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Scottish serial killer Peter Manuel story to feature in Glasgow play
Scottish serial killer Peter Manuel story to feature in Glasgow play

Glasgow Times

time08-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Glasgow Times

Scottish serial killer Peter Manuel story to feature in Glasgow play

Peter Manuel will be brought to life on the stage of Glasgow's refurbished Citizens Theatre when The Last Drop is premiered there next year. It has commissioned an adaptation of a book by best-selling crime writer Denise Mina, which 'reimagines' a night Manuel spent in Glasgow with William Watt, who had spent 67 days behind bars while under suspicion for the murders of three members of his family. The 'electrifying' script by Glasgow-based playwright Linda McLean is described as 'equal parts psychological thriller and pitch-black comedy". McLean's previously plays include Glory on Earth, which imagined a series of encounters between Mary Queen of Scots and John Knox. Her new stage play will be premiered at the Citz in June, nine years after the publication of Mina's book, the author's first 'true crime' novel. It was based on the extraordinary events which unfolded after the Burnside home of former Watt, a former police officer, was broken into in September 1956 while he was on a fishing holiday in Argyll, and his wife, his daughter and his sister-in-law were shot in their beds. Crime writer Denise Mina's book on Peter Manuel, The Long Drop, is being turned into a new play which will be premiered at the revamped Citizens Theatre in Glasgow next year. Watt, who had admitted to the police that he had been unfaithful to his wife, became the prime suspect, but was released from Barlinnie prison after 67 days when the case against him collapsed due to a lack of evidence. Manuel, who was sent to Barlinnie weeks after Watt for an attempted break-in, had sought the other man out and told him that he knew who was responsible for the Burnside murders. Crowds gather for the trial of Peter Manuel in Glasgow in 1958. (Image: The Herald) To try to clear his name, Watt hired the celebrated defence lawyer Lawrence Dowdall, who carried out his own painstaking investigation and met Manuel on several occasions. He became convinced that Manuel was responsible, not least because he was able to give the lawyer detailed descriptions of the Watt house and the shootings. Denise Mina's Peter Manuel book, The Last Novel, is being adapted into a new stage play. Manuel eventually met Watt in person the following December in the cocktail bar of Glasgow's city centre restaurant Whitehall's in Renfield Street before they spent hours together around the city, including the Gorbals area, where the Citz is based. Mina's book mixes scenes from the time they are said to have spent together with the trial at the High Court in Glasgow in May 1958. Peter Manuel was convicted of seven murders in May 1958. Manuel withdrew a confession to the police, conducted his own defence and even called Watt as one of his witnesses. However he was eventually convicted of carrying out seven murders in Glasgow and Lanarkshire between 1956 and 1958. Manuel was the second last prisoner at Barlinnie to be executed, on July 11, 1958. The Citizens Theatre, which will officially reopen in September, will premiere The Last Drop in June 2026. (Image: Supplied) McLean said: 'When you look at photographs of Peter Manuel, he was quite a handsome young man. There was a whole mystique about him at the time. "It was absolutely fascinating that he decided to become his own defence. He turned into a different Peter Manuel. He is a gift for an actor to play. "The fascination for me in doing this play is that my mother was a teenager in Glasgow when Peter Manuel was on the loose. He absolutely terrorised ordinary people. "Denise has given me carte blanche to adapt her book. It has been trimmed down to make it as suspenseful as possible for the stage." READ NEXT: Teenager, 16, left bleeding profusely in Glasgow murder bid involving gin bottle READ NEXT: Council not reimbursed for demolition of India buildings for this reason The Citz, which has been closed since 2018 for the biggest refurbishment in its history, has already announced that it will officially reopen in September with the premiere of a new stage show inspired by the bonds of friendship which were forged between people in America and Lockerbie since the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988. Other new shows in its 2026 line-up includes a new version of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, which will feature Citz favourite George Costigan and Matthew Kelly, who will be appearing at the venue for the first time, and the Pulitzer Prize winning play Sweat, which is set in Pennsylvania at the start of the 21st century. Theatre-makers Adura Onashile and Stewart Laing will be collaborating on a new version of the George Bernard Shaw classic Saint Joan, about Joan of Arc, which will be reimagined and set in the 2020s as the world faces growing political unrest and conflict. Advance publicity on The Last Drop, which will run from June 5-20, describes the play as 'a sleek and stylish descent into the heart of a city – and the haunted minds of the men who shape it.' It adds: 'The Long Drop is an electrifying new play – equal parts psychological thriller and pitch-black comedy – based on the real case of notorious killer Peter Manuel. Gritty and gripping, it plunges us into a world of gangsters, gossip, and half-truths told over one too many drinks, leading to one of the most infamous criminal trials in Scottish history.' The theatre's artistic director Dominic Hill, who will direct the adaption of The Long Drop, said: 'I read Denise Mina's The Long Drop during lockdown and was completely gripped by it. "Denise is one of Scotland's finest crime writers – her work is sharp, atmospheric and utterly compelling. I knew straight away it had the potential to be a brilliant piece of theatre. 'I asked the brilliant playwright Linda McLean to adapt it, and she's done so with real flair. 'Set in the gritty underworld of 1950s Glasgow, this is a dark, funny and gripping drama – the kind of bold, character-driven storytelling that feels right at home on the Citz stage.' Mina said: 'As a Glaswegian, the Citz holds a special place in my heart. I'm honoured that The Long Drop is being staged here, in the Gorbals, where so many of the events happened."

