Mathew Baynton
Mathew John Baynton (born 18 November 1980) is an English actor, writer, comedian, singer, and musician, recognized primarily for his contributions to sketch comedy and sitcoms through the creative collective Them There.[1][2][3] Baynton trained at Rose Bruford College of Theatre & Performance and rose to prominence as a performer and writer on the CBBC series Horrible Histories (2009–2013), where he portrayed numerous historical figures in satirical sketches adapted from Terry Deary's books.[4][3][5] Alongside collaborators including Simon Farnaby, Martha Howe-Douglas, Jim Howick, Laurence Rickard, and Ben Willbond, he co-created and co-wrote fantasy comedy Yonderland (2013–2016) and the supernatural sitcom Ghosts (2019–2023), both for BBC, with Baynton also starring in multiple roles in each.[1][2] His other notable acting credits include the BBC thriller The Wrong Mans (2013–2014), the historical comedy film Bill (2015), and a supporting role in Wonka (2023).[1][6]Early life
Family background and upbringing
Mathew John Baynton was born on 18 November 1980 in Southend-on-Sea, Essex, England.[1][7] He grew up in Southend-on-Sea as the youngest of three brothers.[8] Baynton's early childhood involved frequent viewing of British comedy television programs, including Monty Python sketches and episodes of Dad's Army, shared with his father.[8] Public details on his parents' backgrounds or occupations remain scarce, consistent with Baynton's limited disclosure of personal family history beyond these formative exposures in a southeastern English coastal setting.[8]Education and initial interests
Baynton attended Southend High School for Boys, where he engaged in comedic antics as the class clown, fostering an early affinity for performance and humor.[9] Subsequently, he enrolled at Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama to pursue a degree in directing, viewing it as a more practical alternative to acting training.[10] During his studies, however, peers and instructors recognized his aptitude for acting over directing, prompting a shift in focus toward performative arts. He supplemented his formal education with specialized training in clowning at École Philippe Gaulier in Paris, honing skills in physical comedy and improvisation that aligned with his burgeoning interests in sketch-based humor.[10] These formative experiences laid the groundwork for his engagement with British comedic traditions, emphasizing timing, parody, and ensemble dynamics without venturing into professional output at that stage.[9]Career
Early roles and training
After graduating from Rose Bruford College with a first-class degree in directing, Baynton pursued specialized training in physical performance and clowning at École Philippe Gaulier in Paris, which emphasized improvisational and expressive techniques central to his comedic style.[11] He subsequently assisted physical comedian and director Cal McCrystal during a summer with the theatre group Peepolykus, where McCrystal encouraged Baynton to transition from directing to onstage improvisation, honing his timing and physicality in a competitive environment reliant on unscripted ensemble work.[12] Baynton's initial professional acting appearances occurred in the mid-2000s through theatre productions, including a role in Loot at Derby Playhouse in 2003 and as the Minstrel in The Bubonic Play at the Edinburgh Fringe's Pleasance Dome in 2005, experiences that built his versatility in ensemble comedy and historical sketches prior to television exposure.[7] His television debut came in 2007 with the role of Howard in the BBC drama Learners, a low-profile single episode that marked his entry into screen acting alongside emerging performers.[2] This was followed by a supporting part as guitarist Ritchie Blackmore in the 2008 biographical film Telstar: The Joe Meek Story, further developing his ability to portray period-specific characters in narrative-driven projects amid sparse opportunities for newcomers in British comedy circuits.[2] These roles underscored the persistence required in an industry where early visibility often depended on theatre networks and selective auditions rather than immediate stardom.Breakthrough with Horrible Histories (2009–2014)
Mathew Baynton joined the cast of the BBC children's sketch comedy series Horrible Histories for its 2009 revival on CBBC, serving as an actor and writer in the ensemble that adapted Terry Deary's books into live-action segments blending historical facts with irreverent humor.[13] The program featured short sketches, songs, and parodies portraying events from ancient civilizations to modern eras, emphasizing empirical details like battles, inventions, and daily life while satirizing human follies across time. Baynton's performances contributed to the show's non-condescending approach, which avoided simplification to engage young viewers through causal explanations of historical outcomes rather than rote memorization.