Adam Rickitt

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Adam Rickitt
File:Adam Rickitt IMGP6783.jpg
Rickitt performing on the main stage at the Cardiff Mardi Gras, 2010.
Born Adam Peter Rickitt
(1978-05-29) 29 May 1978 (age 46)
Crewe, England, United Kingdom
Nationality British
Occupation Actor, model, singer, charity fundraiser
Years active 1997–present
Television Coronation Street (1997–99, 2002–04)
Shortland Street (2007–10)

Adam Peter Rickitt (born 29 May 1978) is an English actor, singer and model and charity fundraiser. He is most well known for playing Nick Tilsley in the soap opera Coronation Street from 1997 to 1999 and again from 2002 to 2004. He is now part of the pop supergroup 5th Story, set up for The Big Reunion.

Early life

Rickitt was born in Crewe, the youngest of four brothers. His father is co-owner of an estate agency. Rickitt was educated at Sedbergh School, a boarding school in Cumbria.[1]

Rickitt has spoken publicly about suffering from bulimia in his teenage years and about how male sufferers have largely been neglected.[2]

Career

Modelling

Prior to his acting career, Rickitt had briefly been a child model. He subsequently modelled for numerous UK magazines such as Attitude and Cosmopolitan.

Television

Rickitt is most famous for his role on popular ITV soap opera Coronation Street, where he took over the role of Nick Tilsley in 1997. His girlfriend sent his pictures to various showbusiness agents, one of whom was Nigel Martin-Smith. At first Martin-Smith had the idea of putting him in a boy band he was forming, but when he found out that Coronation Street were re-casting the part of Nick, Rickitt auditioned for the part and got the job. The part had been played by actor Warren Jackson until 1996 when the character moved to Canada.

Rickitt left the series in 1999, returning briefly in 2002 and for a longer spell from 2003 to 2004 after which he along with several cast members were sacked when a new producer came to the show. His most famous and controversial storyline was in 2003 when the character of Nick was involved in the series' first gay kiss with Todd Grimshaw (played by Bruno Langley).

In March 2006, Rickitt took part in the Channel 4 reality show The Games. He took part as a replacement, after the scheduled contestant, electronic musician Goldie, had to pull out, following an accident during training for the water ski jump, in which he fractured his femur. Rickitt himself sustained two black eyes after over-rotating off the diving board.[3] He finished last in the contest.

Rickitt joined the cast of the Shortland Street in early 2007 as the mysterious Kieran Mitchell with his first appearance being on 16 March 2007. The character was written out of the series in 2010, with Rickitt's final episode airing on 2 August 2010. He had said that he preferred his role on Shortland Street to working on Coronation Street.[4]

Music career

Rickitt left Coronation Street in 1999 to start a music career. He signed a six-album deal with Polydor, although he only released one album - Good Times - in 1999. Rickitt's first single, "I Breathe Again", reached number five in the UK and was certified Silver by the BPI,[5] but follow up singles "Everything My Heart Desires" (also recorded by Mandy Moore), and "Best Thing" were less successful, reaching no.15 and no.25 respectively. The album was also a commercial failure, peaking at no.41 and dropping out of the chart after only one week.[6] Rickitt was then dropped by his record label, and he abandoned his career in pop music. In 1999, at a performance at The Prince's Trust Party in the Park, a member of the audience sprayed gas onto the stage when Rickitt was performing. Rickitt fainted after inhaling the substance and was taken to hospital.[7]

In 2010, Rickitt made an appearance at London's G-A-Y club and announced that he was working on a new album. The first single from it, "Tonight", failed to chart[8] and the album was never released.

In 2014, he became part of the supergroup 5th Story, who are taking part in the second series of The Big Reunion along with Kenzie from Blazin' Squad, Dane Bowers from Another Level, Kavana and Gareth Gates.

