<P> Keith Bishop (Ewen MacIntosh): Keith works in the accounts department . Heavy set, slow - talking and apparently emotionless, he is a man of few words . When he does speak, his comments can be eloquent and sometimes disturbing . </P> <P> Chris Finch ("Finchy") (Ralph Ineson): A "bloody good" outside sales representative, he is probably the only character in the series who is genuinely and deliberately mean . He is brashly confident, openly sexist, rasping - voiced with a natural flair for bullying others with swift, humiliating putdowns, Brent being his usual target . He likes to dominate conversations and is successful with women, but shows a humourless violent attitude when he loses the staff quiz in Series One . David describes him as his "best friend" but actually acts more like a lackey, laughing at his jokes and attempting to impress him to feel popular only to be repaid with verbal abuse . He is such a bad loser at the quiz, he exclaims he and Brent can beat the team who beat them at many other things, so decides he can beat them at "Thowing", and if he throws over the building anything they choose, they will win the quiz and the champagne instead (which they eventually do, with Tim's shoe being the nominated object). </P> <P> Jennifer Taylor - Clarke (Stirling Gallacher): Brent's immediate supervisor in Series One, nicknamed Camilla Parker Bowles by him, is a serious - minded professional, and Brent's behaviour and comedy - driven style of management are shown to be puerile and ineffectual by contrast . At the end of the Series One she is made a partner in the firm and, during Series Two, repeatedly reprimands David for inappropriate behaviour . </P> <P> Lee (Joel Beckett): Tinsley's fiancé who works in the company's warehouse . She met him in school and they have been together ever since . Whilst not mean, Lee is extremely dull, humourless and casually dismissive of her ideas of being an illustrator while having no problem with embarrassing her in front of people . His idea of a romantic proposal was a four - word notice in the newspaper--"Lee love Dawn . Marriage?". It is clear from an early stage that she stays with him out of a fear of loneliness rather than real love . Lee has a somewhat violent temper, which is shown when he holds Canterbury against a wall, simply for starting to dance with Dawn . </P>

Who played david brent's boss in the office