[14] As a core performer alongside colleagues like Simon Farnaby and Martha Howe-Douglas, Baynton embodied multiple historical figures in rapid succession, leveraging physical comedy, accents, and musical numbers to illustrate verifiable events such as royal intrigues and scientific discoveries.[15] His writing input helped craft episodes that prioritized factual anchors—drawn from primary historical records—while using exaggeration to highlight absurdities, fostering viewer retention without distorting core truths. The series aired five seasons through 2014, with Baynton's multifaceted role amplifying its appeal by demonstrating how individual agency and systemic factors drove historical narratives.[16] Horrible Histories achieved commercial and critical acclaim, securing four consecutive BAFTA Children's Awards for comedy from 2010 to 2013, the first program to do so, reflecting its efficacy in educational entertainment.[17] It drew strong ratings for CBBC, evolving from daytime slots to primetime BBC One broadcasts by 2011 due to crossover adult viewership, with the format's success attributed to its rigorous adherence to sourced history amid comedic liberty. This breakthrough elevated Baynton's profile, establishing him as a versatile talent capable of synthesizing research-driven content with performative precision.[14]Collaborations with Them There
Following the success of Horrible Histories, Baynton co-founded the comedy writing and performing collective Them There in collaboration with Simon Farnaby, Martha Howe-Douglas, Jim Howick, Laurence Rickard, and Ben Willbond, leveraging their shared experience in ensemble sketch comedy to develop original scripted series.[10] The group formalized under the Them There banner primarily for production credits, enabling a democratic creative process where all members contributed to writing, directing elements, and performing, fostering tightly knit narratives reliant on collective improvisation and character interplay.[12] The collective's first major joint project was the Sky1 fantasy sitcom Yonderland, which aired from November 2013 to March 2016 across three series totaling 25 episodes.[18] Co-created and co-written by all six members, the series centered on a modern-day mother transported to a medieval fantasy realm, where the group portrayed multiple roles in a satirical take on epic quests, emphasizing absurd humor through rapid character switches and collaborative scripting sessions that prioritized punchy dialogue over plot complexity.[19] Building on this model, Them There co-created the BBC One sitcom Ghosts, which ran from April 2019 to December 2023 over five series and a Christmas special.[20] The ensemble wrote the show collectively, devising a premise of a living couple inheriting a haunted manor occupied by the ghosts of its former residents—each member voicing and embodying distinct spectral characters—resulting in layered comedic dynamics derived from group brainstorming on historical archetypes and interpersonal tensions, with production handled in association with Monumental Pictures.[21] This approach allowed for iterative refinements during table reads, where the performers' chemistry directly shaped episode structures around witty, character-driven scenarios rather than external thematic impositions.[11]Writing and producing projects
Baynton co-wrote the BBC Two comedy thriller series The Wrong Mans, which aired in two parts from November 2013 to December 2014, alongside James Corden and Tom Basden.[22] The project received the Royal Television Society Award for Best Writer - Comedy in 2013 for its blend of suspense and farce.[11] As a member of the writing collective behind Sky One's fantasy comedy Yonderland (2013–2016), Baynton contributed to scripts that fused absurd quests with domestic satire across three seasons of 20 episodes. Baynton co-created, co-wrote, and executive produced the BBC One sitcom Ghosts, which spanned five seasons from 2019 to 2023, totaling 34 episodes centered on a haunted house ensemble.[23] He penned or co-penned key installments, such as the pilot "Who Do You Think You Are?" and "Free Pass" in series one, grounding the supernatural premise in interpersonal dynamics and escalating absurdities derived from character motivations rather than didactic themes.[24] The series' scripting process emphasized iterative collaboration to ensure plot progression followed plausibly from established personalities, contributing to its sustained popularity with over 10 million viewers for the finale.[23]Acting in film and television
