Louis Theroux Biography
Louis Theroux (was born as Louis Sebastian Theroux ) is an English documentary filmmaker, journalist, and broadcaster. Theroux is best known for his documentary series, including Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekends, When Louis Met…, and his BBC Two specials.
His career started in journalism and it bears the influences of notable writers in his family, such as his father Paul and his brother Marcel. The BBC has produced all of his documentaries and television series. He has received two British Academy Television Awards and a Royal Television Society Television Award for his work.
Louis Theroux Age
Louis Sebastian Theroux is an English documentary filmmaker, journalist, and broadcaster. Theroux is best known for his documentary series, including Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekends, When Louis Met…, and his BBC Two specials. He was born on 20 May 1970 in Singapore. He is 48 years old as of 2019.
Louis Theroux Early life
Louis Sebastian Theroux was born on 20 May 1970 in Singapore, the son of American travel writer and novelist Paul Theroux and his English then-wife, Anne (née Castle).
His paternal grandmother, Anne (née Dittami), was Italian American, and his paternal grandfather, Albert Eugene Theroux, was French-Canadian. His paternal grandmother was a grammar school teacher and his paternal grandfather was a salesman for the American Leather Oak company.
He holds both British and American citizenship. His older brother, Marcel, is a writer and television presenter, while his cousin, Justin, is an actor and screenwriter.
He is the nephew of novelist Alexander Theroux and writer Peter Theroux, and a great-great-grandson of financier, banker, and railroad magnate H. B. Hollins, as well as a music critic and author Gustav Kobbé.
Theroux moved with his family to England at the age of one and was brought up in London. He was educated at Westminster School, a public school within the precincts of Westminster Abbey.
While there, he became friends with comedians Adam Buxton and Joe Cornish, and the Liberal Democrat politician Nick Clegg, with whom he traveled to America.
He also performed in a number of school theatre productions including Bugsy Malone as Looney Bergonzi, Ritual for Dolls as the Army Officer, and The Splendour Falls as the Minstrel.
Theroux later read Modern History at Magdalen College, Oxford (1988-1991), graduating with first-class honors.
Louis TherouxLouis Theroux Personal life
Theroux’s first marriage was to Susanna Kleeman from 1998 to 2001; he later told the Financial Times‘ Sathnam Sanghera, “She was having trouble finding work … legally.
So we got married, to make it easier for her. We never really considered ourselves married in the full sense – there were no wedding photos or anything like that. It was really a marriage of convenience.”
Theroux later married longtime girlfriend Nancy Strang in 2012. They have three sons. He and his family lived in Harlesden, London until they temporarily moved to Los Angeles, California in early 2013, allowing him more time to focus on his LA Stories series. In August 2017, Theroux again relocated to Los Angeles.
In a 2012 masterclass, Theroux spoke of the challenges of combining family life with the need to go away to work on projects.
While filming for his BBC show Louis Theroux, Theroux was asked: “Why to pose a difference between religion and ethics?” He responded, “Because I don’t believe in God.”
During a 2018 interview with The Guardian Theroux revealed that he was a nervous flyer.
Louis Theroux Wife And Children
Louis Theroux is the son of the writer Paul Theroux and his mum is Anne Castle. He is known to have an elder brother named Marcel Theroux who is also a prolific writer and TV personality.
Moving further down his family line shows that the actor Justin Theroux is his cousin and his two uncles named Alexandra Theroux and Peter Theroux are renowned writers as well.
No wonder it was not hard for Louis to thrive at what he does in his documentary series as he had definitely inherited his skills for writing from his family.
The British-American documentary filmmaker was first married Susanna Kleeman in 1998 and they divorced about 3 years later in 2001.
It is common knowledge that Louis marriage to Susanna was not borne out of love as he revealed that he had to marry her to enable her to get work permits.
About 11 years later in 2012, Louis Theroux got married to his heartthrob, Nancy Strang who is also a TV personality and they have three children together named Frederick, Albert, and Walter Theroux.
Louis Theroux Career
Early career
Theroux’s first employment as a journalist was in the United States with Metro Silicon Valley, an alternative free weekly newspaper in San Jose, California.
In 1992, he was hired as a writer for Spy magazine. He also worked as a correspondent on Michael Moore’s TV Nation series, for which he provided segments on off-beat cultural subjects, including selling Avon to women in the Amazon Rainforest, the Jerusalem syndrome, and attempts by the Ku Klux Klan to rebrand itself as a civil rights group for white people.
