Rikki Fulton
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Robert Kerr "Rikki" Fulton<ref>As per birth and death, recorded on ScotlandsPeople</ref> Template:Post-nominals (15 April 1924 – 27 January 2004) was a Scottish comedian and actor best remembered for writing and performing in the long-running BBC Scotland sketch show, Scotch and Wry.<ref name="bbcnewsfeb04">Template:Cite news</ref> He was also known for his appearances as one half of the double act, Francie and Josie, alongside Jack Milroy.<ref name="bbcnewsfeb04" />
Early lifeEdit
The youngest of three brothers,<ref name="telegraphjan04">Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore</ref> Robert Kerr Fulton was born into a non-theatrical family at 46 Appin Road,<ref name="dennistoun">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Dennistoun, Glasgow.<ref name="bbcnewsjan04">Template:Cite news</ref> Fulton's mother, who was 40 at the time of his birth, developed severe postnatal depression. Due to this, Fulton grew up a "solitary child" and developed a "voracious reading habit" throughout his childhood.<ref name="telegraphjan04" /> His father was a master locksmith who changed trades, purchasing a newsagent and stationery shop at 28 Roebank Street, Dennistoun.<ref name="dennistoun" /> At the age of three, Fulton and his family moved to Riddrie, another district of Glasgow.<ref name="telegraphjan04" /> There he attended the local primary school but later returned to Dennistoun for his secondary education at Whitehill Secondary School.<ref name="dennistoun" />
Fulton completed his education in 1939 and decided to start in the acting profession after a backstage visit at the Glasgow Pavilion Theatre.<ref name="dennistoun" /> In 1941, aged 17, Fulton joined the Royal Navy. The following year he was posted to HMS Ibis, but that November the ship was sunk in the Bay of Algiers. Fulton spent five hours in the water before being rescued.<ref name="telegraphjan04" /> He later joined the Coastal Forces for D-Day, travelling back and forth between Gosport and Arromanches with vital supplies. In 1945, four years after signing up, Fulton was invalided out of the Navy due to blackouts,<ref name="telegraphjan04" /> leaving with the rank of sub-lieutenant.<ref name="thetimes">Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore</ref>
CareerEdit
Fulton began his professional acting career as a straight actor, mostly appearing in repertory theatre and BBC Radio, including The Gowrie Conspiracy in 1947. He also maintained a secondary job in the stationery business with his brothers. When the bank pulled money from their enterprise, however, Fulton gave his full attention to his acting career.
In the early 1950s, Fulton moved to London and became the compère of The Show Band Show,<ref name="independentobit">Template:Cite news</ref> working alongside the likes of singer Frank Sinatra.<ref name="thetimes" /> After a short period, Fulton returned to Scotland to perform for Howard & Wyndham Ltd in pantomime from 1956 at the Alhambra Theatre, Glasgow with Jimmy Logan and Kenneth McKellar followed by the "Five Past Eight" summer revues with Stanley Baxter and Fay Lenore.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 1957 he appeared, with Tommy Steele, as the Dame in the pantomime Goldilocks and the Three Bears at the Royal Court Theatre, Liverpool. <ref> Liverpool Echo, 20 December 1957</ref> His 1958 pantomime appearance was in Sinbad The Sailor at the Alhambra Theatre, Glasgow<ref>The Sunday Mail 16 November 1958</ref> In 1959 he appeared again in Sinbad The Sailor, with Reg Varney at the King's Theatre, Edinburgh.<ref>Dalkeith Advertiser 17 December 1959</ref>
In 1960, he headlined in the new Scottish pantomime "A Wish for Jamie," with Kenneth McKellar, Fay Lenore and Reg Varney, which premiered at the Alhambra Theatre Glasgow, and in its sequel "A Love for Jamie," which ran for three consecutive winters.<ref>"Alhambra Glasgow" by Graeme Smith Template:ISBN</ref><ref>The Scotsman 2 December 1960</ref> He starred in pantomime and Five Past Eight in Edinburgh and Aberdeen. While working at the King's Theatre, Edinburgh, Fulton met comedian Jack Milroy. Together they created a stage double act named "Francie and Josie", two Teddy Boys from Glasgow.<ref name="thetimes" /> In one of his first forays into television, Fulton brought the act to television in 1962's Scottish Television series, The Adventures of Francie and Josie.<ref name="telegraphjan04" /> The series established both Fulton and Milroy as household names in Scotland. In 1970 and 1989, they were jointly named Scotland's "Light Entertainers of the Year".<ref name="thetimes" /><ref name="independentobit" /> In 1977, Fulton produced "The Scotched Earth Show" with Gordon Menzies for the BBC. Menzies later produced Fulton's most popular sketch series, Scotch and Wry.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Fulton continued to perform regularly in pantomime and in straight theatre, mostly notably with the Royal Lyceum Company in Edinburgh and the Scottish Theatre Company based in Glasgow. However, it was the comedy sketch show, Scotch and Wry, that became a Hogmanay institution.<ref name="bbcnewsjan04" /> The series featured one of Fulton's most remembered characters, the Reverend I.M. Jolly,<ref name="bbcnewsjan04" /> a dour, depressed minister prone to inappropriate television conversations.<ref name="telegraphjan04" /> The series began in 1978 and continued for 15 years, and was shown only once throughout the United Kingdom in 1983.<ref name="independentobit" /> Fulton was named Scottish Television Personality of the Year in 1963 and 1979.<ref name="telegraphjan04" />
