Home NET WORTH James Acaster Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Parents, TV shows

James Acaster Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Parents, TV shows

James Acaster net worth

Read the complete write-up of James Acaster net worth, biography, age, height, wife, children, TV shows as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

James William Acaster is an English comedian. He has performed for several consecutive years at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and has been nominated for Best Show five times. He won the Melbourne International Comedy Festival Award for Most Outstanding Show in 2019 with Cold Lasagne Hate Myself 1999 and has won four Chortle awards.

Acaster has appeared on several panel shows, including Mock the Week,  Taskmaster, 8 out of 10 Cats, and Would I Lie to You?. He has a 2018 Netflix show titled Repertoire, consisting of four, hour-long stand-up comedy performances. He has also written two Sunday Times Best-Selling books,  James Acaster’s Classic Scrapes, consisting of true stories, most of which were originally told on Josh Widdicombe’s show on XFM, and Perfect Sound Whatever, consisting of album reviews from the year 2016. He currently hosts panel show Hypothetical alongside Josh Widdicombe, food podcast Off Menu with fellow comedian Ed Gamble and music podcast James Acaster’s Perfect Sounds from the BBC.

Early Life

NameJames Acaster
Net Worth$3 million
ProfessionComedian
Height1.72m
Age36 years
James Acaster net worth 2022

James William Acaster was born on January 9, 1985(age 36 years) in  Kettering, Northamptonshire, United Kingdom.

He attended Montagu Secondary School in Kettering and went on to study music at Northampton College. During this time, he also sporadically worked at a drinks stand at Wicksteed Park igniting a longstanding fascination with industrial catering equipment. Acaster also worked as a teaching assistant in a school for autistic children, and it was around this time that he began to do stand-up, as mentioned in his book, James Acaster’s Classic Scrapes.

Career

Acaster previously played drums in various local bands in Northamptonshire, including The Wow! Scenario. When Acaster was a member of the Capri-Sun Quartet, he was known as Sir William Strawberry. After The Wow! Scenario broke up, he “decided to do comedy before deciding what he really wanted to do”. The Wow! Scenario recorded an album entitled Stand in the Star: A Verse and a Chorus in 2007, which was never released. Acaster announced in 2017 that he had reunited with The Wow! Scenario to finish recording Stand in the Star and that it would be available in 2018. However, developments are still awaited on this project.

Comedy career

In 2009, Acaster performed in a show at the  Edinburgh Festival Fringe with fellow comedians Josh Widdicombe and Nick Helm. In 2010, he supported Josie Long on tour, and, in 2011, he supported Milton Jones on tour.

He appeared on Russell Howard’s Good News Extra and was the internet activity in the TV channel Dave’s One Night Stand from Bristol. In 2011, he had his first solo show at the Edinburgh Festival, Amongst Other Things. Acaster appeared in Australia Versus and was co-host in My First Gig on Resonance FM radio. He appeared in Chris Addison’s E4 programme Show and Tell in autumn 2011.

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In spring 2012, he performed Amongst Other Things as solo shows in various venues in the UK. Acaster’s 2012 Edinburgh show was called Prompt. It began its run with positive reviews and enthusiastic audience response. It received a nomination from the Foster’s Edinburgh Comedy Awards for the best comedy show at the festival in 2012.

Acaster began appearing on his friend Josh Widdicombe’s radio programme on XFM in 2012, initially being asked to share a story about a strange situation he had got himself into in the past. His first story proved popular enough that he was asked to continue sharing a story each week. These stories, dubbed “scrapes” by Josh and later “classic scrapes” by the listeners of the programme, became a recurring segment, known as “James Acaster’s Classic Scrapes”. Acaster’s stories included being “cabadged” repeatedly by his friend’s son, and the time he went line dancing with his brother on Valentine’s day.

Acaster performed Prompt at 14 venues in England and Wales between January and March 2013, after which he appeared at the New Zealand International Comedy Festival. He won the New Zealand Comedy Guild’s best international act award in December 2013.

Acaster’s 2013 Edinburgh show Lawnmower was staged at the Pleasance Courtyard. It was nominated for the Foster’s Edinburgh Comedy Award 2013 for the best comedy show. In September 2013, he made his first appearance on the BBC musical comedy panel show Never Mind the Buzzcocks. He completed his UK tour of Lawnmower at a hometown gig in Kettering on 30 November 2013.

