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Personal Info

Gender

Male

Birthday

1957-05-13 (67 years old)

Place of Birth

Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu, India

Mark Heap

Biography:

Mark Heap (born 13 May 1957) is a British actor and comedian. Television credits include Ghost Train (1991), Smith & Jones (1997–1998), Brass Eye (1997–2001), Kiss Me Kate (1998), The Zig and Zag Show (1998), How Do You Want Me? (1998–1999), Stressed Eric (1998–2000), Green Wing (2004–2007), Spaced (1999–2001), The Strangerers (2000), Jam (2000), Doc Martin (2000), Happiness (2001–2003), Lark Rise to Candleford (2008–2011), Desperate Romantics (2009), Friday Night Dinner (2011–2020), Upstart Crow (2016–2018), and Benidorm (2017–2018).

Film credits include About a Boy (2002), Stardust (2007), The World's End (2013), Time Travel is Dangerous (2024).

Heap was born in Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu, India, to an English father and American mother, the youngest of four boys. When the family moved to the United Kingdom, they lived in Wales. He stayed there until he moved to northern England, where he lives now. He began acting in the 1970s as a member of the Medieval Players, a touring company performing medieval and early modern theatre, and featuring stilt-walking, juggling and puppetry. His brother Carl Heap, who is also an actor, was the artistic director of the company. After its demise, he became part of the street theatre duo The Two Marks (with Mark Saban).

Heap starred in the BBC sketch show Big Train, where he performed a barefoot gymnastics routine and other sketches between 1998 and 2002, alongside other burgeoning comedy stars Simon Pegg, Julia Davis, Kevin Eldon, Catherine Tate, Amelia Bullmore, Rebecca Front, Nick Frost and Tracy-Ann Oberman. He appeared as struggling artist Brian Topp in Spaced (1999–2001), and the pompous Dr. Alan Statham in Green Wing (2004–07).

Heap worked with Chris Morris, in Blue Jam, radio predecessor to Jam, and the documentary parody series Brass Eye. He voiced the lead character of Eric Feeble in the animated comedy Stressed Eric. Other recurring roles included: Terry Roche in Paul Whitehouse's comedy-drama Happiness and Derek Few in How Do You Want Me?. He played Harry in the short-lived Rob Grant TV series The Strangerers, in 2000. He also guested in the second series of the BBC comedy Look Around You as Leonard Hatred.

He appeared as an unsuccessful businessman who became a bellboy, in the 2007 BBC One drama Hotel Babylon. Between 2008 and 2010, he appeared as head postman Thomas Brown, in 32 episodes of the BBC period drama Lark Rise to Candleford. He was the super villain Lightkiller, in an episode of the sitcom No Heroics. He also appeared as the father of Chris Miles in the Channel 4 programme Skins. Heap played the love interest of the main character in the second series of the BBC comedy Love Soup. He played the role of Charles Dickens in the 2009 BBC Two drama Desperate Romantics. He also played Jessica Hynes' husband in the one-off comedy written by Hynes and Julia Davis: Lizzie & Sarah.

Known For

Acting

2025

Time Travel Is Dangerous! as The Regency Dandy

2024

Piglets as Superintendent Bob Weekes

2023

Beyond Paradise as Bob Holland

2022

The House as Mr. Thomas (voice)
The School for Good and Evil as Professor Manley
Sister Boniface Mysteries as Kirk Fabricant
Incredible Ant as Flibbington (voice)

2021

2020

Intelligence as Barnaby Bailer

2019

2018

Killer Weekend as Gerald
The Midnight Gang as Sir Quentin Strillers

2017

2016

Digby Dragon as Mungo (voice)
Upstart Crow as Sir Robert Greene

2015

Undercover as DCI Langdon
The Team as Albert Greaves

2013

The World's End as Publican 7
All Stars as Simon Tarrington
Heading Out as Brian
Endeavour as Felix Lorimer

2012

2011

Is This a Joke? as Doctor
Holy Flying Circus as Andrew Thorogood
Spy as Phillip
Death in Paradise as Alec Burton

2010

2009

Misfits as Jonas
Desperate Romantics as Charles Dickens

2008

2007

Hitler: The Comedy Years as (archive footage) (uncredited)
Stardust as Tertius
Skins as Graham
Benidorm as Malcolm

2006

Confetti as Registrar
Alpha Male as Darwin
Scoop as M.C.

2005

Animal as Hugh Getner
The Crust as Cowboy Keith

2004

Out of time as Charlie
The Calcium Kid as Sebastian Gore-Brown
Green Wing as Alan Statham
Agatha Christie's Marple as Mr. Humpries

2003

2002

About a Boy as Math Teacher
Ant Muzak as In-Store Tannoy Voice
Look Around You as Leonard Hatred

2001

Doc Martin as Mitch
Happiness as Terry Roche

2000

Jam as Various

1999

Spaced as Brian Topp
People Like Us as Graham Atkinson

1998

1997

Hospital! as Dr. Ralph Crosby
Midsomer Murders as Simon Fergus-Johnson
Brass Eye as Simon Hottrin/Dr. Zeus Spofforth
An Unsuitable Job for a Woman as DS Maskell (uncredited)

1996

1995

The World of Lee Evans as Platform Guard

1993

1983

Martin Luther, Heretic as Medieval Player

-

The Magic Faraway Tree as Mr. Oom Boom Boom

Writing