THE HOT 100

BRAVE FACES Niki Boyle looks back at Disney-Pixar’s Brave, one of the defining Scottish cultural events of the year

Just casting a glance over

our Hot 100, you can see how

pervasive Brave’s influence is. Kelly Macdonald (#3) and Billy

Connolly (#51) took leading roles as Highland princess Merida and

her father King Fergus; Gaelic-

language singer Julie Fowlis (#81) performed two songs on

the soundtrack; and the film had

its UK premiere at the newly- revived Edinburgh International

Film Festival a welcome

choice from the festival’s artistic

director, Chris Fujiwara (#15). In order to hold back from

entirely reformatting our list as the Brave 100, there were

a few names that didn’t quite

make it, but who did no less an

admirable job. Actors Robbie Coltrane, Craig Ferguson and

Kevin McKidd brought some

perfectly-executed comic relief

in the shape of three clan- leading noblemen (McKidd

performed two roles as both

Lord MacGuffin and his Doric- spouting heir), and composer

79 EVE MUTSO BALLERINA WITH

CHARACTER

In April, Mutso took on the role of a lifetime, playing the delicate and damaged Blanche DuBois in Scottish

Ballet’s adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire. The production, and Mutso in particular, was a i ve-star triumph. (KA)

78 ANN LOUISE ROSS STAR TURN

Ross gave a heartbreaking performance as Mill Lavarello in James Brining’s haunting revival

of Zinnie Harris’ Further Than the Furthest Thing, winning the CATS Best Female Performance award in the process. Ross went on to play Caliban in Dundee Rep’s The Tempest and was a poignant Angeline Sauve in the Lyceum/NTS revival of The Guid Sisters. (AR)

77 DOMINIC HILL PUTTING ON THE CITZ

I

K C R D L O G C M N N O M A E

: O T O H P

In his i rst season as Citizens Theatre boss, artistic director Hill delivered an ambitious programme of classics that included a consummate production of Harold Pinter’s Betrayal, which won him the Best Director award at this year’s CATS, and a triumphant King Lear with veteran David Hayman in the lead. (AR)

Patrick Doyle created the score for the film, following high-profile

76 THE ETHICAL SHELLFISH COMPANY

soundtracks for Thor and Rise of SUSTAINABLE SUBMARINER

the Planet of the Apes.

The main star, of course, was Scotland itself. Scottish

locations, including the Calanais

Standing Stones on the Isle of Lewis, Urquhart Castle on Loch

Ness and Kildrummy Castle in Aberdeenshire were visited by

the Pixar production team in

preparation for the film, and their

influence can be felt strongly

throughout. Scotland’s own oral folk tale traditions also played a

large part: Brave is Pixar’s first fairy tale, a major divergence

from their typically contemporary

fare.

The film is by no means

flawless our lead film critic Hannah McGill gave it three

stars in her review back in June but it’s impossible to deny the

cultural impact Brave has made.

(Niki Boyle)

14 THE LIST 13 Dec 2012–24 Jan 2013

Scallop diver Guy Grieve harvests some of Scotland’s i nest shelli sh from the chilly waters of the Sound of

Mull and, having seen the underwater evidence i rst-hand, campaigns passionately and persuasively about the devastation of the marine environment by scallop and prawn dredging. (DR)

75 FOLK SIMPLY UNDERSTATED

CLOTHING

Steadily growing their reputation for over a decade, London menswear label Folk took exciting steps this year. Following a Scottish Fashion Awards nomination in 2011, the brand founded by Cumbernauld’s Cathal McAteer added womenswear,

celebrity clients and new standalone stores and stockists to the mix. (CS)

74 EWAN MORRISON ANALYSING SOCIETY

The restless Mr Morrison had two very different books out in 2012. First up was Tales from the Mall, an incisive look at the inexorable rise of the shopping precinct while his latest novel was Close Your Eyes, a stark tale of family and society. (BD)

73 NUMBERS NOT BY NUMBERS NIGHT

Their label action slowed this year, with only one EP from Lory D and a re-release of Unspecii ed

Enemies’ Multi Ordinal Tracking Unit, but the bleeding edge Glasgow squad’s role as promoters and (particularly in Jackmaster’s case) DJs stepped up several gears at parties across Europe and America. (DP)

72 LUCKYME EVER-FORTUNATE

DANCEFLOOR FILLERS

As well as hosting parties in Glasgow, London, Edinburgh and at Sonar in Barcelona, this excellent Scots label stepped up their releases courtesy of

EPs from artists including S-Type, Machinedrum, Cid Rim and Baauer, as well as the TNGHT (Hudson Mohawke and Lunice) co-release with Warp. (DP)

71 FENCE RECORDS FIFE FOLK COLLECTIVE

Anstruther-by-way- of-Eigg label and concert collective Fence Records were busy this year, as Eye o’ the Dug in St Andrews replaced their Homegame event, Eigg’s Away Game returned and they took over the Aberfeldy Festival for a day. Plus there were releases from Rozi Plain, Randolph’s Leap and Fence overlords Pictish Trail and King Creosote. (DP)

70 CRAIG COULTHARD PITCH PERFECT

As contributions to this year’s Cultural Olympiad go, Coulthard’s Forest Pitch was one of the most high-concept. The artist created a full- sized football pitch in the middle of a Scottish Borders forest and staged a tournament featuring players who are either recent British citizens or who have been given ‘leave to remain’ in Scotland. (AR)