James Acaster starred in various segments of radio, including the half-hour programme “James Acaster’s Findings – Bread” for BBC Radio 4, also featuring Nathaniel Metcalfe and Bryony Hannah. A series of four episodes of “James Acaster’s Findings” was recorded in June and July 2014, the first of these episodes being broadcast on 5 November 2014. Acaster also regularly appeared on Josh Widdicombe’s  XFM radio show, where he had a keen following for his “classic scrapes (subsequently published as a book in 2017). His series Sweet Home Kettering (2014) follows him on a journey of discovery around his home town exploring its history and nascent rivalries with proximal town Corby which was sparked by a Primark store opening in the latter town.

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Acaster’s 2014 Edinburgh show was called Recognise. The show was previewed in April and May in Australia and New Zealand, where it won the New Zealand International Comedy Festival Award for Best International Show. Recognise was again nominated for the Foster’s Edinburgh Comedy Award 2014 for the best comedy show – third in a row for Acaster. It was performed at over 30 British venues during autumn 2014, including a two-week run at the Soho Theatre in December due to the success of the October dates at the same venue.

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Acaster’s 2015 Edinburgh show was called Represent, again performed at the Pleasance Courtyard. It earned Acaster his 4th consecutive Edinburgh Comedy Award nomination for Best Show, becoming the second artist to do so after Al Murray. The UK tour of this show ran from October to December 2015, ending at the Lyric Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue. Due to the show’s success, Acaster took Represent to the Soho Theatre for a week-long run in March 2016.

In 2015 he won the Chortle awards for Best Breakthrough Act and Best Show for Recognise.

Acaster’s 2016 show was called Reset. It was previewed at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, and the New Zealand International Comedy Festival in Auckland and Wellington, both in April/May 2016, then at the Udderbelly Festival in June 2016, and finally at The Tringe Festival in Tring in July. Acaster performed this show at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August 2016, where he became the first comedian to receive the fifth nomination for best show at the festival. In June 2016, Acaster appeared as a guest on Russell Howard’s Stand Up Central. In July 2016, Acaster performed in the comedy tent at Latitude Festival. In September 2016 he wrote a pilot episode for a new sitcom, We The Jury, which was broadcast by the BBC.

In 2017 Acaster took Recognise, Represent, and Reset to various venues, performing one show each night over three nights as The Trelogy. A further show of previously performed material, Recap, was also developed to tie the shows together thematically. These four shows were filmed in September for a Netflix special. His first book, James Acaster’s Classic Scrapes, recounting the stories he told on Josh Widdicombe’s XFM radio show and podcast, was published in August, followed by a book-reading tour in autumn 2017. Classic Scrapes appeared on The Sunday Times best-seller list. In November, he turned on the Christmas lights in Kettering.

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In March 2018, Netflix released James Acaster: Repertoire, consisting of the four one-hour shows – Recognise, Represent, Reset and Recap – filmed in September 2017. The initial response to Repertoire was very positive, with a rating of 8.3 on IMDB. In July 2018, Acaster performed at Cornbury Music Festival on the Comedy Stage. Acaster currently presents a weekly podcast series with Ed Gamble called Off Menu. In the podcast, Gamble and Acaster invite a special guest to discuss their dream starter, main course, side, dessert and drink.

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In 2019, Acaster won the Chortle Award for Best Show with Cold Lasagne Hate Myself 1999. Perfect Sound Whatever is Acaster’s second book, about an obsessive challenge that he undertook in 2017 to collect as much music released in 2016 as possible. It was published by Headline Publishing Group in August 2019. In 2019, Acaster won the Melbourne International Comedy Festival Award, making him the first UK comedian to do so in nine years. Acaster’s podcast with BBC Sounds, James Acaster’s Perfect Sounds, started in April 2020.

On 17 December 2020, Cold Lasagne Hate Myself 1999 was released via a one-night-only Livestream on DICE.

Wife

James Acaster is currently not married. However, he was in a relationship with Rose Matafeo, they got separated in 2021.

James Acaster net worth

How much is James Acaster worth? James Acaster net worth 2021 is estimated at around $3 million. His main source of income is from his primary career as a Comedian. However, on March 2, 2021, Cold Lasagne Hate Myself 1999 was published as an on-demand video on Vimeo, along with a bonus show, titled Make a New Tomorrow.

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