
Nicola Sturgeon believed Alasdair Gray was a 'bright light'
However, he began life, like most people, as an infant, in Glasgow on 28 December 1934. He had a traditional Scottish upbringing on a council estate. His father, Alexander, was a factory worker, builder's labourer, and remover of damaged chocolate bicuits from a conveyor belt. Wounded in the First World War, he helped found the Scottish Youth Hostels Association.
Alasdair's mother Amy worked in a clothing warehouse. A 'good housewife who never grumbled', she loved music, particularly opera. Both parents leaned Left (Amy's father had been blacklisted in England for trade union membership).
During the Second World War, Alasdair was evacuated to Auchterarder in Perthshire and Stonehouse in Lanarkshire. From 1942 until 1945, the family lived in Wetherby, Yorkshire, where his father ran a hostel for munitions workers.
Back in Glasgow, Gray frequented the public library, enjoying Winnie-the-Pooh, The Beano and The Dandy, plus all manner of 'escapist crap' before discovering 'the good stuff' such as Edgar Allan Poe.
He attended Whitehill Secondary School, in Dennistoun, where he edited the school magazine. Aged 11, he appeared on BBC children's radio reading his own poems and one of yon Aesop's Fables. He also read his own poems, 'very poor A.A. Milne' stuff initially, until he found his own voice and started writing short stories.
Alasdair Gray
Creative poverty
Having previously encouraged him, his parents feared poverty and humiliation if he pursued a creative career, which fears proved largely correct (at the turn of the century, Alasdair was reduced to applying to the Scottish Artists' Benevolent Fund for money).
In 1957, Gray graduated from art school with a useful degree in Design and Mural Painting. From 1958–1962, he was a part-time art teacher, undergoing pedagogical training at Jordanhill College.
Gray also painted theatrical scenery for the Glasgow Pavilion and Citizens Theatre. His first mural was "Horrors of War" for the Scottish-USSR Friendship Society.
He received a commission (unpaid, apart from expenses) to paint Creation murals for Greenhead church, this becoming 'my best and biggest mural painting'. Alas, the building – and the mural with it – was demolished in 1970.
Indeed, many of his bold and distinctive murals have been lost, though surviving examples can be found at the Ubiquitous Chip restaurant and the entrance to Hillhead subway station.
A collaborative ceiling mural at the Òran Mór arts venue depicts Adam, Eve, the Creation and sundry Glaswegians against a stunning, star-streaked, inky blue background.
In 1977–78, Gray worked for the People's Palace museum as an 'artist recorder", producing hundreds of streetscapes and portraits of politicians, artists, punters and workers. These are now in the collection at Kelvingrove Art Gallery.
In 2023, also for the Kelvingrove, Glasgow Museums acquired Grey's 1964 mural Cowcaddens Streetscape in the Fifties. With distorted perspectives reminiscent of Cézanne, Gray described it as 'my best big oil painting'.
Ga-ga for radio
His first plays were broadcast on radio (Quiet People) and television (The Fall of Kelvin Walker) in 1968, the latter transmogrifying in 1985 into his third novel. McGrotty and Ludmilla (1990) and Mavis Belfrage (1996) began life similarly.
However, his best-known work was his first novel, Lanark, published in 1981 to widespread acclaim. The Observer called it 'probably the greatest novel of the [20th] century', while James Campbell described it as 'an almost preposterously ambitious concoction of thinly disguised autobiography, science fiction, formal playfulness … and graphic design'.
Comprising jumbled chapters (four), prologue and epilogue, Lanark came with an erratum slip on which was printed: 'THIS ERRATUM SLIP HAS BEEN INSERTED BY MISTAKE.' The epilogue, four chapters before the end, lists the book's supposed plagiarisms, some from non-existent works.
The book tells two parallel stories, the first a Bildungsroman – aye – of a young artist (roughly himself) growing up in 1950s Glasgow. The other is a dystopia set in Unthank (roughly Glasgow).
In an oft-quoted passage, the main character says cities gain a positive identity only when so depicted in art: 'Imaginatively Glasgow exists as a music-hall song and a few bad novels. That's all we've given to the world outside. It's all we've given to ourselves.'
Despite Lanark's success, Gray preferred his second novel 1982, Janine, published in 1984. The stream-of-consciousness narrative has a more pornographic theme. Anthony Burgess, who'd previously called Gray 'the most important Scottish writer since Sir Walter Scott', described it as 'juvenile'.
Of Gray's other novels, Poor Things (1992), a Frankenstein-style tale about a scientist seeking to create the perfect companion, received the most attention, acclaim and income after Lanark.
