John Shuttleworth
The creation/alter ego of musician/actor Graham Fellows, John Shuttleworth ‘is’ a middle-aged “versatile singer-songwriter” from Sheffield, South Yorkshire. Achieving a UK hit single early in his career as , Fellows followed the misguided advice of his record label to keep a cult profile and did not see any further hits. In 1985, having signed a songwriting deal with Chappell Music, he was played some of their bad demo tapes and was inspired to create John Shuttleworth, a man with a hum-drum life and little aptitude for pop music who nonetheless writes song after song on his Yamaha keyboard with “built-in auto-accompaniment”. Shuttleworth was initially confined to home-produced tapes that were only circulated among Fellows’ friends but he gradually became more mainstream, with appearances on Radio 4 , Radio 1 and on Jonathan Ross’s ‘Saturday Zoo’ on Channel 4, eventually progressing to his own TV shows and films . Most incongruously, perhaps, Shuttleworth played to 25,000 bemused fans when he supported them at London’s Mile End Stadium in 1996. Fellows has also written books as John and regularly tours in character. The humour of John Shuttleworth is gentle and observational, bearing comparison to the work of Alan Bennett, being similarly rooted in a Northern English perspective. Although John is clearly never going to be a star, we are not invited to mock him, more to identify with him and his hopes and dreams. His songs, though unlikely to top the charts when covered by Clannad or Paul Young, as John perennially hopes, are nonetheless whimsical and clever beyond his understanding.