When TV Nation ended, Theroux was signed to a development deal by the BBC, through which he developed Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekends. He has guest-written for a number of publications, including Hip Hop Connection, and he continues to write for The Idler.
Louis Theroux Documentaries
Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekends
In Weird Weekends (1998–2000), Theroux followed marginal, mostly American subcultures such as survivalists, black nationalists, white supremacists, and porn stars, often by living among or close to the people involved.
Often, his documentary method subtly exposed the contradictions or farcical elements of some seriously held beliefs. Theroux describes the aim of the series as:
Setting out to discover the genuinely odd in the most ordinary setting. To me, it’s almost a privilege to be welcomed into these communities and to shine a light on them and, maybe, through my enthusiasm, to get people to reveal more of themselves than they may have intended. The show is laughing at me, adrift in their world, as much as at them. I don’t have to play up that stuff. I’m not a matinee idol disguised as a nerd.
When Louis Met
In the series When Louis Met… (2000–02), Theroux accompanied a different British celebrity in each program in their daily lives, interviewing them as they go.
His episode about British entertainer Jimmy Savile, When Louis Met Jimmy, was voted one of the top documentaries of all time in a 2005 survey by Britain’s Channel 4.
Some years after the episode was filmed, the NSPCC described Savile as one of the most prolific sex offenders in Great Britain.
In an interview in 2015, Theroux expressed his intention to produce a follow-up documentary about Savile for the BBC to explore how the late entertainer had continued his abuse for so long, to meet people he knew closely, and examine his own reflections on his inability to dig more deeply into the first case.
This follow-up documentary, with the title Savile, aired on BBC Two on Sunday, 2 October 2016, and lasted 1 hour, 15 minutes.
In When Louis Met the Hamiltons, the former Conservative MP Neil Hamilton and his wife Christine were arrested during the course of filming, due to false allegations of indecent assault.
In When Louis Met Max Clifford, Max Clifford tried to set up Theroux, but he was caught lying as the crew recorded his live microphone during the conversations.
After this series concluded, a retrospective called Life with Louis was released. Theroux made a documentary called Louis, Martin & Michael about his quest to get an interview with Michael Jackson. Selected episodes of When Louis Met… were included as bonus content on a Best-Of collection of Weird Weekends.
BBC Two specials
In these special programs, beginning in 2003, Theroux returned to American themes, working at feature-length and in a more natural way.
In March 2006, he signed a new deal with the BBC to make 10 films over the course of three years. Subjects for the specials include criminal gangs in Lagos, Neo-Nazis in America, ultra-Zionists in Israel.
He also visits child psychiatry and the prison systems in California and Florida. 2007 special, The Most Hated Family in America, received strong critical praise from the international media.
My Scientology Movie
In October 2016, Theroux premiered a feature-length documentary entitled My Scientology Movie. Produced by Simon Chinn—a schoolfriend of Theroux’s—and directed by John Dower, the film covers Theroux attempting to gain access to the secretive Church of Scientology. The film premiered at the London Film Festival in 2015 and was released in cinemas in the UK on 7 October 2016.
Louis Theroux Books
Theroux published his first book, The Call of the Weird: Travels in American Subcultures, in Britain in 2005. In it, he recounts his return to the United States to learn about the lives of some of the people he had featured in his television programs.
Louis Theroux Other appearances
Theroux makes a few appearances on ‘the Adam & Joe Show’ DVD, has been a guest many times on Adam & Joe’s radio shows as well as on The Adam Buxton Podcast.
As part of the Weird Weekends episode “Porn”, Theroux agreed to film a cameo in the 1997 gay pornography film Take a Peak.
He did not perform sexual acts in the film but made a brief appearance as a park ranger in search of a criminal. In the Weird Weekends episode “Infomercials”, he was featured as a live salesman for an at-home paper shredder for the Home Shopping Network.
In December 2015 Theroux captained the team representing Magdalen College, Oxford, on BBC Four’s Christmas University Challenge. In their first-round match, the team beat the University of Exeter by 220 to 130 and Theroux’s team went on to win the tournament.
Louis Theroux Net Worth
With regards to his net worth, Louis has done pretty well for himself as he is known to have a whopping $4 million to his name. Well, it is definitely worth his efforts as his documentaries show that he spends a lot of resources as well as quality time to work on a piece. His awards are also evidence that he has put in his best as a documentary filmmaker.
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