His first short-story collection, Unlikely Stories, won the Cheltenham Prize for Literature in 1983, and he published three poetry collections, often featuring big themes – not always treated seriously – like love, God and language.
READ MORE
Rab McNeil's Scottish Icons: Don't be a whinging windbag – our bagpipes are braw
RAB MCNEIL'S SCOTTISH ICONS: John Knox – the fiery preacher whose pal got burnt at the stake
Scottish icons: Saint Mungo – the Fifer with a Welsh name who became patron saint of Glasgow
Scottish icons: the midge, vicious little beasties that bite you in the Cairngorms
Dear unseen place
In appearance likened to a nutty professor with a hysteria-tinged high-pitched laugh, Gray consequently supported socialism and Scottish independence. He popularised the epigram 'Work as if you live in the early days of a better nation', which was engraved hopefully on a wall of the new Scottish Parliament Building.
In May 2014, he designed The Sunday Herald's front page, supporting Yes in the indie referendum. In 1992, he'd written that 'by Scots I mean everyone in Scotland who is eligible to vote', a strategy that doomed the referendum to failure.
Elsewhere, Gray described English arts administrators in Scotland as 'settlers' and 'colonists'. This led to comically inaccurate accusations of anglophobia by leading nutters.
Usually backing the SNP or the Scottish Socialist Party, Gray voted Liberal Democrat at the 2010 general election in an effort to unseat 'corrupted' Labour, and voted Labour in 2019 as a protest against the SNP's timidity. Politics. It's complicated.
As is life. After a short illness, Alasdair Gray died at Glasgow's Queen Elizabeth University Hospital on 29 December 2019, one day after his 85th birthday.
Among many tributes, Nicola Sturgeon, then First Minister, remembered him as 'one of the brightest intellectual and creative lights Scotland has known in modern times'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews Heatwaves: The New Normal? It used to be called ‘summer', now a hot spell has the BBC in meltdown
Heatwaves: The New Normal? (BBC2) Marilyn Monroe started a heat-wave in 1954, by 'letting her seat wave', in a fiery number from the musical There's No Business Like Show Business. 'Her anatomy, made the mercury, jump to 93!' But to hear the BBC tell it, you'd think there was no such thing as a heatwave before climate change. Weather presenter Sarah Keith-Lucas was having a meltdown in Heatwaves: The New Normal? as she predicted wildfires sweeping the UK and 'extreme heat' with 'extreme consequences'. This was the language of hysteria, matched with pictures of burned-out houses and forest infernos. 'When Los Angeles burned, home after home was razed to the ground,' she warned. 'In Australia, hundreds have died and millions of hectares devastated as a result of bushfires. ' Britain, too, could be on the verge of similar heatwave hell, Sarah believes, thanks to 'human-induced climate change'. We cut to clips of anxious members of the public, voicing fears of 'climate collapse'. A buildings expert declared that old buildings with the wrong sort of windows 'will just become uninhabitable'. How this will happen, he didn't explain. Maybe he was worried about rusty hinges that won't open. But a bit of WD-40 will fix that, and it's cheaper than abandoning your home and moving into an air-conditioned refuge. Temperatures above 26°C could cause thousands of deaths, Sarah claimed, citing the Office for National Statistics. Before climate change, a week of 26°C used to be known as 'summer'. Now, it's the end of civilisation. Car valets of the night: Following a fatal stabbing, Mark and Johnny set about restoring a blood-soaked Renault to showroom condition for a rental fleet, on Crime Scene Cleaners (Ch4). Somebody could have died in your next holiday hire vehicle. There's a grim thought. Sarah did admit that a heatwave happened in 1976, though she reported it as a moment of national crisis, with police evacuating countless people from their homes, probably because they couldn't open their windows. But the problem, according to Candice Howarth — spokeswoman for the Quadrature Climate Foundation — is that 'we culturally and historically aren't used to heatwaves in the UK'. I'm sure she's right. Cinema-goers in the Fifties probably came out scratching their heads and saying, 'You know what, Doris, culturally and historically I've got no idea what Marilyn Monroe was singing about.' The reality is that anything can become an alarming new phenomenon if it's served with a spin of panic. Sarah took us into her BBC weather studio, a cubbyhole with a camera and a green screen, and showed us a map on which the jet stream locked Britain under a 'heat dome'. As the temperatures rose, the colours on the map turned a more vivid red. By the time it hit 30°C (86°F), the UK was glowing fire-alarm crimson. Then she met a farmer who was planning to cope with 'weather extremities' by planting a vineyard. Sadly, Sarah was left holding an empty bottle because the vines haven't produced grapes yet.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
ITV's 'most expensive flop in years' fronted by David Tennant facing the axe after getting fewer viewers than niche nature documentary
