Trained at the Rose
Bruford College of Speech and Drama in London, Shazia works full time as a writer, actor and stand
up comedian.
Shazia began stand up comedy in
September 2000 and has in a very short space of time worked her way up the ladder picking up along
the 2001 Hackney Empire Best New Act competition at the London Comedy Festival part of the prize
was to appear at The Palladium. This year Shazia followed this up by winning Metro Magazines
Peoples Choice Best Comic Award at the London Comedy Festival 2002.
Shazias distinctive act
combines a deadpan delivery with observation on her world. Shazia is in certain respects a
revolutionary figure being the UKs only female Muslim stand up, a job which many in her
culture would frown upon. This enables her to have a unique perspective as a British Muslim with
her material crossing both cultures. Supported by many in her culture Shazia has recently won the
award of Young Achiever Of The Year at the Governments initiative for the Asian community,
The Leadership & Diversity Awards.
Shazia is in huge international
demand with coverage from press, TV and radio in Germany, Denmark, Italy, Sweden, USA, Canada,
France, UK and Ireland. To date, Shazia has performed stand up in Belgium, Holland and Denmark.
Shazia has recently appeared on
Have I got News For You, Joan Bakewells Taboo, Richard & Judy whilst BBC 2s First
Sight made a half hour documentary. Internationally Oprahs Oxygen Media have filmed a
profile on her. Earlier in the year Shazia was invited to perform at the Royal Albert Hall V Day
event. Eve Ensler asked her to write her own monologue which she duly did receiving a standing
ovation from the cast which included Isabella Rossellini, Maureen Lipman, Rita Tushingham, Meera
Syal, Dannii Minogue and Anita Dobson.
Shazia can be seen on BBC 1,
11.35pm on Wed 6 November presenting 10 Things You Always Wanted To Know About Islam (But Were
Afraid To Ask).
Shazia is a practising Muslim.
SHAZIA MIRZA PRESS
QUOTES
Her laconic one-liners
represent something quite unique in modern comedy. In these fraught times, she actually manages to
make being a Muslim woman seem wonderfully life-enhancingly funny. Anglo-Islamic understanding is
now even more elusive than before, but if anything, that makes Shazias comedy even more
vailid, and even more vital THE GUARDIAN GUIDE William Cook
My name is Shazia
Mirza.... she says. At least thats what it says on my pilots licence.
No one can resist - the room erupts ELLE MAGAZINE Natalie Meddings
Shazia Mirza has won rave
reviews for her frank and honest stand up comedy routines about being a young Mulsim woman in
Britain THE DAILY TELEGRAPH Richard Warburton
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