The Scotsman

Edith Macarthur

Theatre and television leading lady, best- known for Take The High Road

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Edith Macarthur, actress. Born: Ardrossan, Ayrshire, 8 March, 1926. Died: Edinburgh, 25 April, 2018.

Witht he death of Edith Mac arthur, at the age of 92, Scottish the atre and television has lost one of its great leading ladies, an actress whose breathtaki­ng elegance and beauty–and uncompromi­sing dedication to the crafts he loved–was matched by a brilliant intelligen­ce, and wicked, ear thy sense of humour, that won her the love and friendship of generation­s of colleagues across Scottish theatre and beyond.

In a career that made her one of the defining faces of Scotland in the second half of the 20 th century, Edith Macarthur perhaps became best known for her television role as the sympatheti­c lady laird Elizabeth Cunningham, in the long-running 1980s ST V drama series Take The High Road; but her true passion was for theatre, where her work took her from the postwar Wilson Barrett Company based at the Lyceum in Edinburgh, through seasons in the 1950s, 60s and 70s with the Citizens’ The at re,Br istol Old Vic, the Royal Shakespear­e Company, York Theat re Royal, and many other companies across the UK, to a later career in which her work became more focused on Scotland, and particular­ly on the great Tayside theatres at Dundee, Perth and Pitlochry. Many who saw them will never forget the grace, intelligen­ce and emotional courage of her Dundee and Pit lochry performanc­e sin plays like Chekhov’ s Cherry Orchard, JamesBridi e’s Daphne Laureol a, and Richard Baron’ s acclaimed 1994 Dundee Rep production of Eugene O’neill’s Long Day’s Journey Into Night, in which she played a magnificen­t and heartbreak­ing Mar y Tyrone, opposite David Tennant as her son, Edmund.

Edith Macarthur was born in A rd ross an, Ayrshire in 1926, the eldest child of Donald Macarthur, who was a civil engineer, and his wife Minnie. She had two younger brothers, went to school at Ardrossan Academy, and dreamed of becoming a music teacher; but when she left school – at the height of the Second World War – she became increasing­ly involved with the Ardrossan & Saltcoats Players, at that time British and world champions in the field of amateur drama, and was soon determined to make a career in theatre.

During the war, she worked at an Admiralty Map Correction station in Ayrshire; then later, in the office of a local carpet factor y. In 1948, though, she wrote an impassione­d letter to Wilson Barrett, then the leader of a UK-wide theatre operation based in Edinburgh, asking if she could audition for his profession­al company; and when a telegram arrived inviting her for an inter view, she donned her most glamorous dress – made from blackout material, according to her friend the playwright Sylvia Dow–and headed to Ed inburgh for the meeting that would seal her fate, and mark the beginning of an astonishin­gly long and varied career.

Apart from her brilliant career in “legitimate theatre”, she also made early appearance sin Scotland’ s famous Five Past Eight variety shows, winning more friends among stars of variety and theatre including Jimmy Logan and U na McLean, and playing Fairy God mother in many pantomimes. She struck up a lifelong working relationsh­ip with the late, great Scottish actor and director Tom Fleming, with whom she worked not only on several production­s of Sir David Lindsay’ s Sa ty re Of The ThrieE st a its –memorably playing Lady Chastitie in his great Scottish Theatre Company production of 1983- 85 – but also on a hugely successful, long- running show based on readings from the voluminous letters of Thomas Carlyle and his wife Jane Welsh Carlyle.

She also had an active television career beyond Take The High Road, appearing in series including Sutherland’ s Law and The Borderers, and delivering one of the great performanc­es of her life as terminally ill elderly woman travelling the UK to visit her long- gone children in John Mcgrath’s 1993 television film The Long Roads. And in her later career, she was strikingly unafraid of taking on fiercely challengin­g and taboo-breaking roles. She appeared in Edward Al bee’ s brutally out spoken Three Tall Women at Perth Theatre in 2000, and in Iain Heggie’s Wiping My Mother’s A ** eat the Traverse in 2001; although the final full theatre appearance logged in her own archive, donated to the National Library of Scotland, was in Uncle Varick, John Byrne’s version of Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya, at Pitlochry in 2004.

Edith Macarthur remained single throughout her long and glamorous life, although she enjoyed the company of an army of friends and colleagues of both sex es, loved to flirt, and had her share of romantic relationsh­ips with leading men of the theatre world. She remained active in Scottish theatre well into her late seventies; and her death has brought a rare outpouring of tributes from friends, colleagues and admirers of all generation­s. The actress, writer and singer Gerda Steven - son, who toured with her in the Scottish Theatre Company’s 1980’ s production of Jamie The Saxt, among other shows, remembers how – despite the 30- year age-gap between them – she never seemed like an older person .“She had such a sense of fun, and this wonderful, ear thy sense of humour. She really was brilliant, an amazing mixture of gravitas and playfulnes­s – and wonderfull­y youthful and open- minded, which is what made her such a fine actress.” The director Richard Baron and the whole company at Pitlochry – a theatre she loved with a passion – recalled her elegance and grace, founded in a formidable work ethic and rigorous stagecraft, as well as her happy working relationsh­ip with Jimmy Logan, in his final Pitlochry seasons before his death in 2001.

And this week David Tennant – whose talent she spotted when he was a 10- year- old schoolboy in Paisley – spoke of his huge pride and pleasure at having known her, and having played her son twice, in Long Day’s Journey Into Night, and in Noel Coward’s Hay Fever at the Lyceum, in 1987.

“To a 10 - year- old,” he said, “she was this tall, mag ni ficent, almost supernatur­al figure who seemed to twinkle with glamour. She predicted we would share a stage together one day, and although I am sure she was just being indulgent, her prediction came true. In Hay Fever at the Lyceum she was hilarious and giddy and charming. And then later, in A Long Day’s Journey Into Night, she was utterly extraordin­ary. Fragile, bitter, girlish and broken, she was incredible. Edith had a magic about her. Offstage she sparkled and charmed, but onstage she glistened and glowed; and I will forever remember her as someone I looked up to, and still aspire to be like.”

Edith Mac Arthur iss urv iv ed by her brothers John and Donald, her sister- in- law Jean, and her niece Janet; and also by thousands of friends, colleagues and admirers who will never forget her radiant beaut y and intelligen­ce, her absolute commitment and profession­alism as an actress, her passion for all the arts, and the sense of fun that carried her with such grace and enjoyment through her long life, and brilliant career.

A funeral service for Edith Mac Arthur will take place at W arr is ton C re mat orium, Edinburgh, at noon on Wednesday 9 May. JOYCE MCMILLAN

 ??  ?? 0 Edith Macarthur in Daphne Laureola at Pitlochry Theatre
0 Edith Macarthur in Daphne Laureola at Pitlochry Theatre

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