The show described as ITV's 'most expensive flop in years' is facing the axe after drawing in fewer viewers than a BBC documentary about pangolins. Hosted by David Tennant, The Genius Game is reported to have cost £2.5 million to make, but despite the huge investment, it had average viewership numbers of 661,000 after a promising start. This matched the viewership figures of BBC2's Pangolins: The World's Most Wanted Animal, which examines the plight of the endangered animals also known as scaly anteaters. An insider told The Sun: 'Publicly ITV maintains that no firm decision has been taken, but most execs and commissioners view it as a disaster. 'Not only did it occupy a primetime 9pm slot, it had a big-name host and was seen as a potential rival for BBC 's The Traitors. 'But of the five main channels on June 11, it was beaten by two and equalled by BBC2, thanks to those pangolins.' The Genius Game is intellect-based and sees contestants put their IQ to the test in never-before-seen games and manipulate each other for a cash prize, but many found it confusing and difficult to understand. While the show had a promising 1.5 million viewers when it first aired in April, by the second episode this number had plummeted to 846,000 viewers. To put this into context compared to other primetime TV shows, BBC1's Race Across The World attracted 4.2 million viewers at the same time. ITV has said: 'No decision has yet been made.' News of the show's uncertain future comes after its broadcast schedule was changed amid plummeting viewer numbers. When it first premiered, Genius Game was set to air on Wednesday and Thursday. But now, there was a change in the schedule and it was subsequently only broadcast on Wednesday evenings. Jeremy Clarkson's Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? celebrity specials were then moved into its Thursday slot for two weeks in May. The shake-up meant the show was spread out over seven weeks instead of four. It comes after many viewers during the first episode took issue with the new program and commented on how 'complicated' it seemed, with many not understanding the premise It comes after many viewers during the first episode took issue with the program and commented on how 'complicated' it seemed, with many not understanding the premise. Some took to social media to share their concerns and posted on X: 'Just starting this. Seems very complicated. I'll watch it out but not looking good tbh #GeniusGame.' One watcher turned off the show in just ten minutes and penned: 'Bye bye.' Others said: 'Sorry #GeniusGame it's a no from me, way too complicated for that time of night, I need mindless entertainment after a busy day, ITV should've just extended #CBBUK instead.' 'I'm struggling to understand. I'm clearly no genius, the rules on rules on rules are something else #GeniusGame.' The MailOnline has reached out to ITV for comment.


Scottish Sun
3 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
EastEnders episodes drop EARLY this week in surprise schedule shake-up
But Terrestrial TV viewers will not be able to watch episodes of the soap until Wednesday at the earliest Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) EASTENDERS episodes will drop EARLY this week in a surprise schedule shake-up. The BBC has had to make sweeping changes to the schedule to both of it's major channels. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 4 Wimbledon and the Women's Euros has meant that BBC Credit: BBC 4 Instead of the usual Monday to Thursday schedule, the first episode will not be made available on TV until Wednesday Credit: BBC It is a bumper season for sport due to both the Wimbledon Tennis Championships and the Women's Euros. Due to the extended coverage on BBC One and BBC Two, bosses at the publicly funded corporation have had to make several schedule changes. Usually EastEnders would air every Monday through to Thursday at 7:30pm after The One Show. However, for those wanting to know the latest goings on in Walford, this week's episodes will air at a different time. The first episodes of the week to air on TV will be shown on BBC One at 8pm on Wednesday 9th July. This will be closely followed by another edition of the soap straight after at 8:30pm. The follow-up instalment will air the next day on Thursday 10th July at an earlier time of 7pm. Fans will also be able to watch EastEnders on a Friday night again with the last episode of the week on the 11th July - again at 7pm. This is a drastic change from its usual midweek release schedule of Monday to Thursday. Despite the shakeup on linear television, it's still business as usual for the soap on streaming. EastEnders exit as two stars axed after nine years and leaves in a blaze of glory in final scenes Episodes will still land as normal at the same time for viewers on BBC iPlayer. This means that all the episodes will be available to view on iPlayer far before they are aired on the small screen. The show's official social media accounts posted the full schedule of episodes. On X - formerly known as Twitter - it posted: "Here is our schedule for this week's #EastEnders. "See you on Wednesday for double trouble!" The account added: "Psst…. if you can't wait that long, remember that EastEnders also drops on @iPlayer at 6am, Monday to Thursday." 4 Episodes will still land on iPlayer as normal every weekday morning at 6am Credit: BBC 4 This means that every episode of the soap will be available to view before it gets shows on terrestrial TV Credit: BBC EastEnders continues on BBC One and is available to stream on iPlayer.