Mae Martin

Canadian comedian and actor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mae Martin

Mae Pearl Martin[1] (born 2 May 1987) is a Canadian comedian, actor, screenwriter, and recording artist. Martin co-created, co-wrote and starred in the Channel 4/Netflix comedy series Feel Good. Martin received a nomination for the BAFTA TV Award for Best Female Comedy Performance for their[A] work on the series.

Quick Facts Born, Alma mater ...
Mae Martin
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Mae Martin performing on stage in 2015
Born
Mae Pearl Martin

(1987-05-02) 2 May 1987 (age 37)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Alma materThe Second City
Occupations
  • Comedian
  • actor
  • screenwriter
  • singer
  • songwriter
PartnerParvati Shallow (2023–2024)
Relatives
Websitemaemartin.net
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Early life

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Mae Martin was born in Toronto, Canada on 2 May 1987,[3][4] the child of Canadian writer and teacher Wendy Martin[5] and English actor and musician-turned-food-writer James Chatto.[6][4][7] Martin was baptized in a village on the Greek island of Corfu, where their family lived for several years.[8] James and Wendy were ex-hippies, and comedy fans.[7] The family home was filled with recordings of British and American comedy classics.[5]

Martin describes childhood obsessions with Bette Midler,[9] The Kids in the Hall,[10] Pee-wee Herman and the Rocky Horror Show (Martin's grandfather, Tom Chatto, having starred as narrator in the Rocky Horror stage version). Martin now points to these obsessions as early signs of an addictive personality.[5] At 11 years old, Martin was taken to a comedy club, and developed a lifelong interest in stand-up.[9] Martin and two friends became known as "the Groupies" for going to see Family Circus Maximus a play from The Second City improv troupe160 times in a year.[5]

Martin saw their first comedy show at age 11 and began booking gigs as part of the comedy troupe The Young and the Useless at age 13.[7] At age 14, Martin started drinking and using illicit drugs.[5] At age 15, Martin dropped out of the all-girls school they attended in Toronto[11] to pursue comedy full-time while working at the Second City comedy club.[7] At 16, Martin's parents kicked them out of the house,[12] and they stayed with comedian friends throughout their 20s and 30s. Abusive relationships were normalised in the night-time scene: Martin says that, "If you put a teenage girl in any industry like that, there's going to be people taking advantage."[5] Martin eventually went to rehabilitation.[13]

Career

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Perspective

Martin's career started in Canada at age 13, as part of the three-person comedy troupe The Young and the Useless.[7][14] Martin worked The Second City comedy club, both in the box office and as a stand-up comedian.[5]

At the age of 16, Martin was the youngest-ever nominee for the Tim Sims Encouragement Fund Award.[15] Martin's work in Canada includes writing for the sketch comedy series Baroness von Sketch Show,[16] for which Martin is a two-time Canadian Screen Award winner for Best Writing in a Variety or Sketch Comedy Series.[17]

In 2011, Martin moved to London to enter the British comedy scene.[18] Their 2015 Edinburgh Fringe Festival show, titled Mae Martin: Us,[19] led to[13] the BBC Radio 4 series Mae Martin's Guide to 21st Century Sexuality.[20] Martin has appeared on the British television and radio programme The Now Show,[21] and has co-hosted GrownUpLand.[22]

In 2017, Martin debuted Dope, a show about addiction in all forms, at Edinburgh, which was shortlisted for the Edinburgh Comedy award.[23] The show refers to both recreational drugs as well as to dopamine, the brain chemical associated with compulsive behaviour, and drew on the work of Dr Gabor Maté, among other researchers.[12] Dope was modified into a half-hour Netflix comedy special, released in January 2019 as part of the Comedians of the World collection.[24]

In 2019, Martin released the YA book Can Everyone Please Calm Down? A Guide to 21st Century Sexuality.[25]

Martin co-created, wrote, and starred in the 2020 Channel 4 comedy series Feel Good alongside long-time collaborator Joe Hampson.[26][27] The second season was released in 2021.[28][29] The show tackles relationships, queerness, addiction, and privilege.[5] Lucy Mangan of the Guardian praised the series as "immaculately written" and "properly funny" in their review.[29]

In 2022, Martin appeared in LOL: Last One Laughing Canada.[30] Later that year, Martin appeared in the HBO Max series The Flight Attendant in a recurring role as Grace St. James.