The Scottish serial killer inspiring 'electrifying' new play
The Scottish serial killer inspiring 'electrifying' new play

The Herald Scotland

time07-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Herald Scotland

The Scottish serial killer inspiring 'electrifying' new play

It has commissioned an adaptation of a book by best-selling crime writer Denise Mina, which 'reimagines' a night Manuel spent in Glasgow with William Watt, who had spent 67 days behind bars while under suspicion for the murders of three members of his family. Read more: The 'electrifying' script by Glasgow-based playwright Linda McLean is described as 'equal parts psychological thriller and pitch-black comedy". McLean's previously plays include Glory on Earth, which imagined a series of encounters between Mary Queen of Scots and John Knox. Her new stage play will be premiered at the Citz in June, nine years after the publication of Mina's book, the author's first 'true crime' novel. It was based on the extraordinary events which unfolded after the Burnside home of former Watt, a former police officer, was broken into in September 1956 while he was on a fishing holiday in Argyll, and his wife, his daughter and his sister-in-law were shot in their beds. Crime writer Denise Mina's book on Peter Manuel, The Long Drop, is being turned into a new play which will be premiered at the revamped Citizens Theatre in Glasgow next year. Watt, who had admitted to the police that he had been unfaithful to his wife, became the prime suspect, but was released from Barlinnie prison after 67 days when the case against him collapsed due to a lack of evidence. Manuel, who was sent to Barlinnie weeks after Watt for an attempted break-in, had sought the other man out and told him that he knew who was responsible for the Burnside murders. Crowds gather for the trial of Peter Manuel in Glasgow in 1958. (Image: The Herald) To try to clear his name, Watt hired the celebrated defence lawyer Lawrence Dowdall, who carried out his own painstaking investigation and met Manuel on several occasions. He became convinced that Manuel was responsible, not least because he was able to give the lawyer detailed descriptions of the Watt house and the shootings. Denise Mina's Peter Manuel book, The Last Novel, is being adapted into a new stage play. Manuel eventually met Watt in person the following December in the cocktail bar of Glasgow's city centre restaurant Whitehall's in Renfield Street before they spent hours together around the city, including the Gorbals area, where the Citz is based. Mina's book mixes scenes from the time they are said to have spent together with the trial at the High Court in Glasgow in May 1958. Peter Manuel was convicted of seven murders in May 1958. Manuel withdrew a confession to the police, conducted his own defence and even called Watt as one of his witnesses. However he was eventually convicted of carrying out seven murders in Glasgow and Lanarkshire between 1956 and 1958. Manuel was the second last prisoner at Barlinnie to be executed, on July 11, 1958. The Citizens Theatre, which will officially reopen in September, will premiere The Last Drop in June 2026. (Image: Supplied) McLean told The Herald: 'When you look at photographs of Peter Manuel, he was quite a handsome young man. There was a whole mystique about him at the time. "It was absolutely fascinating that he decided to become his own defence. He turned into a different Peter Manuel. He is a gift for an actor to play. "The fascination for me in doing this play is that my mother was a teenager in Glasgow when Peter Manuel was on the loose. He absolutely terrorised ordinary people. "Denise has given me carte blanche to adapt her book. It has been trimmed down to make it as suspenseful as possible for the stage." The Citz, which has been closed since 2018 for the biggest refurbishment in its history, has already announced that it will officially reopen in September with the premiere of a new stage show inspired by the bonds of friendship which were forged between people in America and Lockerbie since the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988. Other new shows in its 2026 line-up includes a new version of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, which will feature Citz favourite George Costigan and Matthew Kelly, who will be appearing at the venue for the first time, and the Pulitzer Prize winning play Sweat, which is set in Pennsylvania at the start of the 21st century. Theatre-makers Adura Onashile and Stewart Laing will be collaborating on a new version of the George Bernard Shaw classic Saint Joan, about Joan of Arc, which will be reimagined and set in the 2020s as the world faces growing political unrest and conflict. Advance publicity on The Last Drop, which will run from June 5-20, describes the play as 'a sleek and stylish descent into the heart of a city – and the haunted minds of the men who shape it.' It adds: 'The Long Drop is an electrifying new play – equal parts psychological thriller and pitch-black comedy – based on the real case of notorious killer Peter Manuel. Gritty and gripping, it plunges us into a world of gangsters, gossip, and half-truths told over one too many drinks, leading to one of the most infamous criminal trials in Scottish history.' The theatre's artistic director Dominic Hill, who will direct the adaption of The Long Drop, said: 'I read Denise Mina's The Long Drop during lockdown and was completely gripped by it. "Denise is one of Scotland's finest crime writers – her work is sharp, atmospheric and utterly compelling. I knew straight away it had the potential to be a brilliant piece of theatre. 'I asked the brilliant playwright Linda McLean to adapt it, and she's done so with real flair. 'Set in the gritty underworld of 1950s Glasgow, this is a dark, funny and gripping drama – the kind of bold, character-driven storytelling that feels right at home on the Citz stage.' Mina said: 'As a Glaswegian, the Citz holds a special place in my heart. I'm honoured that The Long Drop is being staged here, in the Gorbals, where so many of the events happened."

