The Cambridge Footlights: A Very British Comedy Institution
By (Author) Robert Sellers
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
19th February 2026
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Comedy and stand-up
Film, television, radio genres: Comedy and humour
Television: styles and genres
History of Performing Arts
Hardback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
From Monty Python and Not the Nine O'Clock News to Peep Show, QI and The Great British Bake-Off, alumni of Britain's oldest student sketch comedy troupe have set the tone of cultural eras from the 1960s to today. This book tells the story of the Cambridge Footlights, chronicling its evolution from its creation in the 1880s to the present.
This diverting book includes first-hand interviews with former Footlights alumni, and extracts from past Footlights productions. It draws on material from the extensive archives of the Footlight club at the Cambridge University library, which holds records of club admin.
The Footlights has long been a potential portal to fame: talent scouts, especially from the BBC, were in the habit of coming up to Cambridge on the lookout for comedy writers and material. This book traces the journeys of its most distinguished alumni, including Germaine Greer, Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie, Miriam Margolyes, Emma Thompson, Richard Ayoade, David Mitchell and Sue Perkins, among many others among many others, covering how they got into the club, their contribution and subsequent careers.
Through examining the impact of the Footlights on British popular culture and comedy over the last 60 years, this book demonstrates how its farces, musical comedies, pantomimes and the famous May Week revues have both reflected the tastes of the times and served as a nursery for generations of comic writers and performers. In the world of comedy, it is a unique institution.
Drawing on a wealth of interviews with so many Footlights members who went on to become stars, this book presents a detailed and highly engaging history of this venerable Cambridge institution that has done so much to shape British comedy. * Oliver Double, author of Alternative Comedy and Getting the Joke, and Reader in Comic and Popular Performance, University of Kent, UK *
Robert Sellers is the author of over 25 books on subjects such as cinema, theatre, television, music and popular culture. These includes Raising Laughter: How the Sitcom Kept Britain Smiling in the '70s (2021), as well as authorized biographies of Oliver Reed, Kenny Everett and Ernie Wise, along with histories of Ealing Studios, Radio 1 and James Bond.