Richard Tyrone Jones


Richard Tyrone Jones is a British performance poet, writer and comedian. He is director of Utter! Spoken Word and director of spoken word at the Edinburgh Festival Free Fringe.

Career

He attended King's College, Cambridge, where he studied History. While there he co-founded comedy group Fat Fat Pope.
After the group disbanded in 2001 he began performing poetry, with his first collection, Germline, published in 2009. His poems have also been published in Rising, Magma, The Delinquent and many other magazines.
In February 2010 he staged his own funeral at the Whitechapel Art Gallery as a work of performance art. Unknown to him, he had actually developed dilated cardiomyopathy and a few weeks after the performance was admitted to hospital, where he nearly died. The experience provided the material for Jones's debut one-man show, Big Heart, which tries to raise awareness of his condition. With support from the Wellcome Trust, he toured the show extensively around the UK, and performed in Canada at the Victoria Fringe Festival and Vancouver Fringe Festival. Big Heart was later adapted into a three-part series that aired on BBC Radio 4 in July 2013.
The sequel to 'Big Heart, titled Crap Time Lord, further explored the complications of living with chronic heart failure, and won minor acclaim at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2014 alongside his other one man show 'What the F8ck is this?' during which he was only allowed to use the five titular words.
He has appeared, in various guises, at 400+ events including Latitude, Peterborough Festival and residencies at "Spoonful of Poison". He has hosted and run workshops for Apples & Snakes. In 2008 he ran a month of slams for the Hackney Empire and was in Liz Bentley's Fringe show Edinburgh-by-sea. He won the fourth Poetry Idol contest at Shortfuse, and has hosted for them, the UK antifolk festivals and for Pete Doherty. In 2011 Richard Tyrone Jones was a judge on the pilot episode of
Poetry Idol'', an ITV programme that was never commissioned.
He moved to Manchester in 2016.