Robert McLellanOBE (1907–1985) was a Scottish Renaissance dramatist, writer and poet and a leading figure in the twentieth century movement to recover Scotland’s distinctive theatrical traditions. He found popular success with plays and stories written in his native Scots tongue and is regarded, alongside William Lorimer, as one of the most important modern exponents of fine prose in the language.[1]
McLellan today in literature is probably best remembered for the historical comedies, Jamie the Saxt and The Flouers o Edinburgh, and for his short story cycle, Linmill Stories, but his stage-writing career was a long and experimental one spanning over thirty years of crucial development for Scottish theatrical self-expression. In his later career he also wrote for radio and television. He was awarded a Civil List Pension in 1968 for "services to literature in Scotland" and received the Order of the British Empire in 1978.
Early career
Robert McLellan began life as a dramatist in the early 1930s. Much of his early work was first produced by the short-lived Curtain Theatre in Glasgow,[2] a dynamic and ambitious subscription company founded in 1933 and based in the university district of the city.
This early period was a prolific and experimental one for the playwright. Throughout the decade he was effectively Curtain's "house dramatist", trying out various genres and modes in both Scots and English for performance before a dedicated and vocal "studio" audience. Some of these early works in short form, such as Jeddart Justice and The Changeling, were also picked up by other non-professional companies around the country and entered in the annual Scottish Community Drama Association competitions of the era.
McLellan's first notable success came in 1936 with Curtain's production of his full-length three-act comedy, Toom Byres, set among the Border reivers in the early days of the reign of James VI. This was quickly followed in 1937 by Jamie the Saxt, set in the same period but this time in an urban milieu, its action taking place in and around the court in Edinburgh and featuring the king himself in his prime. This latter production, with the young Duncan Macrae famously creating a sensation in the title role, is generally regarded as the one which confirmed McLellan's reputation as a comic dramatist of substance in Scots.
McLellan is known to have been briefly resident in England as a screenwriter at some point around this time, but for whatever reason he soon came back to Scotland, marrying in 1938 and settling on the Isle of Arran. He continued to work with Curtain in mind, but his last production with the company, Portrait of an Artist, this time written in English with a contemporary setting, met with less critical acclaim. For his next works, The Smuggler and The Bogle, both set in the eighteenth century, the playwright made a return to historical Scots comedy.
In the event, The Bogle (later renamed Torwatletie), would wait until 1946 for its debut production. By the time McLellan had completed the play, early in 1940, Curtain theatre was no more, having broken up after the declaration of war in 1939. The war years would entail a significant interruption in McLellan's developing career as a playwright.
War years
By now a first-time father, McLellan enlisted with the Royal Artillery in 1940. He served for the next five years as an anti-aircraft gunner in defence around the British Isles (outwith Scotland) and on the Faroe Islands. Having set drama aside, he turned instead to poetry and short story, modes of writing which he found more conducive within the context of military life. It was also during his years in the services, in circa 1943, while stationed on the Faroes, that he met the poet Hans Djurhuus. McLellan as a writer in Scots later publicly acknowledged the inspiration he derived from his meetings with Djurhuus, a writer engaged in a parallel effort to forge new literary use for his own native Faroese.
But during this time, the playwright had never lost sight of his principal career. As soon as hostilities ended in May 1945, while still in uniform but freed of his duties, McLellan straightway composed the verse dramaThe Carlin Moth during the fortnight after VE Day, by his own account, in the 'hot attic' of a mansion near Southwold on the Suffolk coast where his unit was stationed at the time. By combining the poetry with his drama, this resumption of his stage work had also added a new mode to his writing.
