Actor and comedian Tony Slattery dies aged 65 after heart attack
Comedian Tony Slattery has died aged 65 following a heart attack, his partner has announced.
Slattery appeared on the Channel 4 comedy improvisation show Whose Line Is It Anyway? and comedy programmes such as Just A Minute and Have I Got News for You.
A statement on behalf of his partner Mark Michael Hutchinson said: “It is with great sadness we must announce actor and comedian Tony Slattery, aged 65, has passed away today, Tuesday morning, following a heart attack on Sunday evening.”
Born 9 November, 1959, Slattery was a contemporary of Dame Emma Thompson, Sir Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie at the University of Cambridge, where he attended Trinity Hall.
He was the former president of Cambridge Footlights, and had recently been touring a comedy show in England. He also launched a podcast, Tony Slattery’s Rambling Club, in October.
Outside of stand-up, Slattery appeared in 1980s and 1990s films including crime thriller The Crying Game, Peter’s Friends with Fry, Laurie and Thompson, and black comedy How to Get Ahead In Advertising with Richard E Grant.
In 2020, Slattery – who regularly spoke openly about his bipolar disorder – revealed he went bankrupt following a battle with substance abuse and mental health issues.
He told the Radio Times that his “fiscal illiteracy and general innumeracy” as well as his “misplaced trust in people” had also contributed to his money problems.
Slattery released the BBC Two Horizon documentary What’s the Matter with Tony Slattery? in the same year, which saw him and Hutchinson visit leading experts on mood disorders and addiction.
Slattery is survived by his partner of more than three decades, the actor Hutchinson.