
Karine Polwart: Gregory's Girl landed big in Banknock
We used to go to my granny and grandpa's in Ayr for a week. She worked in the tartan shop at Butlin's, so we got a day's free pass and went to the shows. It seemed brilliant — with ice cream, candy floss, dodgems and waltzers — but in reality it was quite manky. I went back 15 years later for a conference: it was grim.
Being awarded the Dux medal at high school — genuinely the worst moment of my life. The entire school was looking at me and I had a bad flat-top haircut and acne, and was the shyest person known to mankind. People assume that performers must be extroverts, but the opposite is often true. Not a single person in that room could have predicted I'd make a living standing on stage talking to people.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
41 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Award-winning Orange Is The New Black star looks unrecognisable in new show 12 years on from Netflix debut
An award-winning Orange Is The New Black star looks unrecognisable in a new show, 12 years on from her Netflix debut. Julie Lake starred in the hit series as Angie Rice who worked in the prison laundry room. For her talented portrayal in Orange Is The New Black, alongside her co-stars she was awarded an Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series by the Screen Actors Guild Awards in 2015 and 2017. Now, Julie has ditched the prison overalls and ventured into the world of theatre. The actress has secured a role in Forget-Me-Not alongside songwriter Annie Macleod who created the musical with her. The musical, set to be performed at the Edinburgh Fringe in August delves into a true story about motherhood and lost romances. It sees two estrange childhood best friends as they meet again later in life, now as mothers seeking 'more creative freedom, adventure, sexual liberation and a deeper sense of self,' according to the synopsis. Julie announced her new venture on Instagram and posted a photo of the promotional poster. She captioned the upload with: 'Wildflowers present FORGET-ME-NOT at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Aug 1-9th 11:30AM, Fern Theater @ Greenside. 'Be there or be square. Link to tickets in bio.' The star looked worlds away from her Orange Is The New Black days in the post and wore a mustard yellow top and styled her hair in tousled waves with blonde highlights. One fan commented: 'Gorgeous poster! Go go go!! xoxo.' It comes after fans of the Netflix hit shared their shock at realising that none other than Sabrina Carpenter, 25, appeared in the show. Sabrina appeared in the ninth episode of the first series called 'F***sgiving' as youngster Jessica Wedge. One TikTok user shared the scene on her account with the caption: 'Doing my annual Orange Is The New Black ewwatch when I come across young Sabrina Carpenter bullying Alex Vause. Alex Vause (Laura Prepon) has a flash back of a moment from when she was younger after Tiffany Doggett (Taryn Manning) calls her a rich b***h. But she was actually far from it in the flashback scene. Sabrina's alter-ego Jessica laughs at Alex's trainers, telling her: 'Real Adidas have three stripes. Not four. 'Your shoes are bobos.' Alex asks: 'So?' Jessica replies: 'So your mum shops at Payless and works at Friendly's.' 'My mum has like four jobs,' Alex says back. And Jessica tells her: 'That's not something to brag about. You dress like a bum!' One of her friends chimes in: 'She smells like one too!' Alex's mum then arrives to pick her up and Jessica asks: 'Do you guys live in that janky car too?' Bye bye pigsty!' Many rushed to the comments section to share their shock. One asked: 'THAT WAS SABRINA??' 'That's Sabrina?? no way!!!!' 'Oh wow, I never realized that was Sabrina!! crazy!!'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Full set of Sean Connery Bond movies heads up Edinburgh film festival programme
Andrea Riseborough, Peter Dinklage, Renée Zellweger and – inevitably – the late Sean Connery will be among the big names on show at the Edinburgh international film festival, which announced its programme today. A clutch of world premieres at the festival includes a remake of trash classic The Toxic Avenger, starring Dinklage alongside Kevin Bacon, Elijah Wood and Julia Davis, while Riseborough appears opposite Brenda Blethyn in Paul Andrew Williams's Tribeca festival hit Dragonfly. Zellweger appears in a behind-the-scenes role, with the world premiere of her directorial debut, an animated short film called They. And in what appears something of a coup, the festival will screen 4K restorations of Connery's six 'official' James Bond films: Dr No, From Russia With Love, Goldfinger, Thunderball, You Only Live Twice and Diamonds Are Forever. Connery's name is now firmly imprinted on the festival, with its main feature-film prize named after him and screenings of short films developed through the Sean Connery Talent Lab, an offshoot of the actor's foundation and the National Film and Television School Scotland. Festival director and CEO Paul Ridd said: 'The legacy of Scotland's biggest global star is central to what we're trying to do, connecting it with the future generation of film talent and all the philanthropic work the Connery Foundation do across film and various other causes is of vital importance to us. To have access to those six wonderful James Bond films and showing them on the big screen is very special.' The 2025 edition marks the third event since the dramatic collapse of the Centre of the Moving Image, the festival's then parent organisation, in October 2022, which also resulted in the closure of Edinburgh's celebrated Filmhouse cinema and its sister cinema in Aberdeen. Helped by the wider international festival that takes over the city every August, a short-notice scratch event was put together for the summer of 2023, while Ridd was installed as the head of a new organisation for 2024, which returned the festival to something comparable to its former status. And in a piece of good news for both the festival and the city itself, the Filmhouse in Edinburgh reopened in June after a high-profile campaign. Ridd says the festival is looking to consolidate its revival. 