Sunday Mail (UK)

Voiceover star says she’s trying to reinforce Sturgeon’s life-saving advice on pandemic

- Cumming and McHugh

sh*t in my gerden’, and ‘Oor Isa’s coming up wi’ the big soup pot’, just making them say something different – it all stemmed from that.”

Back then, it was all about Brexit. How things have changed.

Godley said: “The coronaviru­s has definitely pushed our creative juices to the limit and people are finding new skills they didn’t know they had.

“I suppose the good thing is that, whether you like it or loathe it, people are watching the First Minister’s updates through my voice and I’m not contradict­ing the message, I’m reinforcin­g it.

“It’s just that I’m adding in bits about my Pippa Dee top, my feet killing me, cutting my own hair and getting a wee sausage supper with a pickle.”

Now, her ad-libs – recorded in one take, without a script – have become a central part of the decompress­ion, which has seen people sharing comedy memes united around one subject like never before.

It has even led to a fundraisin­g campaign a round one of her character catchphras­es, which she shouts at the end of every speech as

Sturgeon leaves the scene. She said: “‘ Frank, get the door!’ has become an iconic phrase. People have posters of it in their windows.”

But Godley is at pains not to disrespect the seriousnes­s of the situation.

She said: “These addresses do start very sombre. They start with a death count. I make sure I scroll past all that, so it’s not just, ‘ People are dead – and I’m talking funny sh* te.’ It is an incredibly difficult time.

“But people should remember that when people were dying during World War II, you had entertaine­rs like Bob Hope and Peter Sellers.”

She added: “When coronaviru­s hit, I saw Nicola Sturgeon was out every day with journalist­s asking the same questions and I thought I would just translate it into, ‘ This is what I f*****g mean’.”

Sturgeon, in turn, has endorsed Godley’s message (she’s not the only one – everyone from influentia­l Scots satirist Armando Iannucci to Bond star Britt Ekland and tennis legend Martina Navratilov­a have shared her work).

But this isn’t political cosying on Godley’s part.

She said: “If it was a Tory putting out the same message to stay safe and stay at home, then I’d do exactly the same thing.

“I’d be impartial to the politics of whatever government in Scotland was pushing out the message to keep us all safe, just to get that message out.”

She is one of a number of entertaine­rs who have signed up for the National Theatre of Scotland’s onl ine response to the crisis, to be screened on BBC Scotland in the coming weeks. Alan Cumming, Greg McHugh, Denise Mina and Lorraine McIntosh will also take part.

Anxiety and stress risk becoming a pandemic themselves as the psychologi­cal impact of enforced restrictio­ns takes its tol l on our psyche.

There has been a global reach for decompress­ion valves and comedy memes are chief among them.

It’s partly why she has gone viral, in the only good sense of the term – and not for the first time. A photo of her holding up a sign calling Donald Trump the “c” word on his arrival in Scotland in 2016 first shot her to worldwide attention.

Yet the comic scoffs at any notion that she’s become a key figure in the response.

She said: “I’m not a first responder, not a critical worker. There are people risking their children’s lives going to feed an old person or give someone oxygen. I’m just a clown with a camera phone.”

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