Stand-up Davies began performing comedy in 1988 at the
Whitstable Labour Club. He continued touring and performing in the UK and Australia, winning the
Edinburgh Festival Critics Award for Comedy in 1994. That show was released on video and audio cassette in 1995 as
Alan Davies Live at the Lyric recorded at the
Lyric Theatre as part of the Perrier Pick of the
Fringe season in October 1994. A version of his show
Urban Trauma, which ran in the
West End at the
Duchess Theatre and toured the UK and Australia, was shown on
BBC One in 1998. In 2012, Davies planned a new tour called
Life is Pain. The title for this show came from a story he heard about a six-year-old girl being told off by her mother and responding "Life is pain". The tour was broadcast on
Dave. In 2025 Davies took a new stand-up show, called
Think Ahead, on his first tour in ten years. Performing first in venues across England and Wales from September until November, he then toured to Australia, from November and December 2025.
Radio and television In 1994 and 1995, Davies hosted ''
Alan's Big One'' for three series on Radio 1 before appearing in
Channel 4's spoof travel show
One for the Road (made by
Channel X in 1994/5). In 2001, Davies played Robert Gossage in
Bob and Rose, a
comedy drama about a gay man falling for a woman. He also played Jack the dog in the radio sitcom
About a Dog. In 2003, Davies appeared as a
Star in a Reasonably-Priced Car on
Top Gear, with a time of 1:54 in wet conditions. He returned in Series 8 with 1:50.3 in dry conditions. During a period from the mid-1990s to 2002, Davies advertised for
Abbey National. Davies took on a less comedic role in 2004, starring as Henry Farmer, a maverick barrister, in
ITV Sunday night drama
The Brief, for two series. Subsequent drama roles include Superintendent Mallard in ''
Agatha Christie's Marple (ITV, 2008), as well as appearances in The Good Housekeeping Guide
(BBC One, 2006), Roman Road (ITV 2004), and Hotel Babylon'' (BBC One, 2008). He argued the case for
John Lennon as the greatest Briton of all time on the BBC's
Great Britons series in 2002. In 2007, Davies starred in the second episode of
ITV's ''
You Don't Know You're Born and on The Unbelievable Truth''. He appeared in an episode of the BBC science programme
Horizon in which Professor
Marcus du Sautoy attempted to introduce him to elements of mathematical thought, which was broadcast on
BBC Two on 31 March 2009. He went on to appear in
Horizon for a second time in November 2009, this time leading the episode — du Sautoy also returned as a guest speaker. On 16 May 2010, Davies appeared in "Your Sudden Death Question", an episode of the ITV detective series
Lewis, as Marcus Richard, a scamming quizmaster at a competition held in an Oxford college, at which some of the contestants are murdered. In September 2010, he began a three-part documentary series ''Alan Davies' Teenage Revolution
(Channel 4), partly based on his autobiographical book My Favourite People and Me, 1978–88''. In September 2010, a BBC comedy series entitled
Whites starring Davies as a chef premiered. It was cancelled after the first series. It is believed to have been a victim of the cuts at the BBC subsequent to the reduced
licence fee settlement. In April 2011, Davies appeared as the guest on the return of the
ABC TV conversation program
A Quiet Word With .... In 2011, Davies was also one of the judges on the ITV programme
Show Me The Funny, a talent contest for new and aspiring stand-up comedy performers. In September 2012, Davies made his first appearance on
Channel 4's
Big Fat Quiz series, winning ''The Big Fat Quiz of the '90s'' alongside
Phill Jupitus. In February 2014, Davies presented a chat show
Alan Davies Après-Ski on BBC Two, which looked at some of the highlights of the 2014 Winter Olympic Games. He also co-hosted the
Brazilian Banter podcast for ITV with Tom & Dom from Bantams Banter. The show was a satirical look at the
2014 FIFA World Cup hosted by Brazil. From 2014, he hosted
The Dog Rescuers for
Channel 5 and the chat show
Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled for
Dave. In 2021, Davis took part in the twelfth series of
Taskmaster, finishing in joint third with
Desiree Burch. He was a studio fill-in for
Jonnie Peacock for the "New Year's Treat" special in 2022, due to Peacock being unwell.
QI Davies appears as the only permanent panellist on the BBC Two comedy quiz game
QI; the programme was hosted by
Stephen Fry from 2003 to 2016, and has been hosted by
Sandi Toksvig after Fry's departure. He also contributed "four words" to the
QI book
The Book of General Ignorance (which appear after Stephen Fry's foreword), "Will this do, Stephen?". Davies has appeared in almost every regular episode of the show, though in one episode (Episode 10 of Series D, "Divination") he appeared, pre-recorded, in only the first few minutes, as he was in Paris attending
the UEFA Champions League Final between
Barcelona and his beloved
Arsenal during the recording. His chair was empty for the rest of the episode, although his voice was heard during "General Ignorance". He also did not appear in the 2011 Comic Relief episode, when his seat was taken by
David Walliams. During the filming of the
QI Christmas episode 2020, Davies set the new
Guinness World Record for the most
Christmas crackers pulled by an individual in 30 seconds, achieving 35 successful cracks. His record stood until Joel Corry achieved 41 successful cracks at Capital's Jingle Bell Ball on 12 December 2021. ==Books==