Baynton's television acting career gained momentum with a recurring role in the BBC sitcom Spy (2011–2012), where he portrayed Chris Pitt-Goddard, the eccentric best friend and colleague of the protagonist Tim.[25] The character was depicted as manipulative yet comically inept in his schemes.[26] In 2015, he starred in the Sky One miniseries You, Me and the Apocalypse, playing the dual lead roles of estranged identical twin brothers Jamie Winton, a mild-mannered librarian, and Ariel Conroy, a member of a doomsday cult.[27] The series, which aired from November to December 2015, centered on a global comet threat and featured Baynton's performances as contrasting siblings central to the plot. Transitioning to film, Baynton appeared in the historical comedy Bill (2015), assuming multiple roles including William Shakespeare, portrayed as a hapless playwright entangled in the creation of Hamlet.[1] Released on August 27, 2015, the film offered an anachronistic take on Elizabethan England, with Baynton's versatile characterization contributing to its humorous reimagining of literary origins. In the fantasy musical Wonka (2023), Baynton played Felix Fickelgruber, one of the scheming chocolate cartel members opposing the titular inventor's ambitions. The film, directed by Paul King and released on December 15, 2023, depicted Fickelgruber as a rival industrialist in a prequel to Roald Dahl's story.[12] Baynton's improvisational talents were showcased in 2025 when he won the nineteenth series of the Channel 4 comedy competition Taskmaster, outperforming contestants including Jason Mantzoukas and Fatiha El-Ghorri by 15 points.[28] Airing from March to July 2025, the series required participants to complete absurd tasks, where Baynton's consistent strategic and creative approaches secured the victory.[29]Theatre and stage work
Baynton's early professional theatre credits include performances in Holes, a stage adaptation of Louis Sachar's novel, as well as Office Party and Joe Orton's Loot.[30] He also appeared in a live stage rendition of Horrible Histories at the BBC Proms in 2011, showcasing his comedic timing in a concert setting that blended sketches with orchestral accompaniment.[30] In a significant return to the stage after years focused on television, Baynton debuted with the Royal Shakespeare Company on 30 November 2023, taking the role of Nick Bottom in director Eleanor Rhode's production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon.[30] The production, which reimagined the comedy with anarchic energy and physical intimacy among the mechanicals, transferred to the Barbican Theatre in London from 7 December 2024 to 18 January 2025.[31] Baynton's portrayal emphasized Bottom's sincerity and enthusiasm, delivering a non-exaggerated, heartfelt interpretation of the character's transformation and comedic mishaps, which reviewers highlighted for its natural timing and avoidance of over-labored farce.[10] [32] This role marked Baynton's first engagement with Shakespearean verse on stage, demonstrating his versatility in live performance through physical comedy and ensemble interplay distinct from his screen sketches.[10] The production's success, including its availability for streaming on Marquee TV from January 2025, underscored the demand for Baynton's stage presence in classical repertory.[33]Recent developments (2020–2025)
Baynton served as executive producer, co-writer, and actor for the final episode of the BBC sitcom Ghosts, titled "A Christmas Gift," which aired on December 25, 2023, marking the conclusion of the series after five seasons and 34 episodes.[34] The episode drew 9.2 million viewers within seven days, becoming the most-watched British comedy of 2023.[35] In interviews, Baynton expressed mixed emotions about the ending, noting the challenge of closure despite recognizing it as the appropriate time to conclude amid scheduling constraints for the ensemble cast.[36] In 2023, Baynton portrayed the rival chocolatier Felix Fickelgruber in Paul King's film Wonka, starring Timothée Chalamet, which grossed over $634 million worldwide.[37] He also appeared as Dr. Thomas in the BBC's Murder Is Easy, an adaptation of Agatha Christie's novella.[38] Shifting to theatre, Baynton took on the role of Nick Bottom in the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, directed by Blanche McIntyre, which ran from October 2023 to March 2024 and was filmed live for a 2025 cinema release.[39] In early 2025, Baynton competed as a contestant on series 19 of Channel 4's Taskmaster, earning 169 points to win the season, which concluded in July 2025.[29] He has expressed interest in returning for future iterations, citing the show's demanding yet rewarding format.[29] Baynton maintained ongoing involvement with the Them There production collective through 2025, though no new collaborative projects beyond Ghosts were publicly announced by October.[25]Other pursuits
Music and composition