The Most Anticipated Whiskeys of the Year Have Just Arrived. Here's How They Taste
The Most Anticipated Whiskeys of the Year Have Just Arrived. Here's How They Taste

Yahoo

time11-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The Most Anticipated Whiskeys of the Year Have Just Arrived. Here's How They Taste

Securing exceptionally rare spirits is, by definition, an arduous task. If everybody could get their hands on the stuff, it wouldn't exactly be rare. But ever since The Last Drop Distillers came on the scene in 2008, it's been a tad easier for connoisseurs to encounter rarity in the wilderness—or at their local bottleshop, at least. The London-based independent bottler specializes in sourcing precious, often forgotten, troves of liquid—stuff that can never be replicated—and making it relatively accessible to the masses in one final globally-distributed hurrah before it's gone forever. In a typical year, this constitutes maybe a handful of labels, each one scant enough in supply to fill only several hundred bottles. Indeed, up until this point there's been about 15,000 total bottles worth of liquid through a grand total of 36 releases. Now, the brand is ready to bring volumes 37, 38, and 39 to the world. I tasted the three newcomers: a trio of ultra-aged whiskies from Kentucky, Scotland and Japan, respectively. Included in the mix are some of the best liquids I've sipped all year. The theme this year is mastery in maturation. For Release No. 37, The Last Drop has unveiled a 27-year-old Kentucky straight bourbon from Buffalo Trace Distillery. It comes from the award-winning distillery's three oldest casks, laid down between 1995 and 1997. Under normal bourbon-making conditions, this constitutes way too much time in the barrel. But master blender Drew Mayville has a secret weapon at his disposal: an experimental, refrigerated warehouse in which barrels are kept at a steady 45 degrees specialized environment enables extended aging. It's an ambitious project, but one that resulted in a vibrant, 121.8-proof whiskey that's brimming with seasoned oak and simmering cherry. The underlying wood note never overpowers but instead forms a solid anchor upon which tobacco, cedar, and sandalwood flow into a slinking allspice finish. Uncut and unfiltered, the tongue-tingling juice will set you back $10,500 a bottle, with only 508 of them in total shipping out globally this month. Joining it is Release No. 38, a 55-year-old single malt from Tomintoul in Scotland's Speyside region. The liquid was originally distilled in April 1969 and has a supernatural sort of viscosity and richness. These deep almond- and date-driven complexities are owed to the cooperage. It's a union of whiskies that spent all their lives maturing in sherry-seasoned casks. Sip it slowly and methodically, and you might discern tropical pineapple notes around its golden edges. You won't need to add any water to aid in the pursuit. Bottled at an easy 43.1 percent ABV, this is a calm and gentle dram. Just 430 bottles will be available worldwide at a suggested retail price of $6,950. Rounding out the 2025 collection is Release No. 39, a 22-year-old blended malt that incorporates whisky from a now-shuttered Japanese whisky maker. Back in 2000, the Hanyu Distillery in Saitama Prefecture, northwest of Tokyo, was mothballed. Four years later, most of its campus was destroyed by fire. The dwindling stock that remains in existence is rapidly becoming collector catnip. This particular offering fuses a sole barrel from the ghost distillery with another cask from an unnamed Japanese producer. Both whiskies matured exclusively in Mizunara oak. After two decades of aging, the resulting blend flaunts creamy spice and incense notes typical of the cooperage. Bottled at an unusually high proof point for Japanese spirit, this 59.1 percent ABV belter is assertive on the palate, nodding to toasted tropical fruit. The finish resolves in an overture of cinnamon and brioche. It's the rarest release of the bunch, though not the priciest: only 319 decanters in total, set to retail at $5,500 per bottle. As with all The Last Drop releases, they each come packaged in a 700ml decanter alongside a 50ml miniature. It affords collectors the opportunity to sample the interest without dipping into the principal. But those banking on exclusive pours ought to consider a journey to coastal California this weekend. For those in the know, the Pebble Beach Food and Wine Festival is the Pebble Beach Rare Whisky Extravaganza. Master blender Drew Mayville and Rebecca Jago, director of brand experience for The Last Drop, will be hosting a tasting on Friday, April 11. In addition to previewing the latest releases, expect to sip Buffalo Trace whiskeys you'll likely never get anywhere else. Tickets to the exclusive event are still available at $350 per person.

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