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Lou Sanders
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Louise Samantha Sanders (born 24 November 1978) is an English stand-up comedian, writer and actress. Since beginning her career in comedy, she has appeared regularly on panel shows, performed on Live at the Apollo and won the eighth series of Taskmaster in 2019. Since 2021, she has appeared as Mel Giedroyc's sidekick on the Dave comedy series Mel Giedroyc: Unforgivable; she was a contestant on the sixteenth series of Dancing on Ice in 2024.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Louise Samantha Sanders was born on 24 November 1978[1][2] in Barnstaple, Devon to Margaret (née Lang) and David Sanders.[3][4] Her parents divorced when Sanders was two, and she and her older brother were raised in Broadstairs, Kent by her mother and her stepfather, who was a history teacher.[5][6] Her father was periodically present.[5] Sanders moved out at the age of 15;[5] she later earned a degree in Communication and Cultural Studies from London Metropolitan University.[5]
Career
[edit]Before beginning her career in comedy, Sanders worked in administrative roles, including as an executive PA and complaints handler at Ofcom.[5][7] She took comedy classes from Logan Murray, and she was paid to write a comedic blog about The Apprentice.[5]
As a live performer, Sanders performs regularly both in the UK and around the world. In 2018, her show Shame Pig was the joint winner of the Comedians' Choice Award for Best Show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe[8][9] and she returned to the Festival in 2019 with her show Say Hello to Your New Step Mummy.[10]
Sanders was declared the winner of the eighth series of Taskmaster in 2019;[11] she has also appeared on television shows including QI, Would I Lie to You?, Travel Man, 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown, Hypothetical, The Russell Howard Hour, Jon Richardson: Ultimate Worrier, Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled, 8 Out of 10 Cats, Red Nose Day for Comic Relief, Russell Howard's Good News, Live at the Electric and Question Team. She has also acted in sitcoms including Aisling Bea's This Way Up and Karl Pilkington's Sick of It. She is also a regular guest on BBC Radio 4's The Unbelievable Truth. In 2019, Sanders appeared on BBC Two's Live at the Apollo (series 15, episode 2).[12]
As a writer, Sanders wrote and starred in the short film Elderflower which co-starred Sheila Reid, Tom Rosenthal and Mike Wozniak.[13] She has also written for 8 Out of 10 Cats, Mock the Week, Stand Up for the Week and Miranda Hart.
Sanders has been an occasional guest host on Elis James and John Robins on BBC Radio 5 Live.[14] In February 2020, Sanders started hosting a podcast called Cuddle Club.[15] From February 2021, she has appeared in the Dave comedy panel show Mel Giedroyc: Unforgivable. From April 2022 until September 2023, Sanders hosted Taskmaster: The People's Podcast.[16] In August 2023, Sanders released her autobiography What's That Lady Doing?.[15][3] In 2024, Sanders appeared as a contestant on the sixteenth series of Dancing on Ice. She was paired with Brendyn Hatfield and they were the fifth couple to be eliminated.[17][18]
In March 2025, she starred in the first series of LOL: Last One Laughing UK, hosted by Jimmy Carr and Roisin Conaty, alongside Richard Ayoade, Sara Pascoe, Bob Mortimer, Rob Beckett, Judi Love, Joe Wilkinson, Joe Lycett, Daisy May Cooper and Harriet Kemsley.