'We are thinking about this as year one with last year being year zero. We were really pleased with what we brought together last year, so for 2025 we are looking at what worked previously and not deviating really away from that. What's different, I guess, this year is that we've had a significantly higher volume of submissions sent to us, which is fantastic.' This year the festival's competition (for the 'Sean Connery prize for feature film-making excellence') comprises 10 world premieres, including Campbell X's 'queer road movie' Low Rider, Swedish documentary Once You Shall Be One of Those Who Lived Long Ago about a physically collapsing mining town, and In Transit, a drama about an artist and her model starring Jennifer Ehle. An Out of Competition section includes high-profile films such as the Dardenne brothers' Young Mothers, a study of a centre for pregnant teenagers, Jan-Ole Gerster's Islands, with Sam Riley as a washed-up tennis coach, and The Memory Blocks, a new film from experimental documentary-maker Andrew Kötting. The festival is also leaning into a resurgence of interest in archive and back catalogue films; alongside a retrospective of westerns by famed genre director Budd Boetticher (including 1957 classic The Tall T), Edinburgh is staging a series of screenings of films nominated by their in-person guests, all of whom will introduce their picks as well as taking part in an In Conversation event. The Last King of Scotland director Kevin Macdonald, who will appear alongside his brother, Trainspotting producer Andrew Macdonald, has chosen Soviet war classic The Cranes Are Flying; Candyman's Nia DaCosta will talk about Doug Liman's 90s drug deal comedy thriller Go; and Ben Wheatley, whose new film Bulk is leading the festival's Midnight Madness strand, has gone for Ealing comedy classic The Man in the White Suit. Equally as important as the programme was the decision to move the festival back to its August time slot, having been shifted to June in 2008 as a strategic decision by the UK Film Council, then in charge of industry policy, as a way of giving space between the Edinburgh and London film festivals (with the latter taking place in early October). This has reunited the film festival with the energy of the international and fringe festivals, as well as potentially adding some purchase in the autumn awards season. Ridd says: 'I'm very conscious that August is a strategic position for a lot of film distributors to launch their films going into that awards period. So I think August is a pure positive for us.' He adds: 'This is a beautiful city, and you've got all of this other art going on all around you. It's a unique feeling and I know what a big opportunity that represents to us, to emulate that spirit of discovery.' Sign up to Film Weekly Take a front seat at the cinema with our weekly email filled with all the latest news and all the movie action that matters after newsletter promotion Ridd says he is particularly pleased with the reopening of the Filmhouse, even if the umbilical connection between the festival and venue is no longer there. 'We're a completely new organisation, which has emerged Phoenix-like from a difficult situation. But it's obviously had a significant impact on the city, and I think everyone's very, very excited to see it back.' The Edinburgh international film festival, which previously announced Sundance hit Sorry, Baby and Irvine Welsh documentary Reality Is Not Enough as its opening and closing films, runs from 14-20 August.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
King Charles and Queen Camilla brave the rain to meet Scots at war memorial before greeting former Prime Minister Gordon Brown
King Charles greeted former Prime Minister Gordon Brown during a visit to Kirkcaldy Art Gallery on Wednesday. The 76-year-old is carrying out several engagements alongside Queen Camilla, 77, as Royal Week continues in Scotland. Charles, dressed in a dapper, brown overcoat, and Camilla started the day in Kirkcaldy, Fife, where they marked the centenary of the town's war memorial, and unveiled a commemoration cairn. Crowds lined the streets to meet the royal couple, and the monarch shared a sweet moment with a toddler waiting to greet him in the rain, gently touching her hand as onlookers snapped pictures. Later in the day, the royal father-of-two met Gordon Brown, 74, who served as the leader of the Labour party from 2007 to 2010, before joining a community reception to celebrate the work of local charities and community organisations. Elsewhere today, Camilla is due to travel to the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh, where she will host a reception for the Queen's Nursing Institute of Scotland. Founded in 1899 with a donation from Queen Victoria to organise the training of district nurses, today the charity provides professional development opportunities for Scotland's community nurses and midwives. It also supports them in working collaboratively with those they care for to tackle health inequalities. The King traditionally spends a week at the Palace of Holyroodhouse each year, based on what is known as Holyrood Week or Royal Week in