Mike Clattenburg Explained

Mike Clattenburg
Birth Date:21 March 1967[1]
Nationality:Canadian
Occupation:Television and film director, producer, screenwriter
Years Active:1995–present

Mike Clattenburg (born March 21, 1967) is a Canadian television and film director, producer and screenwriter. He is best known as creator, executive producer, writer and director of the TV comedy series Trailer Park Boys (2001–2008),[2] for his work with This Hour Has 22 Minutes (2004), and as the co-creator of the Adult Swim series Black Jesus (2014–2019).[3]

Early life

A native of Cole Harbour, a suburb of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Clattenburg spent his years after high school as drummer in a Police-inspired rock band, The Spawning Grunions.

He was formerly married to filmmaker Stephanie Joline from 2009 to 2015.[4]

Career

Clattenburg's jump from music to television began with his co-hosting and production of a Halifax Cable 10 show, That Damn Cable Show, from 1990 to 1993. The program featured on-location interviews and profiles of Halifax entertainers, many of whom were acquaintances of Clattenburg's through his band contacts. Wedged in between the entertainer segments were comedic three-minute clips that displayed his early talent for irreverent film making. That Damn Cable Show was remarkable for its high production values despite being a local cable channel production on a shoestring budget, and made an early name for Clattenburg in film production circles.

Outgrowing the local cable television station, Clattenburg made the move to professional television production with work on comedy and drama programs at CBC Television, including Pit Pony, Street Cents, The Bette Show, and a variety of segments for Sesame Street. His credits include the direction of music videos for Gord Downie, Len, The Tragically Hip, comedy rap group Three Loco,[5] and, most recently, a rap video for Far East Movement featuring Riff Raff of Three Loco.

In addition to Trailer Park Boys and its associated films , and , Clattenburg also directed the films Afghan Luke[6] and Moving Day, which were released in Toronto and Halifax on July 20, 2012,[7] and the short film Crackin' Down Hard.

He is co-creator, executive producer, co-writer (along with Aaron McGruder), and director of the Adult Swim series Black Jesus, which premiered on August 7, 2014.[8]

He is co-creator (along with Mike O'Neill from Trailer Park Boys), director and an executive producer of Canadian television comedy series Crawford,[9] which premiered as a streaming video on February 2, 2018.[10]

Filmography

!Year!Title!Notes
1995The Cart BoysShort film
1996Liquor StoreShort film
1998One Last ShotShort film
1999Trailer Park BoysFeature film
2006Feature film
2009Feature film
2011Afghan LukeFeature film
2012Moving DayFeature film
2014Feature film
!Year!Title!Notes
1999–2000Pit Pony
2001–2007Trailer Park BoysCreator
2004This Hour Has 22 Minutes
2010Republic of Doyle
2012Mr. D
2013Satisfaction
2014–2019Black JesusCreator
2018CrawfordCreator

Notes and References

  1. https://www.thecoast.ca/arts-music/is-hollywood-ready-for-mike-clattenburg-1016732 Is Hollywood ready for Mike Clattenburg?
  2. The Dirtbag Is Back . 2022-07-26 . . Matei . Adrienne.
  3. Web site: MikeClattenburg.com. Mikeclattenburg.com. October 16, 2017.
  4. Bruce DeMara, "Heartbeat lets Halifax and cast shine through: review". Waterloo Region Record, November 27, 2014.
  5. Web site: Three Loco (Andy Milonakis, Riff Raff & Dirt Nasty) – Neato. WORLDSTARHIPHOP. October 16, 2017.
  6. Web site: Director Mike Clattenburgh on leaving the trailer park for Afghanistan . 2023-03-01 . nationalpost . en-CA.
  7. Web site: Moving Day. Tribute.ca. July 19, 2012.
  8. Web site: Mike Clattenburg. IMDb. October 16, 2017.
  9. Web site: Crawford – full cast & crew . IMDb . January 30, 2018.
  10. Web site: Crawford . CBC . January 30, 2018.