Ryan Gosling
- Actor
Press clippings
Explain yourself: Adam Riches
Born in Cambridge and raised in Glasgow and London, Adam Riches specialises in exaggerated, eccentric characters, both fictional (his alpha-male survival expert Victor Legit) and drawn from real life (a rough-hewn Sean Bean; a silent, needy Ryan Gosling).
Anna Conrad, The Times, 20th August 2014I can't believe I'm the last person to be turned on to Burnistoun's pawky, plooky wit, to move around the workplace shouting "For real!", to instruct the kids that when you find yourself dissatisfied with your surroundings, the only reasonable response is "Up the road!" It didn't grab me at the start and I gave up - too soon, because new sketch shows often seem more miss than hit until they get under your skin, and in its third season Burnistoun has got under mine like scabies. Third and last, alas. The "Save Burnistoun" campaign - which I'm prepared to downgrade to the "Gie's a Christmas special at least" initiative in exchange for a month's supply of macaroon bars because, yes, I can be bought - starts here.
My criteria for a winning comedy are: a) Does it make me laugh? b) Are there good-looking burds in it? c) Does it allow me to come over all pretentious about sub-text, deeper meaning and Scottish identity? The answers are yes, yes and yes. Burnistoun seems to be saying that Scotland, formerly a land of inventors, may be stuck in the hoose these days but it continues to embrace the new. Who is Jolly Boy John, home-broadcasting on his laptop in Speedos to techno, if not the son of Jolly Boy John Logie Baird? As Scott, shell-suited mate of the equally sports-casual Peter, puts it: "Even yer maw's life-streamin' noo."
Not all change is good. The "Up the road!" boys loathe trendy ambience when they're out for a drink or a meal. Hairy McClowdry, host of Kiltie Time, incorporates Kanye West and Ryan Gosling into his heedrum-hodrum rhymes but that's deemed acceptable, whereas it's not okay for history presenters to stride around moors, all lustrous of barnet (Neil Oliver, I think they mean you). If there's schizophrenia at work on Burnistoun, well, isn't that the national condition? One thing we can all agree on, I'm sure, is that it's plain wrong for local talent to swan off to Hollywood and come back talking about how great it is to be "Skaddish" (Lulu, Sheena Easton and Gerard Butler, stop it now). If the show's creators, Iain Connell and Robert Florence, ever get to Hollywood - and I'd love to see Burnistoun: The Movie - it's a pretty safe bet they won't make the same mistake.
Aidan Smith, The Scotsman, 22nd September 2012Video: Kristin Scott Thomas: 'I am good at being mean'
Actress Kristin Scott Thomas has admitted she is good at playing "mean and fierce" roles, after starring as a demanding Patricia Maxwell in Salmon Fishing in the Yemen.
"It doesn't make you feel very good being mean and fierce, it is much nicer playing people who are kind and sweet," she told BBC Breakfast.
The actress also revealed she has just returned from shooting a new film with Ryan Gosling in Thailand.
BBC News, 18th April 2012