Joseph Booton (actor)

Joseph Booton (born 20 July 1987) is a British actor and puppeteer. He is a performer of the traditional British puppet show, Punch and Judy. His first two lead roles in a feature film are The Newest Pledge and MILF. He attended Royal Holloway, University of London alongside fellow actor Tom Weston-Jones.[1]

Joseph Booton
Born20 July 1987 (1987-07-20) (age 33)
OccupationActor
Years active2010–present

Early life

Booton was born at Harold Wood Hospital in the London Borough of Havering. He lived in Upminster until the age of 5, when his family moved to the town of Redhill, Surrey. Booton attended Wray Common Primary School where his teacher advised his mother that they thought her son had a natural talent for acting. Being a quiet and reflective child at home, his mother replied that they must be mistaking her son for another child.[2]

At the age of 11, Booton attended St. Bede's School appearing in many of the school productions, including playing the role of Mr. Toad in Alan Bennett's stage adaptation of Kenneth Graeme's The Wind in the Willows. For this production Booton wore the same costume worn by actor Griff Rhys Jones in the National Theatre's 1990 production of the same name. During his time at school, Booton and a classmate wrote, directed and starred in their own two-man comedy show, which was performed for an audience of 400 and raised over £1,500 for a local charity.

After leaving college Booton went on to study Drama & Theatre Studies at Royal Holloway, University of London where he was a part of the numerous productions that took place there, including playing Cheswick in Dale Wasserman's stage adaptation of Ken Kasey's One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest and Mosca in Ben Jonson's Volpone; an open-air production in the 19th Century Founder's Building.[1]

In 2009 Booton moved to Los Angeles to complete a diploma course in Acting for Film. In addition Booton spent some time developing his improvisation skills with ACME Comedy Theatre, making an appearance in their weekly Theatre Sports shows.[3]

Career

After completing his diploma course in Los Angeles, Booton was granted a work permit for one year and continued to live in the United States. Initially he began doing Extra work on several major television shows and was cast in a small role in the American Film Institute short film Thule, which went on to win an award at the 2009 GI Film Festival.[4] His first major appearance then came in the form of a guest star role on an episode of the Discovery Channel's TV series Worst-Case Scenario.[5]

Booton then went on to appear in his first feature film role as the lead antagonist in the comedy feature film The Newest Pledge released by Lions Gate Entertainment and directed by Jason Michael Brescia.[6] Booton originally auditioned for one of the supporting characters that was then later cut by Brescia from the script. Instead Booton was offered the leading role of Rico Larsen and earned his first role in a feature film and his first leading role in a feature film at the same time. Booton then went on to appear in his second feature film lead role in the cult-comedy hit film MILF.[7]

Upon his return to England, Booton made his commercial debut in an advertising promotion for The Guardian and The Observer national newspapers.[8] He also filmed a lead role in a pilot episode for a new television comedy entitled Gradulthood, based on the struggle facing graduates seeking jobs in the post-recession market place.[9] The pilot was mentioned in the London Evening Standard newspaper as part of a wider discussion on young people's struggle to secure employment following the global recession.[10] In keeping with roles that have a social commentary, Booton took a part in UK feature film K-Shop, looking at society's problem with binge drinking and picking up national media coverage and a global film distribution deal.[11]

Punch and Judy

In 2013 Booton finished an apprenticeship in the art of the traditional English puppet show of Punch & Judy. Booton published an undergraduate thesis on the traditional puppetry art of Punch & Judy and through his research met and worked with one of the last remaining Punch & Judy street showman in England.[12] After his apprenticeship, Booton continued to perform the traditional English art form of Punch & Judy internationally.[13] As a performer of Punch & Judy, Booton is one of the last few remaining practitioners of this traditional art form and a member of the one of the oldest organisations of its kind.[14]

Filmography

YearTitleRoleEpisode
2016K-ShopCCTV ChiefFilm
2014Blood on the RoadJackShort
2014What If Life Was Like The MoviesMichaelShort
2013GradulthoodRalphTV Pilot
2012The Newest PledgeRicoFilm
2011ThuleAirman WalkerShort
2011Comic Relief : The Million Pound DropComedic ContestantTV Movie
2010Worst-Case ScenarioParty VampireTV – 1 Episode
2010Star WashersElanShort
2010MILFNateFilm
2010No Ordinary FamilyWolverine MascotTV – 2 Episodes
20101000 Ways to DieChess Geek / Bell BoyTV – 2 Episodes
2010Hitachi's TempuraSapporo (Voice)Short

References

  1. Jones, Stacey https://www.royalholloway.ac.uk/dramaandtheatre/yourfuturecareer/graduates/josephbooton.aspx, "Royal Holloway Graduates Interview: Joseph Booton – Your Future Career", 26 March 2015, p. 7.
  2. Lewsey, Tess, "Joseph Booton: Actor Interview with Tess Lewsey" – Redstone FM radio interview, 22 October 2014, p. 1.
  3. Jay, David, "Afternoon Chat with guest actor Joseph Booton" – Susy Radio FM radio interview, 20 November 2014, p. 1.
  4. GI Film Festival, "THE FIFTH ANNUAL GI FILM FESTIVAL WRAPS WITH FILM AWARDS", 17 May 2001, p. 1.
  5. IMDb, "Worst Case Scenario", p. 2.
  6. Centrella, Victoria, "Malverne director’s first feature film acquired by Lionsgate", 20 August 2012, p. 3.
  7. The Asylum Home Entertainment, "MILF", p. 4.
  8. The Guardian, "The Guardian and Observer Weekend™, 2013, p. 5.
  9. Will Hall-Smith "Gradulthood" Archived 17 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine, 2013, p. 6.
  10. Tobin, Lucy "Gradulthood, a grim reality for so many young Brits", 22 March 2013, p. 7.
  11. Smith, Steven "Bournemouth film inspired by town’s binge drinking problems to begin shooting", 5 February 2014, p. 7.
  12. Booton, Joseph (27 October 2008). Working for Punch: a bottler's insight into contemporary street Punch (1st ed.). Surrey, England: Royal Holloway Press. pp. 1–37.
  13. Booton, Joseph (27 January 2016). "Punch on Tour". Punch on Tour. Oh Creative. Retrieved 27 January 2016.
  14. "The Punch & Judy Fellowship". Website of The Punch & Judy Fellowship. The Punch & Judy Fellowship. 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
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