Ayr Advertiser

10 of the best actresses Scotland has to offer, do you agree?

- TEDDY JAMIESON

LET’S accept that this is a ludicrous assignment from the off. That you could choose another 10, 20, 30 names tomorrow that would be just as lustrous. That even the word actress has the quaint whiff of the 20th century about it.

But games have rules and this game says choose 10 actresses who you would promote as the best Scotland has to offer. Here are mine.

DEBORAH KERR

Maybe the first question is can we claim her as Scottish? Born in 1921, Kerr spent just the first three years of her life in Helensburg­h before moving to England. And throughout her career she was described as an “English rose”.

But let’s claim her anyway. Which makes her the first Scottish woman to be nominated for an Oscar (in fact, she was nominated six times in all).

It was her associatio­n with Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburge­r in The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (playing three roles) and later Black Narcissus that made Kerr’s name.

She moved to America in the late 1940s. (MGM announced her with the legend: “Deborah Kerr. It rhymes with star.”) And that English rose label rather marked - you could say, limited her choices. But in 1953 she was cast opposite Burt Lancaster in From Here to Eternity in which, famously, she rolled around in the surf with her co-star. Suddenly she had sex appeal.

It didn’t stop the genteel roles. If anything, three years later, her role as the governess in The King and I cemented that perception of her. But many of her most interestin­g performanc­es come in those films where she pushes against her image - most notably Blimp, The Sundowners and Launder and Gilliat’s wonderful Hitchcocki­an comedy-thriller I See a Dark Stranger in which she plays a rebellious young Irish woman spying for the Nazis.

Still, perhaps all those films in which she offered up genteel restraint were good training for her role in The Innocents (1961) when we finally get to see that propriety fray and fall apart in Jack Clayton’s genuinely chilling ghost story. Kerr’s finest hour?

SHIRLEY HENDERSON

Yes, yes, yes, Moaning Myrtle in the Harry Potter movies, but Shirley Henderson has always been more interestin­g than that. Since establishi­ng herself with the Scottish trifecta Rob

Roy, Trainspott­ing and Hamish Macbeth, Henderson has been a quiet yet potent presence in British television and British cinema.

She has worked with Mike Leigh (Topsy Turvy) and Sofia Coppola (Marie Antoinette), been a regular in the films of Michael Winterbott­om (from Wonderland to Greed, via 24 Hour Party People and The Claim) and the whispery chill she offered up as Frances in Sally Wainwright’s second series of Happy Valley was a masterclas­s.

LINDSAY DUNCAN

Duncan was only a baby when she left Edinburgh, but why would you not want her on your team? Her very first credit was alongside Frankie Howerd in Further Up Pompei, in which she plays a character called, ahem, Scrubba. Just over a decade later she appeared in the Channel 4 drama Traffik and then in

Alan Bleasdale’s memorable

1991 political drama G.B.H. But by then she had already made a name for herself on stage in Caryl Churchill’s Top Girls and Les Liaisons Dangereuse­s opposite Alan Rickman. She was also a favourite of Harold Pinter’s. There’s a tendency to cast Duncan in roles where she is controlled to the point of iciness. But there’s often a warmth and humanity in her performanc­es that can sometimes be overlooked.

MARY URE

The problem with Mary Ure is it’s difficult to see beyond the biography. Married twice, to

John Osborne and Robert Shaw, both of whom would be abusive towards her, she died aged just 42 due to a combinatio­n of prescripti­on drugs and alcohol. But she was also only the second Scottish-born actress (after Kerr) to be nominated for an Oscar, for the 1960 version of Sons and Lovers.

And she made the role of the put-upon wife Alison Porter in Osborne’s Look Back in

Anger her own. When the play transferre­d to New York Ure earned a Tony nomination for her performanc­e and appeared in the film version opposite Richard Burton.

These days she’s probably best known for her role in Where

Eagles Dare alongside Burton and Clint Eastwood.

TILDA SWINTON

Too posh to be Scottish? Kelly MacDonald (see below) once said as much of Tilda Swinton.

But Swinton calls herself Scottish and why shouldn’t she be able to define herself ? Since she made her debut in Derek Jarman’s Caravaggio, Swinton has been a mercurial, shapeshift­ing presence on our screens.

Such is her transforma­tive abilities there’s a danger that she is used sometimes more as a special effect onscreen (Wes Anderson has that tendency), but given the opportunit­y - as in Luca Guadagnino’s I Am Love or

Lynne Ramsay’s We Need To Talk About Kevin - she commands the screen.

PHYLLIS LOGAN

Forget Downton, she’ll always be Lady Jane Felsham to me.

But while I wait for the Lovejoy revival, it’s worth pointing out the longevity and quality of Phyllis Logan’s career. She made a name for herself in Another Time, Another Place (1983), playing a young woman who falls in love with an Italian prisoner of war, and has been a constant on our screens ever since, turning up in Mike Leigh’s Secrets and Lies in the 1990s, and, more recently, in Guilt and Shetland.

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