My life through a lens: Comedian Rob Beckett, 35, shares the stories behind his favourite snaps
Celebrities share the stories behind their favourite photographs. This week it’s the turn of comedian Rob Beckett, 35.

Comedian Rob Beckett, 35, (pictured) shared the stories behind a selection of his favourite photographs

1988: I’m about two years old here and look like the Ghostbusters baddie, Slimer. Growing up in a small, three-bedroom house in south-east London, I was a very chubby child. My dad Dave worked away as a lorry driver, I had three older brothers, Dan, Russ and Darren, and we had a newborn baby, Joe, so my librarian mum Sue fed me to keep me quiet

1990: Here I am with Russ and Darren – that’s me on the right. Mum wanted to give us names we could use in a proper job – you can’t call your kid Sebastian if they’re going to work on a building site. My three years at Canterbury Christ Church University was the only time in my life I had my own room – first I shared with my brothers and later with my wife Lou

2001: This is me at my secondary school, Coopers in Chislehurst, where comedian Tom Allen was three years above me. It was a place where you were either good at football, or fighting, or girls fancied you, that was it – knowledge held no value. It was only when I started doing comedy and went up to the Edinburgh Festival a decade later that I realised intelligence could give you status and be cool

2011: Winning the Amused Moose Laugh Off at Edinburgh – where this photo was taken with fellow comedian Ian Smith – led to my first stand-up show, Rob Beckett’s Big Mouth, and playing at the Adelaide Fringe. I had to turn my 15-minute set into a full hour right there and then. I also got a horrible chest infection and paying for the antibiotics cleared out my overdraft. I couldn’t even afford suncream. Luckily a nice English expat family saw my show and invited me to a barbecue. They kept on coming to check on me because they could see how down I was
![2013: Presenting the reality spin-off I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! Now! was my first job on TV. Being launched into a show with two million viewers every night made me instantly famous. I found it quite difficult to deal with but it got easier. I didn't know what I was doing but my co-presenters Joe Swash and Laura Whitmore [pictured] were brilliant. The nice English family I'd met in Adelaide came to visit, and me and Joe shared a room so they could have my apartment. It was nice to be able to offer them something, as they'd helped me without asking for anything](https://cdn.statically.io/img/i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/01/26/14/38497300-9188509-image-a-7_1611671613006.jpg)
2013: Presenting the reality spin-off I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! Now! was my first job on TV. Being launched into a show with two million viewers every night made me instantly famous. I found it quite difficult to deal with but it got easier. I didn’t know what I was doing but my co-presenters Joe Swash and Laura Whitmore [pictured] were brilliant. The nice English family I’d met in Adelaide came to visit, and me and Joe shared a room so they could have my apartment. It was nice to be able to offer them something, as they’d helped me without asking for anything

2017: A pregnant Lou and I went to Jonathan Ross’s Halloween party in Hampstead as zombies – walking through the paparazzi is like a power surge because everything is so bright. Lou and I met in our early twenties. She became a history teacher and paid all the bills for three years when I was earning no money as a comedian

2019: Me and Romesh Ranganathan started out doing all the same rubbish gigs together – my first paid stand-up job earned me £40 for playing a Peterborough pub with no mic, stage or lights – and here we are meeting Prince William at the Royal Variety Performance, which we presented together. We were booked as a double act but we’re just mates who do comedy. It feels like we’ve been a big part of each other’s journey. We’ve both been through the same things at the same time, and been able to ring each other about it

2020: Here I am in Cape Town playing cricket in the TV challenge series Rob & Romesh Vs, in front of 20,000 fans singing, ‘It’s Rob Beckett and he’s got big teeth.’ Later I downed a pint in one and got a call from Lou a minute later giving me grief for drinking at work – a friend had seen it on TV and texted her. You can’t get away with anything these days, even on the other side of the world
Rob & Romesh Vs, Thursday, 10pm, Sky One and Now TV. Rob is a team captain on Paul Sinha’s TV Showdown, tonight, 10pm, ITV.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Dailymail.co.uk
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