Scotland. Yesterday, Princess Anne joined Charles and Camilla at the Sovereign's Garden Party at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh. During the event, King Charles gave his backing to his first female Scottish bodyguards. The Royal Company of Archers serve as the Sovereign's ceremonial bodyguard in Scotland and have now, for the first time, accepted women. Charles spoke to Lady Katherine Douglas, 35, one of the first women to sign up, during the garden party. Lady Katherine also competed on the women's eights rowing team at the Tokyo Olympics. Her father, Lieutenant Colonel Richard Callander, who served as the Lord-Lieutenant of Midlothian, was on duty in his final year with The Royal Company of Archers. Lady Katherine said afterwards: 'The King asked if I had ever done any archery and I said I had not. Before greeting the young child, the 76-year-old royal chatted with her mother and shook her hand 'He said when he did archery the arrows were still in the shrubbery and I said mine will probably be the same. 'He said it is about time that women are allowed and he was very happy about it. 'My uncle was in the Archers and this is his last garden party as at 75 they have to retire.' Queen Camilla chatted to visitors including Campbell Archibald, 52, of charity DD8 Music in Kirriemuir, in Angus, who was dressed head to toe in tartan twill, and blue shoes. She said: 'Amazing twill. You look very smart. Lovely to meet you. And your shoes.' Campaigners from anti-monarchy group Republic unfurled a banner on a hill in Holyrood Park overlooking the garden party which said 'Not My King' but was largely illegible to partygoers. Christie Etukudor, who was accompanied by her husband, Idara, met the Queen as representative of the Rotary Club of Edinburgh. She said: 'We are the second largest in the UK and are 100 years old. The Queen told me that she has agreed to become patron of the Rotary Club. 'Our last patron was the Duke of Edinburgh who held the role for 50 years and we haven't had one since he died, so it's very exciting. She is very passionate about volunteering so it's a perfect match.' Another wellwisher told the Queen: 'Welcome to Scotland. We are really pleased to see you. You are a wonderful asset.' Earlier that day, the King was greeted with pipes and drums - plus bows and arrows - as he arrived for his traditional official week in Scotland. Charles was given a Royal Salute and Guard of Honour as he inspected The Royal Company of Archers, The King's Bodyguard for Scotland, at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh, which is his official residence in the capital. The ceremony took place on Tuesday morning, shortly after the King and Queen had arrived at the palace in a claret liveried helicopter, one of two new aircrafts acquired by the palace. Each year, the monarch traditionally spends a week based at Holyroodhouse, an event known as Holyrood Week or Royal Week in Scotland. Upon his arrival, Charles also took part in the Ceremony of the Keys - an official welcome to the Scottish city. The Lord Provost Robert Aldridge presented keys to the city of Edinburgh to the King, who then immediately returned them for 'safe keeping'. During the visit on Wednesday, Charles laid a wreath at Kirkcaldy War Memorial, as part of his trip to Scotland for Holyrood Week Pictured: King Charles observed a minute silence after laying a wreath at Kirkcaldy War Memorial The Lord Provost said to the King: 'We, the Lord Provost and the members of the City of Edinburgh Council, welcome Your Majesty to the Capital City of your Ancient and Hereditary Kingdom of Scotland and offer for your gracious acceptance the Keys of Your Majesty's good City of Edinburgh.' The King replied: 'I return these keys, being perfectly convinced that they cannot be placed in better hands than those of the Lord Provost and Councillors of my good City of Edinburgh.' Before the ceremony, the palace's garden was transformed into a parade ground and the King met senior military and uniformed figures. He then received a royal salute and inspected a Guard of Honour of soldiers from the Royal Company of Archers, who serve as the King's ceremonial bodyguard in Scotland - a role first created in 1822 for King George VI. Also lined up was the Palace Guard made up of soldiers from Balaklava Company, five Scots, and the High Constables of the Palace of Holyroodhouse. Music at the official welcome was provided by The Band of the Royal Regiment of Scotland and Pipes and Drums of 2nd Battalion Royal Regiment of Scotland. Renditions included, 'I'm Gonna Be (500 miles)' by the Scottish duo Proclaimers, and 'Counting Stars' by One Republic. The King walked past the Guard of Honour, casting his eye over the service personnel and stopping to talk to some of them, and he also chatted to members of the military bands. Charles appeared in high spirits as he greeted Gordon Brown with a firm handshake in Scotland today Around 250 people were invited as a thank you for their work in the local community to watch the ceremony in the palace garden on July 1. Also in Scotland for Royal Week celebrations is Camilla, who visited Ratho Library on the outskirts of Edinburgh for her first engagement of the day. The royal, who is a passionate advocate for literacy and literature, urged people to 'keep on reading', as she revealed new research showed that just ten minutes a day can reduce stress levels by 20 per cent. Speaking about the research commissioned by her Queen's Reading Room charity, Camilla said: 'Neuroscientists have been looking at the power of reading and it's just been proved that ten minutes a day reduces stress by 20 per cent. 'Just ten minutes. So just keep on reading!'