Post-war years
After demobilisation in 1946, McLellan returned to Arran. During his absence, the war years had seen developments in the Scottish theatre scene, such as the formation of Unity Players in 1941, and James Bridie's founding of Glasgow Citizens in 1943, so McLellan perhaps returned with better hopes for a more professionalised institutional culture for new Scottish work. In any event, he hit the ground running. That same year, the newly composed Carlin Moth was produced on radio; the debut production of Torwatletie, completed five years previously but kept on ice until his return from the war, was mounted by Unity (subsequently taken in 1947 to the first "Edinburgh Fringe", then on to London’s Embassy Theatre in 1948); and McLellan himself was already embarked on composing his next major play, The Flouers o Edinburgh. He also by this time had The Cailleach, a short Scots play with a more sombre tone, under his belt.
McLellan conceived Flouers o Edinburgh first and foremost as a professional vehicle for Bridie's recently founded Citizens, but in the later 1940s the two men began to have differences. McLellan refused permission to tour Jamie the Saxt to London after Bridie insisted on license to make re-writes. Then, in 1948, Bridie's Citizens rejected Flouers. Although Unity once again mounted the debut production, they did not achieve the same success as with Torwatletie, and perhaps it was the radio production in 1951, a few months after Bridie's death, in which the play was finally "discovered". Either way, despite the initial resistance from Citizens, Flouers o Edinburgh went on to become one of McLellan's most popular and frequently revived works.
1950s
Citizens did finally mount two McLellan debuts: the historical study, Mary Stewart, in 1950, and The Road to the Isles, a contemporary satire of land activism in the Highlands, in 1954. These new plays did not win the same popular success as previous plays, but McLellan's established works continued to be a popular staple among the country's thriving amateur drama clubs and associations in the years before television. With Scotland's more formal theatrical institutions of the 1950s, on the other hand, McLellan became increasingly frustrated - a frustration he publicly expressed - seeing them as often resistant to, and misapprending of, Scottish theatrical values, especially around the matter of language.[3]
In the course of the decade McLellan increasingly turned instead to broadcast radio, establishing a good working relationship with the Scottish Home Service producer James Crampsie. Crampsie was more in tune with McLellan's needs and aspirations. As well as mounting radio adaptations of his work, he commissioned new writing, including works for broadcast around Burns night, and three substantial series of dramatisations of episodes from Scottish history for schools broadcasts.
One of the next highlights of McLellan's career was the broadcast of his award-winning verse drama for radio in 1957, Sweet Largie Bay, with its beautiful and elegaic evocation of generational change and decline in island life. At the close of the decade, Rab Mossgiel, commissioned by Crampsie to mark the Burns bicentenary in 1959, was the first of the playwright's works to be broadcast on Scottish television.
1960s and after
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (February 2021)
Legacy
McLellan's play The Carlin Moth was produced by Theatre Alba under the direction of Charles Nowosielski on the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August 1990.[4][5][6]
Biography
Robert McLellan was born in 1907 at the home of his maternal grandparents in Linmill, a fruit farm close to Kirkfieldbank in the prosperous fruit-growing Clyde Valley region of Lanarkshire. His father was John McLellan, a printer by trade, who circa 1912 founded, and thereafter ran, the Allander Press in Milngavie, still at that time a detached township to the north of Glasgow. Although the young McLellan grew up in Milngavie, he generally spent his summer holidays the Lanarkshire farm of his grandparents, and it was those times in the immediate pre-First World War period, which later became the inspiration for his Linmill Stories.
After attending Bearsden Academy in Glasgow, McLellan entered the University of Glasgow as an undergraduate in moral philosophy in 1925. He did not complete his degree, possibly abandoning his studies after the death of his mother from tuberculosis in 1928.
McLellan met his future wife, Kathleen Heys from Grindleton, Lancashire, sometime before 1933 while rambling in the Lake District. They married in 1938, settling in Arran where they lived modestly on McLelllan's income as a playwright, latterly supplemented in the post-war years by the produce of his beekeeping and Kathleen’s hand crafts.
McLellan died suddenly at home in High Corrie on the day before his 78th birthday in January 1985. He is buried on Arran.