Sanders was the opening performer at Chichester Festival Theatre's new venue The Nest, where she headlined on 31 July 2025, joined by Cecily Hitchcock.[19][20]
Personal life
[edit]Sanders is a teetotaler[21] and vegan.[22]
Television
[edit]| Year | Programme | Channel | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Russell Howard's Good News | BBC Three | Series 8, episode 3[23] |
| 2016 | Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled | Dave | Series 4, episode 3: "A Penis Poking Through The Window" |
| 2017 | Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled | Series 5, episode 6: "Half of My Special Rose" | |
| Live from the BBC | BBC Three | Series 2, episode 2 | |
| 2018 | Sick of It | Sky One | Series 1, episode 3: "Lonely People", as character Megan[24] |
| The Dog Ate My Homework | CBBC | Series 5, episode 4 | |
| 2019 | Taskmaster | Dave | Winner, series 8 |
| 8 Out of 10 Cats | Channel 4 | Series 21, episode 6 | |
| 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown | Series 17, episode 1[25] | ||
| Jon Richardson: Ultimate Worrier | Dave | Series 2, episode 4: "Health"[26] | |
| The Russell Howard Hour | Sky Max | Series 2, episode 13[27] | |
| Hypothetical | Dave | Series 1, episode 3 | |
| Travel Man | Channel 4 | Series 9, episode 2: "Bergen"[28] | |
| This Way Up | Channel 4, Hulu | Series 1, episode 3, as character Fran[29] | |
| Live At the Apollo | BBC Two | Series 15, episode 2 | |
| 2020 | QI | Series 17, episode 13: "Quills"[30] | |
| Roast Battle | Comedy Central UK | Series 4, episode 5. With Luke McQueen | |
| Richard Osman's House of Games | BBC Two | Series 3, week 13 | |
| Hypothetical | Dave | Series 2, episode 5 | |
| Big Zuu's Big Eats | Series 1, episode 10 | ||
| The Late Late Show with James Corden | CBS | Episode 732 | |
| 2021 | Would I Lie To You? | BBC One | Series 14, episode 1[31] |
| Question Team | Dave | Series 1, episode 7 | |
| Guessable | Comedy Central UK | Series 2, episode 3: "Alan and a Spread of Meat Loaf" | |
| Between the Covers | BBC | Series 3, episode 2. Chose the book Delicacy by Katy Wix | |
| Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled | Dave | Series 6, episode 9: "The Accuracy of a Pigeon" | |
| Outsiders | Contestant | ||
| 2021– | Mel Giedroyc: Unforgivable | "Sidekick" to host Mel Giedroyc[32] | |
| 2022 | Would I Lie To You? | BBC One | Series 15, episode 4[33] |
| Guessable | Comedy Central UK | Series 3, episode 11: "Sugar Puff Daddy" | |
| Married At First Sight: Unveiled | E4 | Episode 6 | |
| Question Team | Dave | Series 2, episode 8 | |
| CelebAbility | ITV2 | Series 6, episode 2 | |
| 2023 | World's Most Dangerous Roads | Dave | Series 4, episode 5: "Iceland". With Ed Gamble |
| The Weakest Link | BBC One | Series 2, episode 10[34] | |
| Guessable | Comedy Central UK | Series 4, episode 5: "I live and breathe Lou Bega" | |
| 2024 | Dancing on Ice | ITV | Contestant, series 16 |
| 2025 | LOL: Last One Laughing UK | Amazon Prime UK | Series 1 Contestant |
References
[edit]- ^ "What a day! It's Black Friday and also my birthday". Instagram. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
- ^ "Lou Sanders: 'It took years to get rid of the shame of my drinking'". i. 14 February 2024. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
- ^ a b Sanders, Lou (17 August 2023). What's That Lady Doing?. Bonnier Books Ltd. p. 288. ISBN 9781788708579.
- ^ "Louise Samantha Sanders". freeBMD. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f Jones, Alice (1 February 2021). "Lou Sanders on shame, skating and her new show, Unforgivable: 'You don't have to be broken to be funny'". i. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
- ^ "Exclusive – Lou Sanders speaks out about fronting Unforgivable with Mel Giedroyc: "There's hardly any comedy shows with two women"". Radio Times. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
- ^ Sanders appeared as a panelist on the television game show Would I Lie to You? transmitted on 8 January 2021, and was introduced as having been a complaints handler at Ofcom by host of the show Rob Brydon.
- ^ Davies, Ashley (21 September 2018). "Comedian Lou Sanders on playing her shame for laughs". Metro. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
- ^ "Comedians' Choice Awards". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
- ^ "Lou Sanders: Say Hello to Your New Step-Mummy". Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Archived from the original on 17 June 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
- ^ "News: Taskmaster Winner Announced". Beyond The Joke. 10 July 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
- ^ "Live At The Apollo". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
- ^ Elderflower, retrieved 22 October 2019
- ^ "New Tour For Lou Sanders". Beyond The Joke. 18 January 2024. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
- ^ a b Aroesti, Rachel (6 October 2023). "Comedian Lou Sanders: 'It blows my mind that people still don't want to believe women'". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
- ^ Bennett, Steve (8 September 2023). "Jenny Eclair joins Taskmaster: The People's Podcast". Chortle.
- ^ "Dancing on Ice reveals Taskmaster star as eighth contestant for 2024 series". Digital Spy. 3 October 2023. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
- ^ "Two icons eliminated from Dancing On Ice in double devastation". metro.co.uk. 11 February 2024. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ "Comedy night with Lou Sanders". The Nest, powered by CFT. Retrieved 20 July 2025.
