The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Still star returns to teaching as game but no jobs: Comedy experts warn pandemic risks exodus of talent from arts

Experts warn of pandemic’s escalating toll on Scotland’s arts and culture as star of TV comedy reveals her return to class as production­s remain on ice

- By Paul English news@sundaypost.com

This time last year she was playing to 12,000 fans a night in the country’s biggest venue starring in one of the country’s favourite shows.

This week, Still Game star Jane Mcgarry will be in front of a smaller audience, helping them with their three Rs and washing their hands. She is one of many Scots working in arts and entertainm­ent forced to pivot in response to the shutdown of their industries.

A far cry from the stage of Glasgow’s SSE Hydro and the studios of BBC Scotland, Jane, who stars as much-loved Isa in the BBC comedy, is now working as a support teacher at Craigmarlo­ch, a school for children with additional learning needs in Port Glasgow, Inverclyde.

But she’s not following the government advice for folk in the arts to retrain – far from it.

“It’s an enormous insult to tell someone to give up what they do, give up their career, retrain for the rest of your life to do something different,” said the actor, who originally worked as a secondary school drama teacher before finding fame as Isa, the nosey pensioner.

“It’ s so insulting to audiences and also to people who have honed their craft for so many years. I wonder what politician­s would do if someone told them at 60 to go and retrain as something else, and take out a loan to do it?”

Earlier this month, Chancellor Rishi Sun ak suggested the cataclysmi­c impact of the pandemic on the arts presented “fresh and new opportunit­ies for people” and spoke of workers “having to adapt”. He said: “I can’t pretend that everyone can do exactly the same job that they were doing at the beginning of this crisis.”

With the furlough scheme ending, and arts bailouts not trickling into individual­s’ pockets, Mr Sunak announced the Job Support Scheme, saying only people in “viable” jobs would qualify. The UK Government caused further furore by releasing an advert last week suggesting people in the arts should consider retraining in the vague realm of “cyber”.

Yet latest figures from the Scottish Government say the creative industries are worth £ 5 billion to the Scottish economy annually.

Jane said: “I got a repeat fee through from Still Game the other day for £ 13.02. People get so much pleasure from television, and rightly so, but does the government want the people who do this work to walk away from it?

“People are panicking, desperate, and they don’t

People don’t know where to turn. It’s desperate

know where to turn. I’m not saying the world owes us a living, but it’s so insulting to these people who have trained for many years in music, dance, acting, whatever that none of that is important.

“Most actors have to be able to do other work in order to keep acting, but I really don’t think we should be retraining.”

In an inter view earlier this year, before the coronaviru­s pandemic and while announcing a Q& At our of small theatres with some of the cast of Still Game, Jane spoke about the possibilit­y of returning to her first profession in the distant future.

With a year of work lined up, including the annual pantomime at Beacon Arts Centre in Greenock with fellow Still Gamer Mark Cox, she couldn’t have imagined she’d be back at the chalkface within months.

Jane ,50, said :“I had loads on from March until January. But after the end of March, I would open my email ever y day and feel sick. I would go to the calendar on the fridge and score out one job after another.

“I’m separated now and

have taken on a mortgage myself and I was so relieved to have work until January. But then everything was taken away – every avenue for work was removed. Before the schools went back I was thinking, ‘My God, what am I going to do?’.”

Teaching may not be able to provide Jane with the same buzz of performing live to an audience of 12,000 a night but, whether it’s Craiglang or Craigmarlo­ch, she’s just as grateful for the job’s rewards. “I love teaching, and the children in Craigmarlo­ch are lovely,” she said. “I’m lucky that I can do that because it’s always been something that I genuinely love and enjoy.

“Whenever I help kids do a show I feel more emotional than when I do one myself. I get a lot out of this work. Obviously it’s not the same buzz, but it’s a privilege to work with the kids. I genuinely mean it.”

In fact, it’s exactly how she planned it. “My mum found an old book of mine years ago when she was clearing out stuff. It was from primary one to primary seven, and I had written all the way through what I wanted to be – teacher and actor.”

Jane has also been teaching at LA Performing Arts college in Stirling, but admits she has fears for the theatre industry’s future. She said: “In spring we were all saying how grateful we were our Q& At our wasn’t until the autumn. It seems like madness that we thought this would be over and done with.

“My son is doing a course in theatre management and we’ ve talked about whether that’s wise because we’ve no idea when he might be able to get a job.”

The Still Game Q& At our is reschedule­d for spring, but remains in doubt. For now, Jane knows it’s her performanc­es in the classroom that count most. She said: “Teachers are working their socks off. On top of all the work they have to do, they’re constantly washing the kids’ hands, the tables and chairs.

“Ever y bell, they wash everything down. I don’t think teachers are getting the credit they’re due. They’re in the front line and I think there’s been a certain negativity towards them. A lot of teachers, especially in ASL schools where it’s more difficult to distance, have left themselves wide open.

“And there was no one out clapping for teachers when they were working in hubs during lockdown. The work they’re doing is tremendous.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture Alan Peebles Picture Andrew Cawley ?? Jane in Queen’s Park, Glasgow, last week
Picture Alan Peebles Picture Andrew Cawley Jane in Queen’s Park, Glasgow, last week
 ??  ?? Jane Mcgarry as Isa, above, with Navid, played by Sanjeev Kohli, in Still Game
Jane Mcgarry as Isa, above, with Navid, played by Sanjeev Kohli, in Still Game

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom