Radio Culshaw rose to fame in January 1998 while working with
Steve Penk on
Capital Radio, by impersonating
William Hague and succeeding in contacting
Number 10 Downing Street. He was put through to
Tony Blair who, despite instantly discovering the ruse, had a lengthy conversation with him until a member of Blair's staff ended the call. Culshaw was one of the stars of the
BBC Radio 4 comedy series
Dead Ringers, which ran from 2000 to 2007 as well as the
BBC Two television series of the same name, from 2002 until 2007. The radio series of
Dead Ringers made a return to
BBC Radio 4 in 2014. In 2018, Culshaw gave a rare dramatic performance as
David Bowie in the BBC radio play
The Final Take: Bowie in the Studio, an imagined account of Bowie as he works on
his final album and looks back over his life.
Television Between 2001 and 2002, Culshaw hosted a programme on
ITV called
Alter Ego, where he interviewed male celebrities in their own style of speaking, a form of simultaneous translation. Culshaw also appeared on
2DTV, a cartoon version of
Dead Ringers. In early 2004, using the same production team, he had his own programme,
The Impressionable Jon Culshaw commissioned for
ITV. In 2005, Culshaw was a celebrity contestant on
Comic Relief Does Fame Academy and was the fourth person to become eliminated. In the same year, he also appeared in the BBC General Election coverage, in the guises of
Tony Blair and
George W. Bush. In January 2006, Culshaw presented one series of the
BBC programme ''
Jon Culshaw's Commercial Breakdown. In November 2007 and December 2008, Culshaw, a keen amateur astronomer, appeared on The Sky at Night impersonating a young Sir Patrick Moore. In March 2011, he appeared again on the 700th episode of The Sky at Night'', reading viewer questions to the panel of experts. Culshaw later appeared two months later reporting on the
Northern Lights. In January 2008, he appeared on
Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack, as part of a
pub-quiz team with
Chris Moyles. In May 2008, Culshaw appeared in the
BBC documentary series
Comedy Map of Britain. From 2009 until 2011, Culshaw starred in the
BBC One comedy sketch show
The Impressions Show with Culshaw and Stephenson alongside
Debra Stephenson. On 13 March, 2010, Culshaw was a guest judge on the
BBC One charity programme ''
Let's Dance for Comic Relief''. In 2013, he appeared as a contestant on the show, where he performed a routine to "
Praise You" by
Fatboy Slim. However, he was eliminated by the public vote. In 2010, Culshaw appeared in the television series,
Missing as Des Martin. In November 2013, Culshaw appeared in the one-off 50th anniversary comedy homage
The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot. In 2015, he has voiced a number of characters alongside
Debra Stephenson for the
ITV sketch show
Newzoids. A second series aired in 2016. In 2017, Culshaw was one of the minor hosts of the
Channel 5 documentary series
Secrets of the National Trust. In February 2021, Culshaw appeared on
Celebrity Mastermind. His specialist subject was "Doctor Who – the Jon Pertwee Years". In 2021, Culshaw appeared as a guest on
Celebrity Yorkshire Auction House, series 1 episode 2. He entertained the auction company's staff when they collected his sale items, and the buyers that attended the auction. He also donated all of the proceeds of the sale to charity. Until 2023, Culshaw narrated the Channel 4 property series
Sun, Sea, and Selling Houses.
Film In film, Culshaw appeared as
Tony Blair in the 2004 film
Churchill: The Hollywood Years and voiced Piston Pete in the 2008 film
Agent Crush.
Impressions Some of Culshaw's most famous impressions include former British Prime Ministers
Tony Blair and
Boris Johnson,
Obi-Wan Kenobi (as portrayed by
Alec Guinness),
Russell Crowe, Presidents
George W. Bush and
Donald Trump,
Ozzy Osbourne, comedian
Michael McIntyre, presenter
Dale Winton, newsreader
Brian Perkins,
Sir Patrick Moore,
Tom Baker and
Les Dawson.
Doctor Who A lifelong fan of sci-fi series
Doctor Who, Culshaw used his impression of
Fourth Doctor actor
Tom Baker for both the TV and radio versions of
Dead Ringers. He voiced several characters in the 2001 BBC webcast
Doctor Who: Death Comes to Time. Culshaw also regularly appears in Doctor Who audio plays for
Big Finish Productions. As well as playing
Earl Rivers in
The Kingmaker in 2006, he used his Baker impression to briefly play the Fourth Doctor. Along with numerous other roles, Culshaw has since become the regular voice of characters in Doctor Who history for which the original actors are deceased or unavailable, including Kameleon (originally played by
Gerald Flood),
Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart (
Nicholas Courtney) and
The Master actors
Roger Delgado and
Anthony Ainley. As well as occasional appearances as the
Third Doctor (
Jon Pertwee), Culshaw is set to headline as the
Twelfth Doctor (
Peter Capaldi) for a series due in July 2026. ==Awards and honours==