- ^ "We're launching The Nest!". Chichester Festival Theatre. 11 June 2025. Retrieved 30 July 2025.
- ^ Sanders, Lou (12 May 2017). "A moment that changed me: realising, aged 16, that I couldn't handle alcohol | Lou Sanders". The Guardian – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^ "Hi, I'm Lou Sanders and I'm a Vegan". BBC Radio 6. 31 July 2018.
- ^ ""Russell Howard's Good News" Episode #8.3 (TV Episode 2013)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ ""Sick of It" Lonely People (TV Episode 2018)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ ""8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown" Episode #17.1 (TV Episode 2019)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ ""Jon Richardson: Ultimate Worrier" Health (TV Episode 2019)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ ""The Russell Howard Hour" Episode #2.13 (TV Episode 2019)", IMDb, retrieved 29 April 2023
- ^ ""Travel Man: 48 Hours in..." Bergen (TV Episode 2019)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ ""This Way Up" Episode #1.3 (TV Episode 2019)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ ""QI" Quills (TV Episode 2020)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ ""Would I Lie to You?" Episode #14.1 (TV Episode 2021)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ "Mel Giedroyc: Unforgivable - Dave Chat Show". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ ""Would I Lie to You?" Episode #15.4 (TV Episode 2022)". IMDb. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ "The Weakest Link: Episode #2.10". IMDb. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
External links
[edit]Lou Sanders
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Childhood and family background
Lou Sanders was born on 24 November 1978 in Barnstaple, Devon, England, to her parents.[6] Her parents divorced when she was two years old, after which she and her older brother were raised primarily by their mother and stepfather in Broadstairs, Kent.[1][6] The instability from the divorce and challenging family dynamics, including a strained relationship with her stepfather who often criticized her, fostered an early sense of independence in Sanders.[4][7] At age 15, she left the family home in Broadstairs to live on her own, a decision driven by ongoing conflicts and her desire for autonomy.[4][8] These formative experiences, marked by emotional turmoil and limited paternal contact, later informed her comedic perspective on resilience and self-reliance, as she has reflected in her memoir.[4]Education and early career influences
After leaving her family home in Broadstairs, Kent, at the age of 15, Sanders relocated to London, where she navigated early adulthood amid personal challenges that fostered her resilient outlook.[4] To achieve financial independence, she took on various low-paid roles, including administrative positions and working as a complaints handler at Ofcom, experiences that honed her observational humor drawn from the absurdities of everyday office life and customer interactions.[9][10] Sanders later attended London Metropolitan University, earning a degree in Communication and Cultural Studies, which provided a foundation for her interest in performance and storytelling.[11][10] These post-education jobs, often part-time to allow flexibility, were marked by financial strain; she occasionally borrowed money from her father to cover rent while transitioning toward creative pursuits.[9] Her initial spark for comedy emerged from exposure to stand-up performers and local scenes in the early 2000s, influencing her quirky, self-deprecating style rooted in personal anecdotes.[12] This interest led her to enroll in classes with comedian Logan Murray, whose teachings on character and narrative helped shape her early comedic voice before she fully committed to the craft.[10] The struggles of self-reliance during this period, including bouts of depression from unfulfilling work, ultimately reinforced the tenacious persona that defines her material.[9]Stand-up comedy career
Beginnings and development
Lou Sanders entered the stand-up comedy scene in her mid-20s in the late 2000s, following an encounter at a festival, by performing at open mic nights across London.[13] She soon appeared on television, including Stand Up for the Week in 2010.[14] Her initial foray into live performance was marked by a debut appearance on an unconventional stage: the upper deck of a No. 73 night bus during a late-night maintenance stop, where she entertained a small group of teenagers and a passenger named Carl with improvised material.[15] This experience, following a comedy course, highlighted her early willingness to experiment in low-stakes environments, though traditional pub open mics soon followed, including one in a London venue where pre-gig nerves left her unable to eat.[16] In her formative years, Sanders faced typical novice challenges, such as inconsistent audience responses and the financial strain of low- or unpaid gigs while holding a part-time job at Ofcom.