Graham Chapman MBTI Personality Type

Personality

What personality type is Graham Chapman? Graham Chapman is an INFP personality type in MBTI, 5w6 - sx/so - 594 in Enneagram, RLUAI in Big 5, LII in Socionics.

Obvious INFP Fi, 2.00- 2.36- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqz1x5fgv9Q FiNe and literally anti Fe- ““Gra was always mildly irritated by any display of decorum, or good taste, if he felt it was a direct challenge to his deepest beliefs. When I mentioned once that Connie and I had guests coming to dinner that evening who were a bit formal and stuck-up, he carefully cut out some very small pieces of paper, wrote an obscenity on each one, and then hid them round our flat in all the rooms our guests were likely to visit. Connie found one of these just ten minutes before they were due to arrive: a moment of pure panic that set off a frenzied paperchase, as we raced around the apartment trying to find them all before the doorbell rang. We missed one, which he had placed on the basin in the visitors’ loo. It simply read, ‘Anus’. I’ve always wondered whether our guests speculated why we might have put it there.” Ne- "Gray would sit there puffing on his pipe staring out of the window and every now and again he would throw something in and it was always off the wall or didn't quite follow what had been going before, so I tended to get too sucked into a left brain"- Off the wall- "eccentric or unconventional." Inferior Te- 1.07- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqz1x5fgv9Q "Chapman was frequently late for rehearsing or recording, leading to the other Pythons calling him "the late Graham Chapman".

Biography

Graham Arthur Chapman (8 January 1941 – 4 October 1989) was an English comedian, writer, actor, author, and one of the six members of the British surreal comedy group Monty Python. He played authority figures such as the Colonel and the lead role in two Python films, Holy Grail (1975) and Life of Brian (1979). Chapman was born in Leicester and was raised in Melton Mowbray. He enjoyed science, acting and comedy, and after graduating from Emmanuel College, Cambridge and St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College, he turned down a career as a doctor to be a comedian instead. Chapman eventually established a writing partnership with John Cleese, which reached its critical peak with Monty Python during the 1970s. He subsequently left Britain for Los Angeles, where he attempted to be a success on American television, speaking on the college circuit and producing the pirate film Yellowbeard (1983), before returning to Britain in the early 1980s.

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