Stage work

Rickitt starred as Mark Cohen in the 2002 UK tour of the musical Rent before moving to London's West End. He made a return to the London stage to star in Bill Kenwright's production Office Games, followed by a new play, Final Judgement, and also appeared in Nick Moran's play Telstar on UK tour.[when?][citation needed] In December 2006, Rickitt appeared in his first pantomime, Cinderella, in the role of Prince Charming at the Norwich Theatre Royal.[9]

Political aspirations

In October 2005, Rickitt was approved as a prospective parliamentary candidate for the Conservative Party.[10] As part of this attempt to reinvent himself, in February 2006 he appeared on the political debate show Question Time,[11] as the non-partisan guest.[12] In May 2006, he was one of 100 would-be MPs chosen for the Conservative party A-list.[13] The following month, he appeared on Sunday AM with Andrew Marr.[14] He attended national and local Conservative party functions in the hope of being selected as a candidate,[15][16] and developed a political blog on his website.[citation needed] However, a newspaper article alleged[17] that he was not a member of the Conservative Party and had only decided to support them because of his dislike of then Prime Minister Tony Blair.[18] Rickitt refuted these claims and confirmed that he was a member,[18] while the newspaper retracted its claims the following week.[19] Along with David Cameron, he also provoked the anger of Sir Nicholas Winterton when it was revealed that Rickitt was being tipped to stand for the safe Conservative seat of Macclesfield, which the outraged Winterton had represented for nearly thirty years. Winterton responded that he had no intention of standing down from this seat: "I wish Adam luck, but there are no vacancies here."[7][20][21]

Rickitt has been unsuccessful in progressing his political career.[22] According to his website, in July 2007 he decided to continue his acting career in New Zealand, rather than seek selection as a candidate, although politics remains a long-term goal.[23]

He returned to the political scene in October 2010 as a guest reporter for the ITV breakfast television programme Daybreak covering the Conservative Party Conference from Birmingham,[24] and also hosted a conference gay party.[25]

Charity work

Rickitt works for the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals as a capital appeals manager.[26]

He left in 2013 to begin working with the cancer charity Help Harry Help Others, and Chief Executive of the mental health foundation, the Caerus Partnership.[citation needed]

Shoplifting incident

On 21 September 2007, Rickitt was arrested and charged with shoplifting a block of cheese, a bottle of HP sauce and a jar of coffee beans from an Auckland supermarket. During an interview with Herald on Sunday he claimed that it was an honest mistake[27] though later claimed that he was drunk at the time of the incident.[28]

Filmography

Films

Year Film Role Notes
2010 Whatever Happened to Pete Blaggit? Clive Released on DVD in 2012

TV

Year Show Role Notes
1997–99, 2002, 2003–04 Coronation Street Nick Tilsley Series regular - 140+ Episodes
2001 Doctors James Neville 1 episode: Sun God
2005 Judge John Deed Roy Storidge 1 episode: Popular Appeal
2007–10 Shortland Street Kieran Mitchell Series regular - 400 Episodes
2014 The Big Reunion Himself

Discography

Albums

Year Information UK
1999 Good Times
  • Debut studio album
  • Released: 18 October 1999
  • Formats: CD, Cassette
41

Singles

Year Single UK Album
1999 "I Breathe Again" 5 Good Times
"Everything My Heart Desires" 15
2000 "The Best Thing" 25
2010 "Tonight" N/A

References

  1. The Independent (Adam Rickitt - True Blue Hunk)
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  3. Fatter, older, slower ... Melbourne a distant second to Games for a laugh Times Online, 25 March 2006
  4. NZ Herald[dead link]
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  6. Roach, Martin. The Virgin Book of British Hit Albums (ISBN 978-0-7535-1700-0) Virgin Books (2009)
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  10. The Scotsman[dead link]
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  13. Tory A-lister urges well-off to avoid burdening NHS Times Online, 21 May 2006
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  17. The Observer, 6 August 2006
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  23. Adam Rickitt Journal July 2007 Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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External links