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Spike Breakwell (born Colin James Breakwell on 13 June 1968) is a British comedian. When Breakwell was four months old he became disabled through taking oral polio vaccine which caused a two-week coma. He was brought up in Dunstable, and "treated and raised to be as stubborn and independent as anyone else round about." In his teens he attended Lord Mayor Treloar College in Alton, Hampshire, now Alton College. Breakwell was the first wheelchair-using comedian on the London alternative club circuit from 1992, appearing on stage and BBC2 television. His act always started with the line: "...I don't know what I've been drinking but I could walk half an hour ago!" Surprisingly, fans never tired of this. He also co-wrote and co-starred (with Simon Hardeman) in the Edinburgh International Festival Fringe shows ''On The Toilet With Shergar (An Evening of Horseplay and Lavatory Humour )'' in 1992, ''Simon and Spikes Laugh-In'' in 1993 and the critically acclaimed play looking at comedy ''Death Of A Comedian'' in 1994. He co-wrote (with Simon Hardeman) the ''Beginners' Guide'' column in The Times Magazine. He has also been a regular in a BBC disability magazine programme.〔 In January 2006 Breakwell and part of the ''Wheelabout'' expedition team drove across Australia. He had planned to become the first person to cross from Perth to Sydney (4600 miles) in an electric wheelchair. However, funding for the trip failed to materialise and it is yet to be completed. In October 2007 he appeared in his first Hollywood film, ''Dante's Criterion'', described as a supernatural horror story of a possessed television, as "Ziggy Fontain" a wheelchair-using TV advertising producer. He is co-writing (with British screenwriter Lucy Soper) ''The Pommie'', a comedy feature film for Hollywood-based Guvnor Films. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Spike Breakwell」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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