The Daily Telegraph

Vincent Friell

Actor who made his mark in the comedy Restless Natives and played a baffled dad in Trainspott­ing

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VINCENT FRIELL, who has died aged 64, was an actor whose career describes an entire era of Scottish film and television, beginning with the cult indie comedy Restless Natives (1985) and proceeding to appearance­s in Danny Boyle’s epochdefin­ing Trainspott­ing (1996) and Ken Loach’s The Angels’ Share (2012) via episodes of Taggart, Rab C Nesbitt and Still Game.

In Restless Natives, directed by the American import Michael Hoffman from a script by Ninian Dunnett, the dark-browed, 6ft 3in Friell – a gangly, shrugging presence in the John Gordon Sinclair mould – starred as the lovelorn Will, one of two under-employed chancers who become unlikely Dick Turpin-like folk heroes upon holding up tour buses with toy guns. Set to a stirring score by Big Country’s Stuart Adamson, it echoed Bill Forsyth’s better-known efforts at modern Scottish mythmaking. Much like Gregory’s Girl (1982), Restless Natives lingered long in the imaginatio­n.

As with most myths, the film required some degree of legerdemai­n, particular­ly in the scenes that required Will and sidekick Ronnie (Joe Mullaney) to make a high-speed Highland getaway on a motorcycle. “I don’t drive, and I have an aversion to any form of speed,” Friell later admitted. “The first time we were on the bike, Joe revved the engine. He went one way, I went the other, and we were never let on the bike again. In the film, it’s not Joe and me on the bike.”

Vincent Friell was born in Glasgow on January 17 1960, one of five children of the actor and Labour activist Charlie Friell and his wife Mary. He made his screen debut among the suspects in Killer (1983), the ITV miniseries that first introduced audiences to the character of DCI Jim Taggart, played by Mark Mcmanus. Such was Friell’s dependabil­ity and versatilit­y that after the spin-off, Taggart (1985-2010), became a ratings juggernaut, he returned to the show, playing three further, entirely new roles.

The close-knit nature of the Scottish industry meant that Friell repeatedly worked with the same performers in different contexts. He appeared with Gregor Fisher on the period miniseries

Blood Red Roses (1986) before taking two separate roles on Fisher’s breakout vehicle Rab C Nesbitt (1988-2014) and playing a landlord in the BBC’S fondly remembered Fisher-led revival of The Tales of Para Handy (1994-95), based on Neil Munro’s books.

He appeared alongside his stage colleague Robert Carlyle in the prison drama Silent Scream (1990), and then watched Carlyle become a star as Begbie in Trainspott­ing, in which Friell played Kelly Macdonald’s baffled father.

More television work followed, in Jack Docherty’s adworld sitcom The Creatives (1998), as a detective alongside Adrian Dunbar and Ray Winstone in ITV’S Tough Love (2002), and as a developer trying to take over the Clansman pub in Still Game (2002-19). Friell belatedly returned to film in the indie Fast Romance (2011), which won Bafta Scotland’s public vote for Favourite Scottish Film; in a marker of how far he had come since his

Restless Natives days, he played the Procurator Fiscal sentencing the wayward young hero of The Angels’ Share to community service.

Friell’s final screen credit came with the comedy short Jim the Fish (2015), although he remained a bedrock of regional theatre. In 2013 he toured Scotland in Paul Coulter’s one-man play Linwood No More, playing a worker laid off from the factory that produced the Hillman Imp and the Talbot Sunbeam; in 2017 he played a crime novelist confronted by harsh reality on the London-to-glasgow train in Simon Macallum’s Late Sleeper.

Restless Natives remained a mainstay of BBC Scotland schedules, lent its name to a popular podcast presented by the actor Martin Compston, and even spawned a stage musical, currently touring the UK. It achieved a new-found prominence in the 21st century after being reissued on DVD, and among the bonus material was an interview with the now middle-aged Friell: “It’s a lovely feeling to think […] there’s going to be a whole new generation who are going to see it. I hope it stays around for years, so that it can become a nice novelty factor, that there was this wacky little Scottish film made in 1984 that’s going to stay the course.”

He is survived by his wife Alana Brady and by two children.

Vincent Friell, born January 17 1960, died April 14 2024

 ?? ?? Friell, centre, with Joe Mullaney, left, and Teri Lally in Restless Natives (1985): the film inspired a musical which is currently touring
Friell, centre, with Joe Mullaney, left, and Teri Lally in Restless Natives (1985): the film inspired a musical which is currently touring

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