Ranganathan has made numerous appearances on television comedy panel shows, and in 2016 he co-presented It's Not Rocket Science on ITV, alongside Rachel Riley and Ben Miller.[8] He has also been a regular panellist on The Apprentice: You're Fired!, Play to the Whistle, and The Museum of Curiosity. He completed his first major tour, Irrational Live, in 2016 in which he performed in large venues such as the Hammersmith Apollo. In 2018, Ranganathan joined A League of Their Own as a regular panellist, replacing Jack Whitehall. He has presented comedy programmes Judge Romesh and The Ranganation, as well as starring in the travel programme The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan. His autobiography is entitled Straight Outta Crawley. In December 2021, Ranganathan began hosting the revival of The Weakest Link, replacing Anne Robinson as host.[9]
In 2020, Ranganathan won the BAFTA TV Award for Best Features for The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan; in 2021, he won the BAFTA TV Award for Best Entertainment Performance for The Ranganation.[10][11]
Early life
Jonathan Romesh Ranganathan was born in Crawley, West Sussex, to Sri Lankan Tamil Hindu parents Ranga and Sivashanthini "Shanthi" Ranganathan.[12] He suffered from an eye infection as a child that left him with right-sided ptosis, which is sometimes referred to as a lazy eye.[13]
Ranganathan studied mathematics at Birkbeck College, University of London.[14] He taught mathematics at Hazelwick School in Crawley, and The Beacon School, Banstead, Surrey,[15] and was a freestyle rapper under the rap name "Ranga", once reaching the finals of the UK freestyle competition.[16] Ranganathan started performing as a comedian whilst working as a teacher.[15]
Career
Ranganathan performing at the British Summer Time festival in 2015
Ranganathan started presenting Newsjack on Radio 4 Extra in March 2014.[17] He appeared on The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice in 2014, during which he presented his homemade vegan chocolate brownies.[18]
Ranganathan has been a guest on several episodes of 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown.[19] He also has appeared on Would I Lie to You?, Holby City, Soccer AM, Russell Howard's Good News, Sweat the Small Stuff, The Last Leg, Virtually Famous, Have I Got News for You, QI, and Mock the Week. He was a contestant on the first series of Taskmaster and also appeared in the third episode of Jon Richardson Grows Up. He also performed at The Royal Variety Performance in 2015. In 2015, he presented a series for BBC Three, Asian Provocateur, in which he travelled to Sri Lanka to explore his ancestral country.[20]
In 2018, Ranganathan joined Season 13 of A League of Their Own[21] and starred in his own 10-episode docu-comedy called Just Another Immigrant that premiered on Showtime June 8.[22]
Ranganathan's autobiography, Straight Outta Crawley, was published in 2018.[23]
Personal life
Ranganathan lives in Crawley[24] with his wife Leesa and their three sons.[25][26] He and his wife first met when they were both working at Hazelwick School, where she was a drama teacher.[27]
Ranganathan is known by his middle name Romesh. He did not find out until he started school that his first name, as stated on his birth certificate, was Jonathan. During his live show, Irrational, Ranganathan recalled that his parents explained to him that this was because they were concerned his name would otherwise sound too ‘ethnic’ when applying for jobs as an adult.[28]
Ranganathan is vegan, having been vegetarian up until 2013.[29][30][31] He is a supporter of Arsenal FC.[32] Ranganathan was raised Hindu.[33]
He stated that he got obsessed with getting tattooed and subsequently has tattoos with the names of his sons, Richard Pryor, Nas, the Roots, the Albanian flag and the Transformers’ Autobot logo on his body.[25]
Mcclean, Craig (30 October 2018). "Romesh Ranganathan reveals how his father's legacy inspired his new comedy The Reluctant Landlord". Radio Times. Retrieved 7 April 2022. The on-screen Romesh – who lives above the pub with his wife (Car Share’s Sian Gibson), young son, record collection and turntables – describes himself as “nominally Hindu”. Is that how this Brit of Sri Lankan parentage sees himself? “I’ve had a Hindu upbringing. There’s a lot about it I think is cool. Temples are amazing. It’s a nice vibe when people are praying. And there’s lots about it where I understand why they believe those things. But I’m not practising. My mum’s very spiritual, and I think she just tells everyone that I’m spiritual, too.”
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