In 1981, Fulton played Oliphant in the Scottish Theatre Company's production of Robert Kemp's play, Let Wives Tak Tent.<ref>Stevenson, Randall (1981). Scottish Theatre Company: First Days, First Nights, in Murray, Glen (ed.), Cencrastus No. 7, Winter 1981 - 82, pp. 10 - 13.</ref> In 1982, he made an appearance in the film Gorky Park, where he played a KGB officer. Director Michael Apted chose Fulton for the role because "he [Apted] had never seen such cruel eyes".<ref name="telegraphjan04" /> He also performed in Bill Forsyth's Local Hero and Comfort and Joy. In 1985, under the pseudonym "Rabaith",<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Fulton, along with Denise Coffey, adapted the French playwright Molière's, Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme as A Wee Touch o' Class. He performed in the lead role at that year's Edinburgh Fringe; the Festival re-booked it for the following year and it went on tour throughout Scotland.
Fulton made several guest appearances in other BBC Scotland programmes. Alongside his Scotch and Wry co-stars Gregor Fisher and Tony Roper, Fulton made two appearances in Rab C. Nesbitt; once in 1988 and 10 years later in 1998. In 1992, Fulton was awarded the Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) and a year later the Lifetime Achievement award from BAFTA Scotland.<ref name="bbcnewsjan04" /> In 1994, he again appeared alongside Fisher as Dan McPhail, The Vital Spark's engineer, in The Tales of Para Handy.<ref name="independentobit" /> In 1996, after 36 years of performing as Francie and Josie, Fulton and Milroy appeared in their "Final Farewell" at the King's Theatre, Glasgow. Milroy later died in 2001, aged 85 years.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Fulton's last full performance on television came on New Year's Eve 1999 with the comedy special It's a Jolly Life and his final Last Call monologue as the Reverend I.M. Jolly.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> After saying his final goodbye to television, Fulton wrote and published his autobiography, Is It That Time Already? (1999).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1994, Fulton was awarded an honorary Doctor of Arts from Abertay University, Dundee,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> in 1995 an honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of Strathclyde and in 2000 another honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of St Andrews.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Personal lifeEdit
Fulton was first married to actress Ethel Scott, who appeared with him on The Rikki Fulton Show in 1960 and 1961.<ref name="independentobit" /> While separated from their respective partners, Fulton met Audrey Matheson Craig-Brown (known as Kate Matheson), an actress 13 years his junior.<ref name="sundayheraldoct04">Template:Cite news</ref> Matheson saw Fulton perform in a production of Noël Coward's Hay Fever,<ref name="sundayheraldoct04" /> but it would be 17 years before they met in person. After one day together, Fulton proposed and they married in 1969. In 1976, Matheson became pregnant but later lost the baby.<ref name="sundayheraldoct04" />
In 1998, Fulton began to display symptoms of Alzheimer's disease. In 2001, his wife recalled that "he [Fulton] returned home and devastatingly informed her, "I can't remember my lines any more". In 2002, after being diagnosed with the disease, Fulton remained at his own home and fronted that year's Alzheimer Scotland Christmas appeal.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He grew to depend on Kate more and more until, eventually, it was decided he move into the Quayside nursing home.<ref name="sundayheraldoct04" /> In 2003, after breaking his hip in a fall, he was admitted to the Western Infirmary and then to Gartnavel Royal Hospital for assessment.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> After contracting the "superbug" MRSA and returning to Quayside, Fulton died peacefully on 27 January 2004, aged 79 years.<ref name="bbcnewsjan04" />
Fulton's death sparked numerous dedications in his memory. The then-BBC Scotland Controller, John McCormick, said "he [Fulton] was a legend for people across the whole country."<ref name="bbcnewsjan04" />
Fulton's funeral took place six days after his death. In tribute to his Scotch and Wry character Supercop (a police traffic officer), police motorcyclists escorted the funeral cortège as it made its way to Clydebank Crematorium.<ref name="bbcnewsfeb04" /><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The Reverend Alastair Symington, who was a close friend of Fulton, led the service, which featured tributes from Fulton's widow Kate Matheson and Tony Roper.<ref name="bbcnewsfeb04" /> Symington had previously collaborated with Fulton on the book, For God's Sake, Ask!.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Both Rikki and his wife were strong supporters of the Scottish SPCA, which received a financial donation following Fulton's funeral. A Scottish SPCA inspector represented the animal welfare organisation at the service.
