The Scotsman

Hollywood star was ‘ taught to fear and loathe the English’ when growing up

● Star says some Scots suffer from ‘ absurd prejudice’

- By BRIAN FERGUSON Arts Correspond­ent bferguson@ scotsman. com

Glasgow- born Hollywood star Craig Ferguson has told how he was “taught to fear and loathe the English” when he was growing up in Scotland – and said some Scots were still guilty of “absurd prejudice”.

Writing in his newly- published memoirs, the standup, actor and chat show host, who shot to fame after moving from Scotland to the US in the mid- 1990s, suggested they were committing “an act of self robbery, which will severely damage your chances of joy or happiness”.

Brought up in Cumbernaul­d, Lanarkshir­e, Ferguson said his generation grew up believing “we were victims of the system” and said he felt “indoctrina­ted” with negativity.

The 57- year- ol d c r i t i c i s - es Braveheart and Outlander as “revisionis­t fairytales”, d e s c r i b e s B o n n i e P r i n c e Charlie as a “chancer” in his book and admits he even dislikes Brave, the Disney- Pixar film set in Scotland, which he starred in as a clan leader.

Ferguson writes of his belief that Scotland’s modern- day “separatist­s” were more motivated by economics. He said t he current i ndependenc­e movement could be traced back to Margaret Thatcher’s policies as prime minister.

Ferguson’s first taste of the entertainm­ent industry came when he played in a Glasgowbas­ed punk band Dreamboys in the early 1980s with Peter Capaldi, before the art school student encouraged Ferguson to try his hand at stand- up.

In his book, Riding the Elephant, Ferguson recalls how he was gripped by nerves over making his debut at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1986 – in the guise of his on- stage alter ego Bing Hitler – because he thought audiences would be made up of English people, but ended up having “the time of my life”. He said: “English people in the audience were daunting because since I was a child I have been taught to fear and loathe the English.

“I t ’s an absurd prejudice that quite a few Scots still suffer from. I say suffer, because I believe if you are prejudiced you are committing an act of self robbery, which will severely damage your chance of joy or happiness. Tribalism is not just a curse for those who are victims of its cruel nonsense, but also for the stubborn evol utionar y throwbacks who believe that it has validity as a value judgment.”

Ferguson, who will stage his first UK stand- up show in the UK for 25 years at the Edinburgh Playhouse in August, recalls how his 1986 Fringe show led to offers of work on TV and in London, including a tour with rising English star Harry Enfield.

He writes: “I was wrong about Edinburgh. The audiences were great, even though they were half- English, and I had the time of my life.

“I got that first adrenaline­l aced j olt of success and i t launched me into my current profession­al, artistic life with a thrilling force that damn near killed me.” Recalling the “cold, cruel hand of austerity” of the Thatcher era in Scotland, Ferguson said: “I think that the rise of the current Scottish independen­ce movement was instigated by Margaret Thatcher and her policies, which were particular­ly hard on the Scots. Modern separatist­s are much more inclined to be motivated by economics than by any revisionis­t fairytales like Outlander or Braveheart or by romantic myths s urrounding dubious his - torical chancers like Bonnie Prince Charlie.”

“I was wrong about Edinburgh. The audiences were great, even though they were half- English, and I had the time of my life.”

CRAIG FERGUSON

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 ??  ?? 0 Clockwise from main: Craig Ferguson had a chatshow, The Late Late Show, in the US from 2005- 14; at the Edinburgh Fringe in 1988; the film Braveheart which he says is a ‘ revisionis­t fairytale’
0 Clockwise from main: Craig Ferguson had a chatshow, The Late Late Show, in the US from 2005- 14; at the Edinburgh Fringe in 1988; the film Braveheart which he says is a ‘ revisionis­t fairytale’

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