
Lucy Beaumont
Upcoming Shows
- 27th, Mar, 2027 @ 7pm
Vicar Street, Dublin
She starred in and co-wrote the highly rated sitcom Meet The Richardsons (Dave) and co-wrote the Channel 4 series Hullraisers. She also co-hosted Jon & Lucy’s Odd Couples (Channel 4). Most recently, Lucy appeared on the first ever celebrity series of The Traitors for the BBC, as well as The Great British Sewing Bee, further cementing her reputation as one of the most distinctive and endearing comic voices on British television.
Her extensive television appearances also include Taskmaster (Channel 4), The Wheel (BBC One), Would I Lie to You? (BBC One), The Great Celebrity Bake Off (Channel 4), 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown (Channel 4), The Jonathan Ross Show (ITV), World’s Most Dangerous Roads (Dave), Sunday Brunch (Channel 4), The One Show (BBC One), Joe Lycett’s Got Your Back (Channel 4), Artsnight (BBC Two), Jon Richardson: Ultimate Worrier (Dave), Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled (Dave), Lorraine (ITV), QI (BBC Two), Drunk History (Comedy Central), What’s Going to Kill Us (Channel 5), and Live at the Electric (BBC Three).
She is the writer and star of the BBC Radio 4 sitcom To Hull and Back, co-starring Maureen Lipman, and was nominated for the Foster’s Edinburgh Comedy Award for Best Newcomer with her debut show We Can Twerk It Out, which Chortle described as “irresistibly endearing”. She is also the winner of the BBC New Comedy Award and the Chortle Award for Best Newcomer.
A proud daughter of Hull and a fierce advocate for her hometown, Lucy was team captain for the University of Hull on the University Challenge Christmas Special (BBC Two). Lucy has performed in theatres and arenas across the UK, with her most recent stand-up tour extended multiple times due to popular demand. Her radio work also includes appearances on The Unbelievable Truth, Dilemma, History Retweeted, and Crush, as well as starring in The Magical Faraway Tree, an Enid Blyton adaptation directed by Johnny Vegas (BBC Radio 4). She received a Sony Radio Award for Crush, a critically acclaimed 90-minute monologue.
“A star is born”
Chortle
“The next Victoria Wood in the making”
The Stage
“Beaumont is a riot!”
The Scotsman
“Endearing and utterly original”
The Guardian

