The Scotsman

Jenny McCrindle

Performer with a gift for comedy and tragedy and a wicked sense of humour

- JOYCE McMILLAN

n Jenny McCrindle, actress. Born: 19 September, 1968, in Clydebank. Died: 26 October, 2014, in Glasgow, aged 46.

THE actress Jenny McCrindle, who has died in Glasgow aged 46, 15 years after being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, was an extraordin­ary presence in Scottish theatre and film during the 1990s, a tiny, beautiful figure who combined a fragile appearance with an extraordin­ary, wild and wicked sense of humour, and a huge, unpredicta­ble gift both for comedy and tragedy.

Her screen career ranged from the 1989 television film Dream Baby with Peter Capaldi, to the 1998 television series Looking After JoJo – in which she co-starred with Robert Carlyle, and played his girlfriend, a Marilyn Monroe lookalike – and the film version of Irvine Welsh’s Acid House, released in the same year.

And in theatre, she played a key role in realising the work of many of the leading Scottish playwright­s of the period, from Forbes Masson and Alan Cumming, who wrote the parody 1987 Tron panto Babes In The Wood, in which she memorably played a bee, to Chris Hannan, Iain Heggie, Simon Donald and David Kane.

Jenny McCrindle was born in Clydebank in 1968, into a close and loving family who, according to her lifelong friend David Kane, shared a terrific sense of humour.

Jenny was the first in the family to become involved in theatre, joining the Scottish Youth Theatre in the mid-1980s and graduating rapidly to her first film, Charlie Gormley’s 1986 comedy

Court circular

Heavenly Pursuits, starring Tom Conti and Helen Mirren.

By the end of the 1980s, she was becoming a soughtafte­r performer on the Scottish stage, with a rare gift for the Scottish tradition of noholds-barred raucous comedy, built on a close rapport with the audience.

She adored pantomime, and starred in a Tron version of Sleeping Beauty co-written by Peter Capaldi and her then boyfriend Craig Ferguson, as well as in BabesInThe­Wood.

She also gave unforgetta­ble comic performanc­es in David Kane’s Dumbstruck at the Tron in 1994, and in Simon Donald’s Life Of Stuff at the Traverse in 1992. In 1995, at the Royal Exchange in Manchester, Iain Heggie describes her as just “walking in” to a key role in his Glasgow tenement backyard comedy An Experience­d Woman Gives Advice; the then 7:84 administra­tor Jo Beddoes said that the sight of Jenny making her entrance across the rock- ery, in perilously high heels, was worth the ticket price in itself.

As a live performer Jenny McCrindle was not only funny, but dangerous, unpredicta­ble and thought-provoking. “She was very sharp, very clever, very well-informed, and a very observant and supportive friend,” says her close friend and colleague, the comedian and writer Lynn Ferguson, “but she would hide that behind this appearance of kookiness.”

“And she was absolutely off-the-wall, the perfect mixture of humour, integrity and anarchy. Doing the same theatre show every night can get quite dull after a couple of weeks. But with Jenny, you never knew exactly what would happen.

“She was never disrespect­ful to the script, but she was always reinventin­g it, always creative, always trying out something new, something daft, something that would shake things up.”

By the time of her diagnosis with multiple sclerosis in 1999, Jenny McCrindle’s short career as an actor was almost over; her symptoms were severe, gradually confining her to a wheelchair, and friends felt that she preferred to deal with her health problems in private, with the support of her family.

Yet 15 years after her last appearance­s on stage and on screen, friends and colleagues still find themselves laughing at the memory of an outrageous­ly inventive, creative and original actor, who loved to party, to say what no-one else dared to say, and to overturn every stereotype­d expectatio­n that might have been attached to her tiny, almost fairy-like figure.

“With Jenny, it was never dull,” says David Kane. “I think she was happiest when she was in panto, when she was able to be a clown, use her whole body, act the goat, and simply make people laugh.”

And the playwright Iain Heggie, who also became a close friend, agrees. “As a playwright or a director, you could never really tell her what to do – yet what she did was always right.

She was very, very creative, absolutely fearless in front of an audience, and I think she needed acting. Above all, she loved to live and perform without limits; which is why what happened to her was so hard, but why we all remember her with such laughter, and such a great sense of energy and joy.”

Jenny McCrindle is survived by her parents, George and Libby, and by her sister Joanne; and she leaves behind both the most vivid memories of her stage presence, and a back catalogue of beautiful, vulnerable, fragile and funny screen performanc­es that ensure her special and completely original place, in the story of late-20th century Scottish drama.

 ??  ?? Jenny McCrindle with Robert Carlyle, her co-star in Looking After JoJo, in which she played a Marilyn Monroe lookalike
Jenny McCrindle with Robert Carlyle, her co-star in Looking After JoJo, in which she played a Marilyn Monroe lookalike

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