The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Why it’s time to hang up p my frock

Panto star Dean wants to spend Christmas

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But this year he is hanging up his frock after his skin cancer fight forced him to reappraise his life.

“I spend eight weeks of the year wearing a dress and high heels, but this Christmas, it’s trousers for me,” said Dean, 66.

“I’m taking time off because doctors told me that if they hadn’t diagnosed my skin cancer in time, I might not be here to enjoy this Christmas with my three kids and six grandchild­ren.”

That doesn’t mean Dean is turning his back on pantomime.

He said: “I’ve never been able to sit in an audience and watch my mates perform because I’ve always been working, so this year I’ll be going to see as many pantos as I can.

“I’m particular­ly looking forward to Marti Pellow and my old mucker Johnny Mac in Aladdin at the SECC.”

The showbiz legend was stunned when specialist­s told him a lump on his face was cancerous and would need major surgery.

Dean said: “You think you are invulnerab­le and then, suddenly, you realise you’re not.

“I’d had a mark on my face for years and was told there was nothing to worry about, probably just the effects of the sun while playing golf.”

In May 2015, maxillofac­ial surgeon Colin MacIver, at Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital, removed a malignant melanoma and sent the star home with scars that needed 150 stitches.

The performer said: “Inevitably, I was being asked when I was auditionin­g for Phantom of the Opera. Typical Glesca humour. “Joking apart, it was no joke!” Dean underwent a second round of surgery and, mercifully, has just been given the

Dean is taking a break over Christmas. all- clear. He said: “It’s been quite a long road but I’m ready for anything now. My fiancée, Karen Logan, and I are booked up for a load of shows next year. And as well as doing my own one- man show, I’m going on tour with Joe Longthorne for his Scottish dates.”

The comedian and singer’s first panto was 1977 as Mother Goose’s son Silly Billy at the Gaiety theatre in Ayr with River City star Johnny Beattie, 90.

Dean’s first role as dame was Widow Twankey in 1985 alongside television star Tom O’Connor, 77, at Eden Court, Inverness, in Aladdin.

He’s played “dame” virtually every year since, apart from last year at Glasgow’s Pavilion, where he played Handy Andy and Santa in Santa Claus Is Coming To Town.

Dean said: “Being dame is the best fun, but you have to be very fit to survive the gruelling physical role of being centre stage, two shows a day, eight weeks of the year. You need to be

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