Johnny Beattie Death

Johnny Beattie Death | Obituary – Scottish Entertainment the true legend Johnny Beattie sadly passed away, Johnny Beattie contributed a lot to his community and he will be forever be remembered.

Beattie was born in Govan, Glasgow on 9 November 1926 into a working-class family. He grew up there with an older brother, Frank, and two younger sisters, Mary and Cathie. He attended St Gerard’s Roman Catholic Secondary School, but left school at sixteen to start an apprenticeship and became involved with amateur dramatics, and by the mid-1950s he had become a stand-up comedian.

Beattie starred in his own sketch show, Johnny Beattie’s Saturday Night Show, which featured him playing many different colorful characters, including his alter ego “Glaikit O’Toole”. The show ran on BBC One from January 1964 to February 1970. In 1974, Beattie took part in STV’s four-part series A Grand Tour, along with Rikki Fulton, Jack Milroy, Billy Connolly, Mark McManus and Stanley Baxter, in which the six performers went on a grand tour of Scotland and took part in useless tasks. Beattie recalled his most renowned moment on the show as when he was made to “Take a long drop off a short pier”, in which each of the participants had to compete.

Beattie went on to appear on Rikki Fulton’s sketch show Scotch & Wry, at one point appearing as his alter ego Glaikit O’Toole, who encounters Fulton’s character Supercop in one of the sketches. While on the set of Scotch & Wry, he met actor Gregor Fisher, with whom he went on to appear in the 1990s sitcom Rab C. Nesbitt. In 1990, Beattie starred in The Big Man alongside Billy Connolly and Liam Neeson. He also appeared in popular Scottish television shows including Taggart, and he was also the original host of the Scottish Television gameshow Now You See It for three years between 1981-84.

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