Early history and Fringe shows (2006–2010) Ker, Reed and Tuck first met as students at the
University of Edinburgh through the student comedy troupe
The Improverts in 2001. They performed together for the next four years before forming, along with founding member Jamie Anderson, The Penny Dreadfuls. In 2006, they made their debut appearance at the
Edinburgh Festival Fringe with their Victorian-themed sketch show
Aeneas Faversham. The show's executive producer was Idil Sukan, while its associate producer and technical director were Steve Greer and Neil E Hobbs respectively. This group would go on to produce each Fringe show for the troupe for the next four years:
Aeneas Faversham Returns in 2007,
Aeneas Faversham Forever in 2008,
The Never Man in 2009, and
The Penny Dreadfuls in 2010.
TV & BBC Radio (2007–present) The troupe appeared on television in 2007 with a sketch in
BBC Three's
Comedy Shuffle. They then made the transfer onto radio in January 2008 with their own show,
The Brothers Faversham, guest starring
Miles Jupp and
Ingrid Oliver. The four-part series was a fictional biography following the life and demise of one of the Faversham brothers. A second series,
More Brothers Faversham, was broadcast in October 2008 and later broadcast on
BBC Radio 4. Following on from this shift towards narrative comedy, in 2009 they wrote a comic retelling of the story of
Guy Fawkes for the
Afternoon Drama slot on Radio 4. While they returned to the sketch format for their 2010 Edinburgh Fringe show. their radio comedy followed in the vein of
Guy Fawkes, writing a new historical comedy every year (except 2010 and 2013) for BBC Radio 4 until 2020. In 2011
Margaret Cabourn-Smith played a supporting role in
Revolution, and became a regular fixture in most subsequent
The Penny Dreadfuls Presents... plays. From 2012 onward, each play in
The Penny Dreadfuls Presents... series was credited solely to Reed. ==Radio episodes==