List of works by Robert McLellan
Stage plays
Dates of first productions:
1934 - Jeddart Justice, A Border Comedy in One Act (Curtain Theatre, Glasgow)
1934 - Tarfessock, A Tragedy in Three Acts, set in the Kilsyth Hills; a play which McLellan subsequently rejected (Curtain Theatre, Glasgow)
1934 - Flight of Graidhne, A Celtic Folk-tale in One Act, drama set in 3rd century Ireland at Tara (first production details not traced)
1935 - The Changeling, A Border Comedy in One Act (Clydebank Little Theatre)
1935 - Cian and Ethlin, A Play in Five Scenes, a 'Druid allegory' (Curtain Theatre, Glasgow)
1936 - Toom Byres, A Comedy of the Scottish Borders, McLellan's first successful full-length play (Curtain Theatre, Glasgow)
1937 - Jamie the Saxt, or English Siller, A Historical Comedy in Four Acts (Curtain Theatre, Glasgow; with Duncan Macrae in the title role)
1939 - Portrait of an Artist, contemporary drama of bohemian life set in Glasgow (Curtain Theatre, Glasgow)
1939 - The Smuggler, A Folk Play in One Act, set on Arran (Whiting Bay Drama Club)
1946 - Torwatletie, or The Apothecary, A Comedy in Three Acts, originally completed in 1940 under the title The Bogle; set on the Scottish Solway Coast (Unity Players at the Queen's Theatre, Glasgow, with Roddy McMillan in the title role; subsequently taken to the first 'Edinburgh Fringe' in 1947, and to London's Embassy Theatre in 1948)
c.1946 - The Cailleach, A Tragedy in One Act, set on Arran under the Cromwellian occupation (first production details uncertain)
1950 - Mary Stewart, A Historical Drama in Five Acts (Citizens Theatre, Glasgow; Lennox Milne in the title role)
1950 - An Tàcharan translation of The Changeling into Gaelic (pamphlet)
1950 - A’ Chailleach, translation of The Cailleach into Gaelic (pamphlet)
1954 - The Road to the Isles, A Modern Comedy in Three Acts, set in the contemporary Scottish Highlands (Citizens Theatre, Glasgow; cast included actors Roddy McMillan and Fulton Mackay)
1972 - A Pageant of Dumbarton, (community production mounted in Dumbarton, adapted from commission completed by McLellan in 1970)
Work on Radio
1944 - Perrie Becomes Captain, short story (BBC Home Service)
1946 - The Carlin Moth, An Island Fairy Tale in Four Scenes, verse drama originally conceived for the stage but first produced on radio (Scottish Home Service)
1951 - first radio adaptation of The Flouers o Edinburgh (Scottish Home Service)
1954 - As Ithers See Us, documentary drama about James Currie, first biographer of Robert Burns (Scottish Home Service, produced by James Crampsey)
1954 - This is My Country, first of a number of series of historical dramatisations which McLellan wrote for schools radio over the next ten years (Scottish Home Service)
1956 - Sweet Largie Bay, A Dramatic Poem, verse drama for radio, awarded the 1956 Arts Council of Great Britain Award for Poetry (Scottish Home Service)
1959 - Rab Mossgiel, A Play in Three Acts, biographical drama commissioned by the BBC for the Burns bicentenary (Scottish Home Service)
1960 - first series of Linmill Stories, narrated by James Gibson, recording broadcast on radio (Scottish Home Service)[7]
1962 - Balloon Tytler biographical radio drama in Scots about Scottish polymath James Tytler (Scottish Home Service, produced by James Crampsey)
1964 - Waverley Gallery, series of stories from Scott dramatised for radio (Scottish Home Service)
1965 - The Old Byre at Clashmore, set in the Scottish Highlands (Scottish Home Service, produced by Stewart Conn)
Work on Television