Kate Matheson died in 2005 after completing a book about her relationship with Fulton, entitled Rikki & Me.<ref name="thestagemay05">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> For her funeral in Glasgow, Matheson requested no black ties should be worn because "we [she and Fulton] were together again".<ref name="thestagemay05" />
TheatreEdit
Year | Title | Role | Company | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1972 | Kidnapped | James More MacGregor, Duke of Argyll | Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh | Bill Bryden | adaptation by Keith Dewhurst |
1981 | Let Wives Tak Tent | Oliphant | Scottish Theatre Company | Ewan Hooper, David Thompson | play by Robert Kemp |
1988 | Iolanthe | Lord Chancellor | Scottish Opera, Theatre Royal, Glasgow | operetta by Gilbert & Sullivan |
FilmographyEdit
- Laxdale Hall (1953)
- "Dance party roof" (1957–58)
- The Rikki Fulton Show (1960)
- The Five past eight (1960's)
- The Adventures of Francie and Josie (1962–1965)
- The Grand Tour (1965)
- The Rikki Fulton Hour (1965)
- Rikki (1966)
- The Scotched Earth Show (1977)
- Scotch and Wry (1978)
- Out with the Old, in with the New (1978)
- The Miser (1978)
- Charles Endell Esquire (1979)
- Square Mile of Murder (1980)
- It Ain't Half Hot Mum (1980)
- Boswell for the Defence (1981)
- The Winter's Tale (1981)
- The Dollar Bottom (1981)
- The House on the Hill (1981)
- Bergerac (1983)
- Local Hero (1983)
- Gorky Park (1983)
- The Country Diary of an Edwardian LadyTemplate:Broken anchor (1984)
- Comfort and Joy (1984)
- The Girl in the Picture (1985)
- The Holy City (1986)
- Supergran (1986)
- Rab C. Nesbitt (1988, 1998)
- Tis' the Season to be Jolly (1993)
- Jolly, a Man for All Seasons (1994)
- The Tales of Para Handy (1994)
- Jolly: A Life (1995)
- It's a Jolly Life (1999)
Notable charactersEdit
Supercop a frequently dimwitted traffic cop who rides a motorbike, his trademark is how he removes his goggles (pings off and flies off camera), is often getting into more trouble than those he stops. Carries a small pocket sized notepad and pencil.
Rev. I.M. Jolly a very downtrodden and pessimistic minister of the Church of Scotland, presents a fictional show "Last Call" where he has a heart to heart with the audience where he tells them what he has been up to that week. His tone is always low-key and down beat.
Rev. David Goodchild a minister who offered a few thoughts on "Last Call" and has an unfortunate mix up between his water and neat gin. Rev. David Goodchild is often confused with Rev. I.M. Jolly, but they were two different people.
Dickie Dandruff owner of "The Fourways Café" also goes by the moniker "The Gallowgate Gourmet" and presents a cooking segment called "Dirty Dick's Delicat'messen" where he prepares food in comedic style from his filthy café kitchen in the Gallowgate area of Glasgow.
Josie is also another much loved character from his comedy show "Francie and Josie" with co-star Jack Milroy who played "Francie".
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- [https://www.imdb.com/{{#if: 0298504
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