The Sunday Post (Inverness)

We chat to River City star Lorraine Mcintosh

Spooked actress reveals her very own fright night while researchin­g new role as a TV ghost-hunter in comedy drama

- By Bill Gibb BGIBB@SUNDAYPOST.COM

The spooky exploits of TV ghost-hunters had never thrilled or chilled Lorraine Mcintosh.

The actress had never even watched one of the haunted house shows until researchin­g a new role ... and is possibly now too afraid to watch another.

After being terrified by the on-screen hauntings, her TV suddenly fell from its stand and shattered.

She said: “I thought it was going to be funny and I actually found myself scared.”

The former River City favourite is one of the stars of BBC Scotland’s new horror/ comedy Long Night At Blackstone, written by Still Game’s Greg Hemphill.

Lorraine plays Faye Bowers, the host of a phoney paranormal TV show who is trapped with her crew in a dilapidate­d Scots manor house.

Having never watched ghost-hunt programmes before, she decided to catch up with some viewing of Yvette Fielding’s Most Haunted.

Lorraine said: “These programmes have always passed me by, but I decided I had to watch and see what I was going to be doing.

“I settled down one day in the living room, where I wouldn’t normally sit.

“The next thing was my telly fell off its stand and smashed on my coffee table. “The way it was angled it had obviously been falling bit by bit in a tiny way and it toppled just as I was watching this programme about ghosts.

“I had to go and buy a new TV.”

The bizarre mishap would have unnerved many and Lorraine says that, while she’s not an avid believer, she’s not a rabid sceptic either.

“I would never think that we understood the paranormal world because we just don’t know,” said mum-of-three Lorraine.

“I’ve never pursued it, but I’d never say it’s all a load of rubbish. Some of these TV programmes probably are, but I think there are definitely things out there that we don’t understand.”

Greg juggled writing Still Game with penning Long Night At Blackstone. He also directs, his second time behind the cameras after West Skerra Light, which was screened at Halloween in 2016.

It reunites the same cast including John Gordon Sinclair, John Michie and Greg’s wife Julie Wilson Nimmo.

Lorraine, 53, said: “West Skerra Light was a joy to film and when Greg said he was going to write another one we all wanted to be in it.

“He was as good as his word and very rarely do you get a job that’s as much fun as this. Greg picked people you’re going to get on with and have a laugh with.

“And working with John Gordon Sinclair was such a brilliant honour. He’s a lovely human being but he’s also just a Scottish legend.

“He’s a brilliant actor who has won Olivier Awards on the London stage – and who wasn’t a fan of Gregory’s Girl?”

Lorraine, like Greg, is a huge horror movie aficionado with The Shining, Rosemary’s Baby and The Blair Witch Project among her all-time favourites. Family viewing, though, isn’t an option as her husband, fellow Deacon Blue member

Ricky Ross, very definitely isn’t a fan. “If we sit down to watch a film together it’s never a horror.

“I really like being scared as long as it’s on my own terms. If you tried to scare me afterwards though then I wouldn’t be happy.”

Filming for West Skerra Light took place at Corsewall Lighthouse in Wigtownshi­re, while Long Night At Blackstone was shot at atmospheri­c Hunterston House in Ayrshire.

One of Scotland’s most popular period properties with filmmakers, 39 Steps and Jonathan Creek have been filmed there. Two series of Outlander were shot at the house and a new David Walliams project had just been completed before the BBC Scotland unit moved in.

“It’s very scary but it’s still full of all the family’s bits and pieces,” said Lorraine, who is currently making the switch from screen to stage. She’s in rehearsals for a new play called Gut, being produced in associatio­n with the National Theatre of Scotland. It opens at the Traverse in Edinburgh on April 20 before it moves to the Tron Theatre in Glasgow on May 16.

It’s a psychologi­cal drama with Lorraine playing a mother-in-law whose decision about the three-year-old grandson she looks after has major ramificati­ons for the family.

With her musical commitment­s, it’s not always possible to devote time to taking on theatre of TV projects.

“I would like to get some more acting in, but it’s hard,” she admits. “If we’ve got one gig in August for instance, then that’s enough to rule you out of the Edinburgh Festival.”

Long Night At Blackstone, BBC1 Scotland, tomorrow, 9pm

 ??  ?? Actress and singer Lorraine Mcintosh plays TV host Faye Bowers in ghost-hunting spoof Long Night At Blackstone TV ghost-hunter Yvette Fielding
Actress and singer Lorraine Mcintosh plays TV host Faye Bowers in ghost-hunting spoof Long Night At Blackstone TV ghost-hunter Yvette Fielding
 ??  ?? Lorraine Mcintosh, centre, with co-stars Julie Wilson Nimmo and John Gordon Sinclair
Lorraine Mcintosh, centre, with co-stars Julie Wilson Nimmo and John Gordon Sinclair

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