1959 - television adaptation of Rab Mossgiel, the palay first broadcast on radio earlier that year (BBC TV)
1965 - television adaptation of Young Auchinleck, the play first produced at the 1962 Edinburgh International Festival (BBC TV)
1965 - Arran Burn, A Poem for Television, read by Iain Cuthbertson, (BBC TV)
1978 - The Daftie, film version by Micheal Alexander of a story from the Linmill cycle (BBC TV)
1979 - The Donegals, film version by Micheal Alexander of a story from the Linmill cycle (BBC TV)
Non fiction
1958 - The Case for a Real Scots Theatre, in Saltire Review No. 16, Autumn 1958
1960 - Review of Sydney Goodsir Smith's play, The Wallace, in Saltire Review No. 22, Autumn 1960
1970 - The Isle of Arran, full-length historical and geographical survey of the Isle of Arran
1977 - The Ancient Monuments of Arran, HMSO guide book
Unproduced work
1959 - Kirstan and the Vikar, A Parable in Scots, drama in Scots set on a fictional island under German occupation in World War II (completed in stage and radio versions)
1960 - Kilellan, series of completed television sit-com episodes set on Arran (offered to the new STV company in Glasgow but never produced)
1964 - A Cure for the Colonel, episode for Dr Finlay’s Casebook (completed but not produced)
1965 - Mum and Sally, short drama written for television
1967 - Progress to Extinction, drafts for a television documentary on island depopulation
1970 - My Dear Dear Sister, long draft play about William and Dorothy Wordsworth
Posthumous collections
Although individual plays and stories were regularly published throughout McLellan's lifetime, collected editions of his works only appeared posthumously:
2014 - Playing Scotland’s Story: Collected Dramatic Works, McLellan's principal plays
Reviews
Ross, Raymond J. (1983), Directed Irony, which includes a review of Collected Plays, in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), Cencrastus No. 11, New Year 1983, pp. 45 7 46, ISSN0264-0856
^McLellan, Robert, "The Case for a Real Scots Theatre", in Reid, Alexander (ed.), Saltire Review Vol. 5, No. 16, Autumn 1958, The Saltire Society, Edinburgh, pp. 26 - 31
22.1-mile-long (35.6 km) tributary of the Delaware River For the stream in Iowa, see Old Mans Creek. Bridge on US 130 over Oldmans Creek near Penns Grove Oldmans Creek is a 22.1-mile-long (35.6 km)[1] tributary of the Delaware River in southwestern New Jersey in the United States.[2] Oldmans Creek defines part of the western boundary between Gloucester and Salem counties. It starts just southwest of Glassboro, approximately one mile from the head of Raccoon Creek. It fini...
Una buba o bubón (del griego βουβών, tumor en la ingle) es la inflamación de un nódulo linfático. Se produce en infecciones como la peste bubónica, la gonorrea, la tuberculosis, el chancro o la sífilis. Su aspecto es similar a una enorme ampolla, y suele aparecer en las axilas, las ingles o el cuello. Bubas en la pierna causadas por la peste bubónica.Según los registros históricos, las bubas eran características de la pandemia responsable de la peste negra y quizás de otras p...
Yusuf VSultan GranadaBerkuasaPeriode 1445–1446 M dan 1462-1463PendahuluMuhammad IXPenerusMuhammad XInformasi pribadiKematian1463AlhambraDinastiNashriAgamaIslam Yusuf V dari Granada adalah Sultan Granada dua periode pada tahun 1445 hingga 1446 dan pada tahun 1462 hingga 1463.[1] Referensi ^ https://onlinecoin.club/Info/Persons/Sultan_Yusuf_V_of_Granada/ diakses 20 Agustus 2020 Sumber Islamic Spain 1250 to 1500 by Leonard Patrick Harvey; University of Chicago Press, 1992 lbsSultan Gra...
Slovenian footballer and manager Tomaž Kavčič Personal informationFull name Tomaž KavčičDate of birth (1953-11-28) 28 November 1953 (age 70)Place of birth Novo Mesto, SFR YugoslaviaHeight 1.74 m (5 ft 9 in)Position(s) MidfielderSenior career*Years Team Apps (Gls)1990–1992 Gorica 31 (1)1992–1993 Svoboda 14 (1)Managerial career1997–1998 Črnuče Factor1998–1999 Svoboda2001–2002 Bela Krajina2002–2003 Grosuplje2003 Ljubljana2003–2004 Brinje2004–2005 Bela ...
1924 film The Martyr SexDirected byDuke WorneWritten byLeete Renick Brown Jefferson MoffittProduced byPhil GoldstoneStarringWilliam Fairbanks Dorothy Revier William DyerCinematographyRoland PriceProductioncompanyPhil Goldstone ProductionsRelease dateApril 8, 1924Running time50 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguagesSilent English intertitles The Martyr Sex is a 1924 American silent drama film directed by Duke Worne and starring William Fairbanks, Dorothy Revier and William Dyer.[1] this ...
Christian eschatological view This article is about Premillennialism in Christian eschatology. For other uses, see Millenarianism. Christian eschatology Contrasting beliefs Historicism Interpretations of Revelation Futurism Dispensationalism Preterism Idealism The Millennium Amillennialism Postmillennialism Premillennialism Prewrath rapture Post-tribulation rapture Dispensationalism Biblical texts Daniel Seventy Weeks Synoptic Gospels Olivet Discourse Mark 13 Matthew 24 Sheep and Goats Paulin...
American basketball player and coach (1934–2019) For the whistling stage performer, see Joe Belmont (bird impressionist). Belmont with Duke, 1953–54 Joseph Elliott Belmont (July 12, 1934 – January 6, 2019) was an American basketball player and coach.[1] He played college basketball at Duke University, and was selected in the 1956 NBA Draft by the Philadelphia Warriors. He never played in the NBA, however. He had a long playing career with the Denver-Chicago Truckers of the Natio...
1987 Indian filmMupperum DeviyarPosterDirected byK. ShankarScreenplay byK. ShankarStory byK. P. ArivanandhamProduced byM. Sarojini DeviStarringK. R. VijayaLakshmiSujathaPrabhuAmbikaCinematographyM. C. SekarEdited byK. ShankarV. DevanMusic byM. S. ViswanathanProductioncompanyAmmu CreationsRelease date 12 November 1987 (1987-11-12) Running time136 minutesCountryIndiaLanguageTamil Mupperum Deviyar is a 1987 Indian Tamil-language film, directed by K. Shankar and produced by M. Saro...
One of the Ashtavinayak temples of the Hindu deity Ganesha Chintamani TempleThe shikara of the templeReligionAffiliationHinduismDistrictPune DistrictDeityGanesha as ChintamaniFestivalsGanesh Chaturthi, Ganesh JayantiLocationLocationTheurStateMaharashtraCountryIndiaLocation within MaharashtraGeographic coordinates18°31′25.67″N 74°2′46.62″E / 18.5237972°N 74.0462833°E / 18.5237972; 74.0462833ArchitectureTypeMandir architecture The Chintamani Temple of Theur i...
KUK redirects here. For other uses, see Kuk (disambiguation). AirportKasigluk AirportAerial photo showing runway prior to expansionIATA: KUKICAO: PFKAFAA LID: Z09SummaryAirport typePublicOwnerState of Alaska DOT&PF - Central RegionServesKasigluk, AlaskaElevation AMSL40 ft / 12 mCoordinates60°52′24″N 162°31′28″W / 60.87333°N 162.52444°W / 60.87333; -162.52444MapKUKLocation of airport in AlaskaRunways Direction Length Surface ft m 17/35 3,0...
American band Jelly Jam redirects here. The term may also refer to Jelly Jamm. The Jelly JamBackground informationOriginUSGenresProgressive rock, jazz fusionYears active2002–presentLabelsInsideOut, Molken, MascotMembers Rod Morgenstein Ty Tabor John Myung Websitethejellyjam.com The Jelly Jam is an American progressive rock trio supergroup, consisting of King's X member Ty Tabor on guitar and vocals, Winger and Dixie Dregs member Rod Morgenstein on drums, and Dream Theater member John Myung ...