In 2023 Martin appeared on and won[31] series 15 of the Channel 4 comedy game show Taskmaster.

Martin received a Juno Award nomination for Comedy Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2024 for SAP.[32]

In 2024, Martin hosted an episode of CBC's The Nature of Things (in association with Kensington Communications and Gay Agenda) called "Fluid: Life Beyond the Binary". In the one-hour documentary, Martin explores the science behind sexual and gender fluidity, speaking with gender non-conforming youth and other experts.[33][34][35]

Production began in 2024 on Martin's television series Wayward for Netflix.[36][37][38]

Martin's debut studio album, I'm a TV, was released on February 27, 2025, through Universal Music Canada, with its sound described as indie rock. The songs were all self-written, with production by Jason Couse and Wes Marskell of the Darcys.[39]

Personal life

Martin has one older brother.[4][5] Their grandfather was actor Tom Chatto.[40] Their paternal uncle is artist and actor Daniel Chatto, who is married to King Charles III's cousin Lady Sarah Chatto.[41]

In June 2021, Martin described themself as "a queer person",[11] came out as non-binary in 2021 and that they use they/them pronouns[2] and [42][43] Martin shared that they had top surgery in late 2021.[25] Martin has dated both men and womenstating in April 2021 that they are bisexual after previously resisting labelling their sexuality.[4][42][44]

In 2022, Martin had a romantic relationship with fellow Canadian actor Elliot Page.[45][46] In December 2023, Martin announced their relationship with television personality Parvati Shallow.[47]

In a 2024 interview with Adam Grant, Martin discussed their ADHD diagnosis and their experience with the disorder.[48]

Filmography

Film

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Film
Year Title Role Notes
2001 Bagatelle Grace Short film
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
Television
Year Title Role Notes
2003 Cream of Comedy TV special; writer only
2012 Upstaged Mae Television short
2014 Sketch My Life Writer only
2016–2019 Baroness von Sketch Show Employee Episode: "It Satisfies on a Very Basic Level"; also writer/story editor – 29 episodes
2017 Uncle Imogen 2 episodes
2018 Jon Richardson: Ultimate Worrier Themselves 4 episodes; writer on episode: "Jon Richardson"
2019 Comedians of the World Themselves Episode: "Mae Martin"; also writer and producer
2020–2021 Feel Good Mae 12 episodes; also creator and writer – 6 episodes
2021 Richard Osman's House of Games Contestant 5 episodes
2022 LOL: Last One Laughing Contestant Canadian version
The Flight Attendant Grace St. James 7 episodes
Stand Out: An LGBTQ+ Celebration Themselves Netflix documentary
2023 Taskmaster Contestant Season 15
2024 John Mulaney Presents: Everybody's in LA Themselves Episode: "PALM TREES"
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Comedy specials

More information Year, Title ...
Comedy specials
Year Title Distributor Notes
2023 Mae Martin: SAP Netflix Netflix Comedy Special
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Discography

Studio albums

More information Title, Details ...
Title Details
I'm a TV[49]
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Singles

As lead artist

More information Title, Year ...
Title Year Album
"Going Places"
(Charles Watson with Mae Martin)
2022 Going Places[B]
"Love Is Pain"
(Carolyn Taylor with Mae Martin)
2023 Non-album single
"Good Dream" / "Stowaway" 2025 I'm a TV
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Note

  1. Martin uses they/them pronouns.[2]
  2. Going Places is the name of a two-song with the B-side featuring a version of the song without Martin.

References

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