Mick Molloy

For the rugby player, see Mick Molloy (rugby).
Mick Molloy
Born Michael Molloy
(1966-07-11) 11 July 1966
Canberra, Australia
Nationality Australian
Occupation Comedian, writer, producer & actor

Michael "Mick" Molloy (born 11 July 1966 in Canberra) is an Australian comedian, writer, producer and actor who has been active in radio, television, stand-up and film. He is on the Triple M Melbourne's breakfast show The Hot Breakfast and the Seven Network's one-hour AFL preview show on Saturday night during the football season.[1]

Biography

Early years

Molloy grew up in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) before moving to Melbourne in the mid-1980s to study performing arts at the University of Melbourne, where he wrote and performed in his first live act in 1987. He attended The Peninsula School during his secondary/high school period.[2] It was during Molloy's time at university that he met the Australian comedy troupe, The D-Generation (the future cast of The Late Show), that consisted of members who would later form Working Dog Productions; Molloy would also collaborate with members on several projects.

Television

Molloy worked with the D-Generation as a writer-performer on their 1988 Seven Network specials (he had auditioned for the D-Gen in 1986, but it wasn’t until the troupe saw him in the 1987 Melbourne University revue, Laminex on the Rocks, that they signed him up). He also worked as a writer on the ABC's The Gerry Connolly Show (1988), the Network Ten series, The Comedy Company, in its 1989 season, and, while working on the (unscreened) pilots for The Late Show for the Nine Network (1990), Molloy was a cast member of ABC TV’s The Late Show (1992–1993) as a writer/performer. As well as pairing up with Tony Martin for each episode’s introduction and the Street Interviews segment, Mick co-hosted the segments Muckrakers with Jason Stephens and Commercial Crimestoppers with Santo Cilauro, played the thick-witted assistant of stuntman Rob Sitch in Shitscared, and performed in countless sketches (he provided the voices of Sergeant Olden in The Olden Days and Chief Chromedome in Bargearse). Molloy also delivered a series of volatile rants in the Mick’s Serve part of Late Show News.

Molloy landed his own late-night TV show, The Mick Molloy Show, which premiered on the Nine Network in 1999. Planned to run for twenty episodes, it was slated by the critics and cancelled after only eight. Molloy's next involvement with television was the show, Any Given Sunday, with Nicole Livingstone, on the Nine Network in 2006. He was also involved in the 2006 Commonwealth Games coverage on the Nine Network, as a commentator for the lawn bowls events.[3]

In 2007, Molloy filmed a pilot of The Nation, a weekly late-night news-based comedy hour on the Nine Network. The show debuted on 5 June,[4] but struggled for ratings, attracting only 575,000 viewers nationally for its fourth show.[5] Originally it was on Tuesdays at 9:30 pm, but was moved to Wednesdays at 10:30 pm and has been off air since the end of August 2007.

In 2008 it was announced that Molloy would replace Peter Helliar on the panel of Channel 10's Before the Game, an AFL themed show, after Helliar had discontinued his position post-2007. On the show, his views as a keen supporter of the Richmond Football Club (Tigers) were often made clear. Molloy is one of the club's more prominent supporters and as well as appearing on the Before the Game, he has in the past appeared in a club membership advertising campaigns. In June 2008, Molloy made comments on the show regarding Nicole Cornes, the wife of former Adelaide coach Graham Cornes, in which he suggested she had slept with footballer Stuart Dew. Nicole Cornes sued the Ten Network for defamation, and was awarded A$85,000 in July 2011.[6] Molloy remained with Before the Game until it was axed at the end of the 2013 AFL season.[7]

In 2009, Molloy starred in the sitcom The Jesters which aired on Movie Extra on Foxtel. He played a veteran comic Dave Davies who has become the manager of a group of young, rookie comedians and who has to cope with the behind-the-scenes antics of producing a comedy sketch show.[8] A second series aired in 2011.[9]

In February 2010 it was announced that Molloy and Eddie McGuire would be investigated by the NSW Anti-discrimination board following complaints that their on air coverage of the Vancouver Winter Olympics men's figure skating contained homophobic remarks.[10]

