Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

John Byrne (columnist)

Irish writer, cartoonist, performer, and broadcaster From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

John Byrne, sometimes known as John M. Byrne (born in Dublin, Ireland)[1] is a writer, author, cartoonist, performer, and broadcaster.

Remove ads

Early career

Byrne started his career as a communications officer for UNICEF in Malawi. After returning to England in 1989 he started a "live cartoons" show, a combination of stand-up comedy, art class and audience participation and performed at festivals, school libraries and corporate events.

Biography

Byrne's cartoons have featured regularly in a wide range of newspapers and magazines. He has also worked for Christian Herald, Private Eye, the BBC's in-house magazine Ariel, Voluntary Sector magazine, Young Performers magazine, and as a careers advisor and agony uncle for The Stage newspaper.

Broadcasting

Byrne's broadcasting and writing credits include TV and radio work for BBC TV, BBC World Service, Nickelodeon, ITV, Channel Five, Virgin Radio and 'script doctoring' roles for several shows and musicals.

Selected bibliography

  • Writing Comedy (3rd Edition)
  • A Singer’s Guide to Getting Work (with Julie Payne)
  • The Little Book of Cool at School
  • Drawing Cartoons that Sell[2]
  • A Dancer’s Guide to Getting Work (with Jenny Belingy)
  • The Bullybuster’s Joke Book

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads