The stand-up comedian looked incredibly svelte in a black coat and v-neck t-shirt as he promoted his latest movie.
In fact, the funnyman looked so slim it harked back to his short-lived Seona Dancing boyband days in the 1980s.
The 55-year-old’s weight has yo-yoed through the years, but his recent look seems to be his slimmest yet.
Ricky recently revealed he struggled to lose weight due to his love of wine, claiming he could drink a bucket of it – while also admitting to a “severe sausage habit”.
“I was always thin growing up until I turned 30, and those were my eating years, and then at 40 I remember, it was one Christmas I ate 11 sausages and I was saying to Jane [his girlfriend], ‘I’m having a heart attack’”, Ricky told on US chat show Live! with Kelly.
“I decided to get fit and I lost about 20 pounds at about 48 or 49, and now it’s steadily going back on again.”
Ricky and his wife Jane pledged to lose weight together on a buddy scheme.
Working together the pair aimed to lose 40 pounds between them, with Ricky shedding “20 or 22 lbs”.
They ran around Hampstead Heath, where the pair live, instead of tucking into to tasty evening meals.
His wife also added that she was making healthier versions of what the pair were used to eating, meaning her comedian beau didn’t notice eating fewer calories.
Ricky is an outspoken animal activist, recently making a plea on television for viewers to adopt a dog that had been chained up outside for 15 years.
Millions of viewers to Good Morning America saw the British comic and well-known animal welfare campaigner turn his eight-minute slot into a poignant call for the dog to be given a forever home.
The outspoken comedian has also slammed the X Factor, claiming that it ruins the lives of those who take part.
Speaking about fame and music in a candid interview, the comedian said that the loss of icons including David Bowie and Prince has made 2016 a shocking year as he realised that they will be replaced by talent show winners
He explained: “Those are the last generation of people who were actually famous for something, they were icons, because we have run out of icons.
“In 30 years’ time who are we going to be crying for, this talented person? What did they do? All these talent shows have people going, ‘Make me famous please’ and we go ‘Alright then’. “