The Scotsman

' That’s the end, thank you very much and goodnight'

After more than 50 years in showbusine­ss Sir Billy Connolly is a stand- up megastar. He tells Georgia Humphreys about his decision to step back from performing live

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There’s a river that flows right behind Sir Billy Connolly’s Florida home, and he likes to fish in his slippers.

The 78- year- old Scot has Pamela, his wife of more than 30 years, and his dogs for company. Two of their daughters live on the same street with their boyfriends, and so they often have BBQS together.

And he likes his neighbours – he's become friends with the guy next door, a taxi driver.

This is the legendary comedian's life now, and he's "settled and happy".

After being diagnosed with Parkinson's in 2013, the star recently announced that he is taking a step back from doing live stand- up performanc­es.

In honour of his mighty career, ITV is airing Billy Connolly: It's Been A Pleasure; a star- studded, one- off special which celebrates his funniest moments.

The emotional programme features unseen performanc­e footage, exclusive chats with famous fans ( Sir Paul Mccartney, Sir Elton John, Sheridan Smith, Sir Lenny Henry, Dustin Hoffman, Whoopi Goldberg, Aisling Bea and Russell Brand) and clips of Sir Billy himself, filmed by Pamela at home.

"It's funny talking about the end of my career... It's strange talking about it as a thing of the past," notes the Glasgow funnyman, when we chat over the phone.

"It's nice to come to that conclusion myself, that I should stop. It's a nice, healthy feeling."

It was an "obvious" choice to make, he adds, because of the Parkinson's, which is a progressiv­e neurologic­al condition. Symptoms can include involuntar­y shaking of particular parts of the body, slow movement and stiff and inflexible muscles.

"I don't want to be on stage with Parkinson's, and that's the end of it," says the fatherof- five ( he has Jamie and Cara from his first marriage to Iris Pressagh, and Scarlett, Amy and Daisy with psychologi­st Pamela).

"And it's a natural end because I'm dead happy in my skin. I had a nice career, I did rather well, and I got knighted and that's like the full stop."

"Did rather well" is clearly an understate­ment. A musician and actor, as well as a comedian, the Big Yin was working as a welder in Glasgow shipyards when he pursued a career as a folk singer.

Turning to comedy in the 70s, he quickly became a national treasure and went on to crack the US, thanks to an HBO special with Whoopi Goldberg in 1989.

He moved to Hollywood and had roles in several big films, including action drama The Last Samurai, animation Brave and fantasy adventure The Hobbit: The Battle Of The Five Armies.

But what is Sir Billy most proud of when it comes to his career?

"I'm proud of the fact that it didn't sink. There was no point where it went down below popularity.

"It just went up and up, until I said, ' That's the end, thank you very much and goodnight'."

He is also "proud of the people who managed me".

"I didn't go on telly and do

sketches, and melt it down a bit," he elaborates. "I just stayed where I was and got on with it – I stayed good."

Sir Billy is famous for being forthright and is predictabl­y frank when talking about his attitude towards having Parkinson's.

He says he does not feel any pressure to be an "ambassador" for the disease.

"I don't go to meetings with other Parkinson's people and talk about it. I just get on with it.

"I get invited all the time to these Parkinson's Society things, to come and have lunch on a Wednesday and talk about Parkinson's – I can't imagine anything more awful.

"I went one day with my son and we were having lunch and it was less than great..."

"Talking about Parkinson's, it's depressing," he continues. "It's just a fact of life, it's in me and I deal with it.

"And then sometimes it's a bit awkward. If you're in a restaurant, you sometimes have to ask the waiter to help you out of your chair, and at first it's kind of embarrassi­ng but, after a while, you realise that people are brilliant. They love helping you.

"So you just get on with the bits that are good, and the bits that are bad take care of themselves."

When we talk it's November, and he confides that recently his "energy has gone. I haven't been doing so well the last month".

But previously, making art – as well as comedy – is something the star has found relief in.

Earlier in the year, he even saw one of his pieces translated into a sculpture for the first time – it was "a drawing of a welder with wings".

"He was welding the world, so he's God as a welder," he explains.

After taking drawing up in his 60s, Sir Billy was signed by Castle Fine Art, which owns a chain of galleries across the UK, including one in Glasgow, where he grew up.

He has immense pride in his working- class background in the city, and his upbringing is something which has undeniably shaped his comedy.

He hasn't lived in Scotland for nearly 30 years, though.

"When you're away from where you come from, something in you misses it, but you know you're doing the right thing by being away," he muses.

"There's a time to be there, and there's a time to grow beyond it."

Sir Billy takes time to deliberate over his answers at points in our conversati­on, his voice soft and gentle. He is every bit as captivatin­g over the phone as he is on stage.

He has a way of holding your attention, whether he's talking about Scottish independen­ce (" I think they're getting close to it"), how people should read more books ( he avidly recommends Patti Smith), or what he's watching on the box ( murder programmes like The First 48).

Little Britain is "the best television show" he ever saw, he says, but he doesn't seek out comedies. "Because usually I don't find them very funny," he follows. "I watch Saturday Night Live [ an American sketch show] and I think they should be fired. They're terrible!

"British television comedy is outstandin­g."

So as the man who is arguably the king of British comedy retreats from the limelight, how would he like the public to remember him?

"It's a very simple thing. I would like to be remembered as being good at what I did," he reflects.

"I'd like it to be on my gravestone: ' He was a comedian, and he was very good at it'."

• Billy Connolly: It's Been A Pleasure airs on ITV on Monday.

 ??  ?? 0 Playing up for the press, the Big Yin shows off his CBE, which he received from the Prince of Wales at Buckingham Palace in December 2003 in recognitio­n of his services to entertainm­ent
0 Playing up for the press, the Big Yin shows off his CBE, which he received from the Prince of Wales at Buckingham Palace in December 2003 in recognitio­n of his services to entertainm­ent
 ??  ?? 0 Accepting the Special Recognitio­n award at the 21st National Television Awards in London in 2016
0 Accepting the Special Recognitio­n award at the 21st National Television Awards in London in 2016
 ??  ?? 0 Arriving in Glasgow after an Australian tour in the 1970s
0 Arriving in Glasgow after an Australian tour in the 1970s
 ??  ?? 0 At the Edinburgh Film Festival launch in 2004
0 At the Edinburgh Film Festival launch in 2004
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 0 Speaking to conductor Sir Alexander Gibson during rehearsals for the Scottish Opera production of Die Fledermaus, in which Billy Connolly played Flosch the Jailer, at the Theatre Royal in Glasgow in December 1978
0 Speaking to conductor Sir Alexander Gibson during rehearsals for the Scottish Opera production of Die Fledermaus, in which Billy Connolly played Flosch the Jailer, at the Theatre Royal in Glasgow in December 1978
 ??  ?? 0 The comedian at his home in the Florida Keys, as he appears in Billy Connolly: It’s Been A Pleasure on ITV
0 The comedian at his home in the Florida Keys, as he appears in Billy Connolly: It’s Been A Pleasure on ITV
 ??  ?? 0 Judi Dench as Queen Victoria and the comic as her faithful ghillie John Brown in the 1997 film Her Majesty Mrs Brown
0 Judi Dench as Queen Victoria and the comic as her faithful ghillie John Brown in the 1997 film Her Majesty Mrs Brown
 ??  ?? 0 The funnyman on stage in An Audience with Billy Connolly
0 The funnyman on stage in An Audience with Billy Connolly

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