
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
One of the greatest of the Scottish clans is the Clan Gregor. We are all familiar with its most famous son, Rob "Roy" MacGregor, immortalised in legend and played by Liam Neeson on film. And the clan boasts other renowned sons. There was John McGregor, a piper who fought and died alongside Davy Crockett and Jim Bowie at the Alamo: another John, this time MacGregor, who introduced canoeing to Great Britain: there was the folk singer and TV star, Jimmy MacGregor. And, since where there is fame there is usually notoriety, there is Ian MacGregor, the former boss of British Coal, who helped Margaret Thatcher crush the miners in the mid-Eighties.
But surely the name Gregor rose to its highest peak of fame as young Ewan McGregor, Scotland's biggest movie star since Sean Connery, climbed inexorably through the Hollywood ranks. He crooned with and pined for Nicole Kidman in the award-winning Moulin Rouge. He fought alongside Josh Hartnett and Tom Sizemore in Ridley Scott's super-contemporary military action epic Black Hawk Down. And then he was the young Obi-Wan Kenobi in the Star Wars prequel trilogy that began with The Phantom Menace, amongst the most successful films of all time. Add to this the controversy surrounding Trainspotting and the many furores caused by Ewan's continual onscreen nudity, and you have a very famous actor, indeed.
Ewan Gordon McGregor was born on the 31st of March, 1971, in Crieff, Perthshire, out in the sticks a few miles north of Edinburgh. His parents - James Charles Stuart McGregor and Carole Diane Lawson - were both teachers, ensuring that Ewan and his older brother Colin (now an RAF pilot) were given a liberal and rounded education. James was furthermore director of the Crieff Highland Games, an event held annually since 1870 and Ewan would come to help him, actually being awarded the title of Chieftain of the Games in 2001. He would remain very close to his parents, Carole still acting as his official spokesperson, as well as dealing with his personal appearances and fan mail.
Ewan was an active child. He enjoyed swimming and sub-aqua diving, and learned the drums, guitar and French Horn. Riding was a big hobby, and he'd eventually get a job at the stables of Crieff Hydro. At school, he did very little acting, but he did perform as soloist for both the choir and orchestra, and recite poetry at school revues. Singing was always in Ewan's repertoire. At parties, he'd entertain his friends and family with impersonations of Elvis Presley, doing Hound Dog or Don't Be Cruel, and he's utilised his musical abilities often in his movies, singing in both Velvet Goldmine and Moulin Rouge and playing brass in Brassed Off.
Though Ewan became a big fan of James Stewart, the prime influence on his career choice was far closer to home. This came in the shape of his uncle, Denis Lawson, himself an actor of some renown. Denis had appeared in the series Rock Follies, would star as Kit Curran in the Kit Curran Radio Show and more recently in Bob Martin. More importantly - and coincidentally, as Ewan's career panned out - he starred alongside Burt Lancaster in Bill Forsyth's Local Hero and as fighter pilot Wedge Antilles in the first three episodes of Star Wars. Seeing Denis in Star Wars had a mighty effect. Ewan thought he was the coolest. "He had long hair," recalls Ewan, "beads and a furry waistcoat. I aspired to be as different as him".
Ewan had studied from primary school age at Morrison's Academy, where his father was careers advisor and PE teacher (mum taught Special Needs kids in Dundee), and Colin was Head Boy from 1987-88. Colin was a superb student, a golden boy, and his influence on Ewan was profound. When Colin left the school, Ewan, then 16, went off the rails, becoming depressed and getting into trouble. Later, he would recall how, after half a term, when his mother was driving him through a rainy night, she told him that if he was unhappy there he could leave. His life suddenly opened up before him, he could do his own thing and would no longer have to suffer the frustration of being unable to match his brother's achievements. Colin had excelled at all the right things - cricket, rugby and academics - while Ewan lent towards music and the arts (typical waster studies). Also inspired by his uncle and at last embracing his own "difference", he decided to act and, while spending a year studying at the Fife College Of Further And Higher Education at Kirkcaldy, he worked as a stage hand at the Perth Repertory Theatre, learning his craft. Then came the big move. Though he'd take the bus up to Edinburgh at every opportunity, Ewan spent the next three years (1989-92) in London, studying at the Guildhall School Of Music And Drama.
Success was near immediate. Ewan left Guildhall to step straight into a lead role in the TV series Lipstick On Your Collar.

