In February 2014, it was announced by the Seven Network that Molloy would be joining its one-hour AFL match preview show on Saturday nights during the football season.[1]

Radio

After writing and performing on The D-Generation Breakfast Show on the Triple M radio, from 1990 to 1992, Molloy teamed up with Tony Martin for Triple M’s Bulltwang (1990)

After The Late Show finished, Molloy developed, again with Martin, the successful Austereo radio programme, Martin/Molloy (1995–98), which produced three ARIA award winning compilation albums, The Brown Album (1995), Poop Chute (1996) and Eat Your Peas (1998). Molloy occasionally appeared with his former D-Generation cohorts on Network Ten’s The Panel (1998–2004).

Molloy hosted another radio show, Tough Love with Mick Molloy (2004–06) on Triple M alongside Robyn Butler and Richard Molloy.[11]

In 2011, Molloy returned to radio and to Melbourne's Triple M, as a permanent member of The Hot Breakfast.[12] He is also appearing daily at 6:50am on Triple M Brisbane's The Grill Team.[13]

Film

Following the cancellation of The Mick Molloy Show, Molloy returned with a video release, entitled Shonky Golf with Mick Molloy, and he directed the feature-length documentary Tackle Happy (2000). He played Kim's dad Gary Poole on Kath & Kim (2003–04) and co-starred, with David Wenham, in two Murray Whelan telemovies, Stiff and The Brush-Off (both 2004).

He has starred in three movies, Crackerjack (2002)[14] (which he also co-wrote, receiving an AFI nomination), Tony Martin's Bad Eggs (2003), and BoyTown (2006), which, like Crackerjack, he co-wrote with his brother Richard Molloy. During production of the DVD-release for Boytown in 2007, Molloy and his long-time collaborator Tony Martin had a dispute over the proposed extra content for the DVD and the two have not worked together since.[15] In the 2006 Australian feature film Macbeth, Molloy played Brown; it was the second time he has appeared in a production of Macbeth.

Personal life

Molloy was the long-term partner of Australian actor Sophie Lee in the 1990s. (Lee regularly appeared on Molloy's nationally syndicated radio show, as well as playing Tracey Kerrigan in the film The Castle, which was made by Molloy's former D-Gen cohort).

He is a supporter of the Richmond Football Club.

In April 2012, at the 54th Logie Awards, Molloy delivered an onstage tribute to friend and colleague Bill Hunter, who died in 2011.[16]

On The Hot Breakfast on 8 June 2012 Molloy announced he was to become a father for the first time, his partner being pregnant with twin boys. On 11 July he announced their birth. The boys were born on 10 July, and were a month early.[17]

Television

Movies

Radio

Albums

Video/DVD only release

References

  1. 1 2 Knox, David (26 February 2014). "Mick Molloy joins Seven footy". TV Tonight. TV Tonight. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  2. Kate Nancarrow (27 March 2009). "Stagefright". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 13 October 2012.
  3. "Mick Molloy takes on The Nation". Brisbane Times. Fairfax Media. 25 May 2007. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  4. Molloy hopes for nine lives, The Herald Sun 11 May 2007
  5. "The West Australian - Perth, WA, National & World News". thewest.com.au. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  6. Mick Molloy sorry for defamation loss, Herald Sun, 7 July 2011.
  7. Devlyn, Darren (13 December 2013). "Channel 10 axes AFL comedy show Before the Game". News.com.au. News Ltd. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  8. "The Jesters". TV Tonight. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  9. The Jesters
  10. "Anti-discrimination board to investigate Eddie McGuire and Mick Molloy". smh.com.au. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  11. Mick Molloy Joins The Hot Breakfast!
  12. "Mick Molloy joins Triple M Brisbane". Champagne Comedy: The Late Show fan site. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  13. "Crackerjack". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  14. "Martin, Molloy in movie fallout". NewsComAu. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  15. The Learned One (27 May 2011). "Mick Molloy Delivers Heart-Warming Eulogy For Late Australian Legend Bill Hunter". Triple M. Southern Cross Austereo. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  16. Mick Molloy's twin boys arrive a month early
  17. "BoyTown Confidential (Video 2007)". IMDb. 20 February 2007. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
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