Frank Skinner has confirmed his departure from Absolute Radio after 15 years at the station, but acknowledged that he didn’t take the news ‘well’.
The broadcaster and comedian, 67, has been on Absolute Radio since 2009 and was inducted into the Radio Academy Hall of Fame in December 2015.
He has been the host of the Saturday breakfast slot The Frank Skinner Show, alongside co-hosts Emily Dean and Pierre Novellie, and also hosts Frank Skinner’s Poetry Podcast, which will continue for two more series.
In a pre-recorded show, he revealed he will be leaving in May and said: ‘My manager (called)… you know every year, about this time, we’ve just celebrated our 15th anniversary on the show, so obviously that means the new contract is coming, and every year I do self-deprecating jokes about the fact that we probably won’t get it renewed.
‘Guess what?! Yeah, we didn’t! So, um, we’re not just going now, I’m not going to say bye and that’s the end we’ve got, like, several other, we’ve got some notice to serve, but um yeah, but no that was um… that’s it!’
He added: ‘We had a good run but I realise that in recent times but I am ever more becoming Grandad from The Simpsons, but even so um, yes, I’m not going to pretend I took it… well I took it well in that we’ve had 15 years and Absolute have actually been very, very good to us in those 15 years but I didn’t take it well,
‘I took it well in the way David Tennant took it well as the tenth Doctor when he started to regenerate and said: “I don’t want to go!”‘
Paul Sylvester, Absolute Radio’s content director said: ‘Frank has been a huge part of the Absolute Radio story and after 15 years this is truly the end of an era.
‘We are hugely grateful for the contribution he’s made to both Saturday mornings and our charity comedy nights at the London Palladium.
‘We’ll share details of our future summer schedule in due course, but there’s still a few more weeks to enjoy Frank, Emily and Pierre on Saturday mornings.’
Skinner – whose real name is Christopher Graham Collins – has been touring with his acclaimed show 30 Years of Dirt, heading to Milton Keynes, Brighton, Leeds and other venues in April, with more dates in May and June at other venues.
In August the show will return to the West End for a limited three-week run, it was recently announced.
Skinner was made an MBE in the 2022 New Year Honours list, where he was recognised for his services to entertainment.
He began his live stand-up career in 1987 when he tried his hand as a comic at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and returned to the festival to scoop one of comedy’s most prestigious prizes – the Perrier Award – four years after his first performance.
Alongside fellow comic and screenwriter David Baddiel, Skinner makes up one half of Baddiel and Skinner, the duo behind TV programmes Fantasy Football and Baddiel And Skinner Unplanned.
The football-enthusiast duo, along with the Liverpudlian rock band The Lightning Seeds, wrote the football anthem Three Lions for the 1996 Euro tournament in England.
Before England’s Euro 2020 final, they gave an inspiring performance of the song, with Sir Geoff Hurst, a World Cup winner, introducing them to the stage.
Skinner has written several books, including two autobiographies and Dispatches From The Sofa: The Collected Wisdom Of Frank Skinner, which is a compilation of his columns for The Times.
His television work involves making and hosting three series of Frank Skinner’s Opinionated for BBC Two, presenting various series of BBC One’s Room 101, and Portrait/Landscape Artist of the Year for Sky Arts.
He has also hosted documentaries for the BBC about Muhammad Ali, Elvis Presley, and the life of actor and musician George Formby.