David Schneider was born in London, England, UK on May 22nd, 1963 and is the TV Actor. At the age of 61, David Schneider biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, and networth are available.
At 61 years old, David Schneider has this physical status:
David Schneider (born 22 May 1963) is an English actor, comedian and director.
Early life
David Schneider was born in London, England on 22 May 1963 to a Jewish family. He was educated at the City of London School, an independent school for boys in the City of London, before going to Exeter College, Oxford, where he studied modern languages, and studied for a doctorate in Yiddish Drama. During his time at university, Schneider performed a predominantly physical comedy act that contrasted with the trend towards stand-up comedy in live performance comedy in the 1980s. It was at this time that he met Armando Iannucci, who in 1991 recruited him for news-radio spoof On the Hour. He is an avid fan of Arsenal F.C.
Career
Shane Richie, Suzy Aitchison, Frances Dodge, and Lewis MacLeod (actor) appeared on BBC Sketch Show Up to Something (1990).
Schneider appeared on The Day Today, On the Hour's television spin-off, and also appeared in the spin-offs Knowing Me, Knowing You... with Alan Partridge and I'm Alan Partridge, where he played fictional BBC commissioning editor Tony Hayers. In 1994, he appeared in Mr. Bean as the judo instructor. Schneider wrote The Eleventh Commandment, a play for the Hampstead Theatre about a Jew marrying a gentile. He appeared in the late 1990s on the topical satire The Saturday Night Armistice (subsequently renamed The Friday Night Armistice), alongside Armando Iannucci and Peter Baynham. Schneider appeared in The Peter Principle, a BBC sitcom, in 1997 and 2000.
Schneider wrote the screenplay for the 2001 feature film All the Queen's Men, directed by Stefan Ruzowitzky and starring Matt LeBlanc and Eddie Izzard. Schneider has appeared on BBC Radio 4's The 99p Challenge, as well as in the BBC sitcom Gimme Gimme Gimme Gimme. He appeared in a few films, including The Saint, 28 Days Later, A Knight's Tale, and Mission: Impossible, in which he played the train's driver. Joseph Goebbels appeared in the satirical tongue-in-cheek comedy Churchill: The Hollywood Years in 2004. Schneider made Uncle Max, a series of 13 dialogue-free shorts for CITV in 2006, and he was the first lead actor. Schneider said he wanted to be "a human cartoon" and that they were focusing on slapstick humour.
He appeared in an episode of Hotel Babylon as a magician, not dissimilar to Tony le Mesmer, who appeared in an episode of Knowing Me, Knowing You... with Alan Partridge in April 2008. Blink's voice is provided by Schneider in the CBBC's One Minute Wonders series. In 2008, he appeared on BBC Three's Most Annoying People of 2008, relaying his observations of celebrities, including Prince William, Mark Ronson and Peaches Geldof. Schneider delved into his Yiddish roots in 2009 for BBC Radio 4, My Yiddish Mother Tongue, a 30-minute documentary by My Yiddish Mother Tongue, with contributors including family members, researchers, Colin Powell, and Michael Grade.
Based on Joseph Stalin's orders, he has written Making Stalin Laugh. In 2007, he created Up Close and Personal, a sitcom pilot starring Raquel Cassidy, as well as a sitcom pilot on Up Close and Personal, which was set in a celebrity newspaper and starring Raquel Cassidy. ITV2 had the pilot reject the pilot. He appeared in Horrid Henry: The Movie in 2011 and 2012 as murder suspect and taxi driver Marcus Salter, and in 2012 as a murder suspect and taxi driver Marcus Salter. Births, Death, and Marriages, a radio comedy that was set in a registry office and starring himself, premiered on BBC Radio 4 in May 2012. Schneider appeared in the fifth episode of Plebs, depicting a slave auctioneer named Agorix. Schneider produced The Death of Stalin with Armando Iannucci in 2017.