Baynton is a self-taught musician who plays guitar, keyboards, and drums, having never formally studied music beyond basic school exposure and lacking ability to read notation.[40] His musical pursuits remain ancillary to his primary career in acting and writing, often serving comedic or collaborative ends rather than as a standalone profession. In Horrible Histories, he contributed to sketches by performing original songs and providing musical accompaniment, incorporating self-devised melodies to enhance satirical elements, such as in tracks like "Dick Turpin" and "Charles II: King of Bling."[41][42] Outside television, Baynton released a self-written solo EP titled So It Goes in November 2011 under the moniker Dog Ears, featuring tracks like "Mrs. Winchester" that he composed and recorded at home with minimal production.[43] He has occasionally collaborated on recordings and live performances with bands including Grovesnor and Black Peaches, touring support slots with acts like Hot Chip, though these efforts were sporadic and secondary to his acting commitments.[40] Baynton has participated in music-adjacent live events, such as narrating Hector Berlioz's life and introducing movements of Symphonie Fantastique during Aurora Orchestra's 2019 BBC Proms production, blending spoken word with orchestral performance to evoke the composer's obsessive themes.[44] These engagements highlight his interest in music's narrative potential, influenced by artists like Elliott Smith and The Lemonheads, but do not indicate a shift toward professional composition.[40]Radio appearances and productions
Baynton featured in the BBC Radio 4 sitcom Reluctant Persuaders across four series from 2015 to 2021, playing a junior executive in a struggling London advertising agency alongside Nigel Havers as the head and Josie Lawrence as a colleague. The series, written by Edward Rowett, depicted the team's futile pitches and interpersonal chaos, with Baynton's character contributing to the ensemble's deadpan humor.[45] In the spoof documentary series Before They Were Famous, Baynton provided voice impressions for episodes in 2012 and 2013, including portrayals of Hunter S. Thompson and Cormac McCarthy in sketches exploring their supposed early jobs before literary success.[25] Hosted by Ian Leslie, the program aired five 15-minute episodes per series on Radio 4, blending archival-style narration with comedic hypotheticals. Baynton voiced multiple characters in The World of Simon Rich Series 3 on BBC Radio 4 in 2022, adapting the American writer's absurd short stories into audio sketches starring alongside Kieran Hodgson and Cariad Lloyd.[46] The six-episode run, first broadcast starting March 8, emphasized whimsical narratives like talking animals and inanimate objects gaining sentience. He made guest appearances on history and music programs, including a December 2023 episode of You're Dead to Me discussing medieval European ghost stories with host Greg Jenner and expert Dr. Michael Carter.[47] On Inheritance Tracks in May 2023, Baynton selected tracks by The Beatles and Nick Drake that influenced his career, aired as part of Radio 4's long-running feature on cultural heirlooms.[48] Additional radio credits include the role of Sam in Katherine Jakeways' Forty Weeks (2016) on BBC Radio 4 Extra, a comedy about pregnancy milestones, and Dylan in Human Resources (2017) on Radio 4, a workplace satire. These productions highlighted his versatility in voice-driven ensemble comedy, often drawing on his strengths in character differentiation without visual cues.[49]Personal life
Relationships and family
Baynton has maintained a low public profile regarding his personal life. He has been in a long-term relationship with film historian and filmmaker Kelly Robinson since meeting her at age 19.[12][50] They have two children: a son named Bo, born in 2011, and a daughter named Ida, born in 2016.[51][52] The family resides in north London.[52]Public persona and interests
Baynton serves as patron of the Williams Syndrome Foundation, a UK charity supporting individuals with the genetic disorder characterized by developmental delays, cardiovascular issues, and hypersociability. In May 2016, he starred in and helped produce a comedic awareness sketch for the foundation, portraying a hapless advocate who encounters public indifference while attempting to describe the condition's traits, such as elfin facial features and excessive friendliness, to underscore the need for greater recognition.[53][54][55] Beyond advocacy, Baynton maintains a reserved public presence, with limited engagement on social media platforms like Instagram, where he shares sporadic posts related to professional endeavors rather than personal opinions or lifestyle details.[56] This approach reflects a preference for substance over ostentation, as evidenced by his avoidance of high-profile celebrity circuits and focus on meaningful creative output in interviews.[57] He has occasionally voiced appreciation for history's narrative depth, crediting early exposure to factual storytelling as fostering a lifelong curiosity about the past, distinct from his professional explorations.[58] Baynton also emphasizes comedy's potential to convey educational value through entertainment, advocating for content that informs without preachiness.[25]Reception and impact
Awards and nominations
Baynton contributed to Horrible Histories, which won the BAFTA Children's Award for Comedy in 2012.[59] In 2014, he shared the RTS Programme Award for Best Writer – Comedy with James Corden and Tom Basden for The Wrong Mans.[60] That year, Baynton received a nomination for the BAFTA Television Award for Best Male Performance in a Comedy Programme for his role in the series.[61] He was also nominated for a Satellite Award for Best Actor in a Series, Miniseries or Television Film for The Wrong Mans.[6] In 2015, Baynton and Corden earned a nomination for the BAFTA Television Craft Award for Writer – Comedy for the The Wrong Mans episode "X-Mans".[62] In 2025, Baynton won the nineteenth series of Taskmaster, scoring 169 points overall.[29]Critical acclaim and influence
