Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Outlander actor set to tell city’s story

- BY ALASDAIR CLARK

A DUNDEE actor who has appeared in Outlander is set to tell the story of the city’s Michelin factory closure in a new play.

Mark Rannoch’s show, It’s Always Sunny in Dundee, will feature a family impacted by the site in Douglas shutting down.

It will run at London’s Golden Goose Theatre this month.

The drama focuses on a father who loses his job as part of the Michelin closure, which was announced in 2018.

But it will also feature other parts of the city’s history, as it reveals how the mother of the family lost her job following the closure of the Timex plant in 1993.

Mark said: “I’ve had a few friends who worked at the factory, and when I started writing ideas for the play it was very much in the news about other factories closing around the UK.

“That made me aware of what was going in Dundee with the Michelin tyre factory, and also the history with the Timex factory.”

The Michelin factory closed for good in 2020, resulting in the loss of about 850 jobs.

The site has since been transforme­d into the Michelin Scotland Innovation Parc.

The factory produced more than 300 million tyres after opening in 1971, employing thousands of people during its lifetime.

Mark says the play will look back at the end of industry and the changes in Dundee over the last 30 years as a result.

He said: “The wife in the play, Elaine, used to work at Timex.

“She speaks about the strikes and the effect it has on her life and the family.

“We’ve also got snippets of the NCR factory closure, which employed around 6,000 people in the city at one point.”

The play will also examine modern Dundee, including the addition of the V&A to the city’s Waterfront and the changing cultures.

“The father is a bit more traditiona­l, he likes going to older pubs where you can get cheap pints,” Mark said.

“There’s comment from that about how the city is transformi­ng from an industrial, working place into more of a tech hub.

“It’s about the city, and I think everyone around the UK has seen a little bit of gentrifica­tion of areas which have been industrial manufactur­ing hubs.”

Mark was brought up in Craigieban­k, attending Craigie High School and later Dundee and Angus College.

The play marks the first major production of his own, and he hopes to bring it to Dundee if it proves successful in London.

He previously said: “The dream would be that I’d love to perform it at the Dundee Rep where I went to see theatre when I was younger, but this is sort of testing the water in London.”

 ?? ?? Mark Rannoch at the former Michelin factory, which is the focus of the play he has written following the family’s experience­s.
Mark Rannoch at the former Michelin factory, which is the focus of the play he has written following the family’s experience­s.

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