[9] She often traveled for side gigs, including trips to Wales that required late-night returns and early work shifts, leading to exhaustion and occasional borrowing from friends to cover rent after transitioning to full-time comedy around 2015.[9] These struggles honed her observational and self-deprecating style, characterized by chaotic, surreal storytelling drawn from personal vulnerabilities, which she refined through repeated trial and error rather than formal scripting.[9] Her educational background in communication studies provided a foundation for building performative confidence, enabling her to connect with audiences despite early "deaths" on stage.[17] Key influences on Sanders' development included British comedians like Eddie Izzard and Ross Noble, whose surreal and improvisational approaches inspired her to blend absurdity with heartfelt confession in her sets.[17] By the mid-2010s, consistent performances led to her integration into London's regular club scene, where she built a reputation for reliable, engaging live comedy before broader recognition.[13]Notable performances and tours
Sanders made her Edinburgh Fringe debut in 2014 with the show Another Great Show Again, marking the beginning of her annual appearances at the festival.[18] Her progression through subsequent Fringe runs built her reputation, culminating in the 2018 hour-long stand-up Shame Pig at the Monkey Barrel Comedy Club, where she delivered raw, observational material that drew strong audience engagement during its daily lunchtime slots.[19][20] Following her victory on Taskmaster in 2019, Sanders launched her largest national tour to date with Say Hello to Your New Step-Mummy, performing across the UK from October 2019 to April 2020, including sold-out dates at venues like Soho Theatre.[21][22] The show incorporated international elements, with Sanders having previously toured her live acts to packed houses worldwide, earning acclaim for her unfiltered style.[23] In recent years, Sanders has continued her live stage work with the 2025 tour No Kissing in the Bingo Hall, a brand-new hour exploring human quirks through self-deprecating anecdotes, scheduled across UK theaters in the first half of the year.[2][24] She headlined the inaugural comedy night at Chichester Festival Theatre's new venue, The Nest, on 31 July 2025, supported by Cecily Hitchcock, delivering a set that highlighted her signature blend of whimsy and candor to an enthusiastic crowd.[25] Throughout her tours, Sanders' onstage persona has evolved from early experimental efforts—rooted in her initial comedy development—into an authentic extension of herself, as she reflected in a 2025 interview, emphasizing vulnerability over constructed characters.[2] This shift is evident in personal anecdotes woven into her material, such as her year-long "man-ban" on dating explored in Say Hello to Your New Step-Mummy, and her long-term vegan lifestyle, which informs themes of ethical living and self-reflection in recent performances.[26][27]Awards and critical reception
In 2018, Sanders' stand-up show Shame Pig was the joint winner of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Comedians' Choice Award for Best Show, voted on by fellow performers.[28] Critics have praised Sanders for her original comedic voice, blending vulnerability with sharp wit in a style that draws from personal authenticity. A 2025 Guardian profile highlighted her development of an onstage persona rooted in raw emotional openness, noting how she evolved from experimental approaches to embracing her unfiltered self, which resonates through her performances on topics like breakups and self-doubt.[2] Reviews of her subsequent Fringe appearances, such as Say Hello to Your New Step-Mummy in 2019, described her as "irresistibly good" for her engaging mix of feminism, desire, and quirky storytelling.[29] By 2022, her Edinburgh show earned acclaim as a "masterful, charismatic performance" that kept audiences on edge with offbeat asides.[30] Sanders has received informal recognitions through festival highlights and industry profiles, positioning her as one of Britain's most original comedians, known for her distinctive, unpredictable style that stands out on the circuit.[3]Broadcasting and media work
Television appearances and roles