Baynton's contributions to Ghosts (2019–2023), co-created with the Them There collective, have been lauded for their sharp ensemble dynamics, where the interplay among the ghostly characters and living protagonists drives comedic tension rooted in interpersonal conflicts rather than supernatural gimmicks. Critics noted the series' success in reviving interest in multi-character British sitcoms through its layered character arcs and historical satire, amassing consolidated viewership of 4 to 5 million per episode across its run, with the 2023 finale drawing 6.62 million viewers within seven days.[63][64] This popularity extended internationally, inspiring a CBS adaptation that similarly emphasized relational humor, thereby broadening the format's appeal and demonstrating Baynton's influence on transatlantic comedy trends.[65] In Horrible Histories (2009–2013, with revivals), Baynton's writing and performances exemplified a commitment to factual precision within satirical sketches, blending verified historical events with exaggerated grotesquery to engage young audiences without sacrificing accuracy. Sources affirm the series' reliability, with historical details cross-verified against primary records, often surpassing adult-oriented channels in evidentiary fidelity while making complex timelines accessible.[66][67] This approach fostered greater public interest in history among children, as evidenced by its role in shifting perceptions from rote memorization to irreverent inquiry, influencing subsequent educational programming that prioritizes evidence-based entertainment.[68] Through the Them There collective, Baynton has shaped emerging talent by collaborating on projects that emphasize collaborative scripting and character-driven narratives, indirectly mentoring via shared creative processes in works like Yonderland (2013–2016). His involvement in initiatives such as Arts Emergency underscores a broader commitment to guiding aspiring writers from underrepresented backgrounds, promoting empirical skill-building over abstract theory.[69] This legacy is reflected in peer acknowledgments of Them There's model for sustaining innovative comedy ensembles, impacting the pipeline of British writers through practical, output-focused development.[9]Controversies and self-reflections
In December 2022, Mathew Baynton reflected on the original run of Horrible Histories (2009–2013), acknowledging that the cast's use of spray tans to portray ancient Egyptians could be interpreted as a form of blackface. He stated during a Q&A at the Oxford Union that while the production avoided traditional blackface, "you could argue that we did," describing the cast as "basically a bunch of white people" darkening their skin for such sketches. Baynton further remarked that the practice "may have been racist," situating his comments within ongoing cultural debates about racial representation in comedy, including comparisons to shows like Little Britain that faced removal from streaming platforms for similar reasons.[70][71][72] Baynton's comments highlighted tensions between historical reenactment and contemporary sensitivities, noting the show's reliance on its predominantly white ensemble for diverse roles without external casting for non-European characters. He expressed hindsight regret over these choices, though he emphasized the educational intent of the sketches, which aimed to convey historical facts through humor rather than mock racial stereotypes. No formal complaints or cancellations arose from the original episodes at the time, but Baynton's reflections contributed to retrospective scrutiny of the series' approach to ethnicity in historical comedy.[73][74] During his appearance on Taskmaster in 2025, Baynton's competitive antics, including eating yogurt off a shoe and a wardrobe malfunction exposing his underwear, drew viewer complaints for being "unhinged," "horrifying," and "mortifying." Some audiences described the moments as "absolutely foul" and questioned their suitability for broadcast, with reactions focusing on the edginess of his self-humiliating tasks. Baynton later addressed the backlash on Instagram on June 16, 2025, apologizing to those disturbed by his behavior and explaining he anticipated competition in the "least" category of a task, framing it as intentional chaos within the show's format. The incidents resulted in no formal repercussions from Channel 4 or the production.[75][76][77][78]Selected works
Film roles
- Hereafter (2010) as college receptionist
- Tonight You're Mine (2011) as Tyko[79]
- Bill (2015) as William Shakespeare, Lord Burghley, English Messenger, and Customs Official[80]
- Wonka (2023) as Felix Fickelgruber[81]