Der Walk of Fame auf dem Museumsvorplatz Die Hall of Fame des deutschen Fußballs ist die 2018 gegründete Ruhmeshalle des deutschen Fußballs. Sie wurde vom Deutschen Fußballmuseum initiiert, angeregt von Manuel Neukirchner, dem Direktor des Deutschen Fußballmuseums. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Wahl der Gründungself 2 Jurymitglieder 3 Liste der aufgenommenen Spieler 4 Liste der aufgenommenen Spielerinnen 5 Liste der aufgenommenen Trainer 6 Liste der aufgenommenen Trainerinnen 7 Weblinks 8 Einzel...
Trogonidae Trogon viridisTaxonomíaReino: AnimaliaFilo: ChordataClase: AvesOrden: TrogoniformesAOU, 1886Familia: TrogonidaeLesson, 1828Géneros Apaloderma - África Euptilotis - Neotropical Harpactes - Asia Pharomachrus - Neotropical Priotelus - Neotropical Trogon - Neotropical [editar datos en Wikidata] Los trogónidos (Trogonidae) son la única familia del orden de los Trogoniformes. Engloba a seis géneros: Apaloderma, Pharomachrus (quetzales), Euptilotis, Priotelus, Trogo...
Government agency of Vietnam This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (September 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources. Find sources: Vietnam News Agency – news · newspapers...
Radio station3SPHBroadcast areaShepparton, VictoriaFrequency100.1 MHz FMBrandingVision Australia RadioProgrammingFormatRadio reading serviceAffiliationsRadio Print Handicapped NetworkOwnershipOwnerVision AustraliaTechnical informationClassCommunityTransmitter coordinates36°21′45″S 145°41′46″E / 36.3625°S 145.6961°E / -36.3625; 145.6961LinksWebsitewww.visionaustralia.org.au/radio 3SPH is a radio station based in Shepparton, Victoria. It is part of the Vision...
Catholic diocese in France Diocese of Rodez (–Vabres)Dioecesis Ruthenensis (–Vabrensis)Diocèse de Rodez (–Vabres)Rodez CathedralLocationCountryFranceEcclesiastical provinceToulouseMetropolitanArchdiocese of ToulouseStatisticsArea8,743 km2 (3,376 sq mi)Population- Total- Catholics(as of 2014)279,400 (est.)271,400 (est.) (97.1%)Parishes36InformationDenominationCatholic ChurchSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished5th century (As Diocese of Rode...
Cabeçalho do site do Programa Discovery (janeiro de 2016)[1] Representações das missões Lucy e Psyche Regolito de asteroide Eros, conforme visto pela missão NEAR Shoemaker da Discovery Programa Discovery (do inglês Discovery & New Frontiers Programs ou simplesmente Discovery Program), é uma série de missões de exploração do Sistema Solar financiadas pela Administração Nacional de Aeronáutica e Espaço dos Estados Unidos (NASA) por meio de seu Escritório do Programa de Miss�...
ZeusZeus memegang petir. Zeus de Smirna, ditemukan di Smirna pada tahun 1680[1]Raja para dewa Dewa langit dan petiSimbolPetir, Elang, dan Pohon EkPasanganHera, MetisOrang tuaKronus dan ReaSaudaraPoseidon, Hades, Demeter, Hestia, HeraAnakAres, Athena, Apollo, Artemis, Afrodit, Dionisos, Hebe, Hermes, Herakles, Helene, Hefaistos, Perseus, Minos, MousaiPadanan dalam mitologi RomawiJupiterPadanan dalam mitologi HinduDyaus PitaPadanan dalam mitologi EtruskaTinialbs Zeus (/zjuːs/;[2...