Lou Sanders' television career commenced in 2013 with a guest appearance on the BBC Three topical comedy series Russell Howard's Good News, where she performed stand-up in episode 8.3. Over the subsequent decade, she expanded into acting, panel shows, reality formats, and hosting, leveraging her improvisational humor to become a familiar face on British screens. Her work spans channels including BBC, Channel 4, ITV, Sky One, Dave, and streaming platforms like Hulu and Amazon Prime. In acting, Sanders made her scripted debut as Megan, a brief but memorable character, in the third episode ("Lonely People") of the Sky One sitcom Sick of It in 2018, opposite Karl Pilkington and Steve Coogan. The following year, she portrayed Fran, Aisling Bea's sister-in-law, in the third episode of the Channel 4/Hulu series This Way Up, contributing to the show's exploration of mental health through comedic family dynamics. Sanders achieved prominence as the champion of Taskmaster series 8 in 2019 on Dave (subsequently moving to Channel 4), competing alongside Iain Stirling, Joe Thomas, Paul Sinha, and Sian Gibson to complete absurd creative challenges set by host Greg Davies and assistant Alex Horne. She clinched the title with a total of 164 points, her victory secured through standout efforts in tasks emphasizing ingenuity and absurdity, such as crafting a realistic injury from food in episode 5 ("Stay Humble"), where her ghastly, bloody creation using ketchup and props earned high marks for realism. Other notable moments included her inventive approach to concealing herself in a phone box in episode 6 and, in the finale (episode 10, "Clumpy Swayey Clumsy Man"), devising rocket-powered mannequin legs for the "tremendous pretend legs" challenge, which propelled her to the win despite a competitive field. Sanders returned for the 2022 special Taskmaster: Champion of Champions II, placing joint third among previous winners.[31][32][33] As a panel show regular, Sanders has appeared frequently on flagship comedy quizzes, bringing her self-deprecating wit to discussions. She debuted on Channel 4's 8 Out of 10 Cats in 2019 (episode 6 and specials), returning for 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown the same year (series 16, episode 1), in 2020 specials, and in 2025 (episode 4). On BBC Two's QI, her guest appearances began in 2020 (series Q, episode 13: "Quills" and specials) and continued through 2020 (series R, episode 10: "Rest & Recreation"), 2023 (series T, episode 8: "Ticks Tax Toes"), 2024 (series V, episode 1: "Voyaging"), and 2025 (series W, episode 3: "Weaponry"). She featured on BBC One's Would I Lie to You? in 2021 (series 14, episode 1 and a special) and 2022 (series 15, episode 4 and specials).[13] Sanders ventured into reality television with the sixteenth series of ITV's Dancing on Ice in 2024, paired with professional skater Brendyn Hatfield; she performed routines blending comedy and skating, including a musical week number, before elimination in week five in a double elimination, with Roxy Shahidi eliminated directly and Sanders losing the skate-off to Ricky Norwood. In 2025, she competed in the inaugural series of Amazon Prime's LOL: Last One Laughing UK, hosted by Jimmy Carr, where ten comedians, including Sanders, attempted to provoke laughter in others while maintaining a straight face over six episodes.[34][35] Since 2021, Sanders has co-hosted Dave's Mel Giedroyc: Unforgivable as sidekick to Mel Giedroyc, interrogating celebrity guests like Guz Khan and Roisin Conaty about their most embarrassing misdeeds across four series through 2024, with the format emphasizing confessional humor and audience interaction.[36] The following table provides a chronological overview of her major television credits from 2013 to 2025, focusing on on-screen roles and appearances (excluding writing credits unless dual-role).| Year | Show | Channel | Role | Notes/Episodes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Russell Howard's Good News | BBC Three | Guest (Self) | Series 8, episode 3[37] |
| 2016 | Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled | Dave | Guest (Self) | Series 4, episode 3[13] |
| 2017 | Live from the BBC | BBC Three | Guest (Self) | Various episodes[13] |
| 2018 | The Dog Ate My Homework | CBBC | Guest (Self) | Series 5, episode 4; series 6, episode 5[13] |
| 2018 | Sick of It | Sky One | Actress (Megan) | Series 1, episode 3 |
| 2019 | Taskmaster | Dave/Channel 4 | Contestant (Self), Winner | Series 8, full series (10 episodes)[31] |
| 2019 | This Way Up | Channel 4/Hulu | Actress (Fran) | Series 1, episode 3 |
| 2019 | 8 Out of 10 Cats | Channel 4 | Guest (Self) | Episode 6; specials |
| 2019 | 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown | Channel 4 | Guest (Self) | Series 16, episode 1[13] |
| 2019–2025 | QI | BBC Two | Guest (Self) | Multiple: 2020 (Q/13), 2020 (R/10), 2023 (T/8), 2024 (V/1), 2025 (W/3) and specials |
| 2020 | 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown | Channel 4 | Guest (Self) | Specials[13] |
| 2021 | Would I Lie to You? | BBC One | Guest (Self) | Series 14, episode 1; special |
| 2021–2024 | Mel Giedroyc: Unforgivable | Dave | Co-host (Self) | Series 1–4, full series |
| 2022 | Taskmaster: Champion of Champions II | Channel 4 | Contestant (Self) | Special (joint 3rd)[31] |
| 2022 | Would I Lie to You? | BBC One | Guest (Self) | Series 15, episode 4; specials |
| 2024 | Dancing on Ice | ITV | Contestant (Self) | Series 16, weeks 1–5 (eliminated week 5 in double elimination, lost skate-off to Ricky Norwood)[34] |
| 2025 | 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown | Channel 4 | Guest (Self) | Episode 4[13] |
| 2025 | LOL: Last One Laughing UK | Amazon Prime | Contestant (Self) | Series 1, full series (6 episodes)[35] |
