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Beyond The Line Of Duty

The Scots Magazine

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August 2025

The Greenock-born actor is shaping the future of Scottish storytelling – on and off screen

- by PAUL ENGLISH

Beyond The Line Of Duty

ON the train line between Glasgow and Martin Compston’s hometown of Greenock sat a dilapidated convenience store – a ramshackle outpost on a sorry stretch of wasteland on what was once a row of tenements in Port Glasgow.

As he passed back and forth between the city and the lower Clyde, a career as an actor was no more on this schoolboy’s horizon as a flight to the moon.

But this solitary shop, clad in corrugated iron, gave rise to the sort of imaginative meandering common to the make-believe world in which the young Inverclyder would go on to earn his living.

“I’d see it from the train when I was going by,” said Compston, speaking to The Scots Magazine at the launch of his latest drama Fear. “It was called Gate of India. I wrote a story when I was at school about the back of that shop leading to Mumbai. It was a story about a guy dating a girl from Port Glasgow. He couldn’t understand how her mum made the best curries, with all the different » spices. She'd been going through the portal at the back of the Gate of India shop. I loved the idea of that.”

imageThe flight of fantasy about a long-abandoned unit in the Woodhall area of Port Glasgow was one of several sketches doodled by the young Compston, whose path in those days seemed set on football, as a youth squad member at Greenock Morton FC.

“I used to write stuff like that when I was at school. And I wrote one called ‘The Gospel According To Henrik’, about Jesus trying to get tickets to a Celtic game.”

The stories found their way into a drawer, soon forgotten about in the Compston household, and stayed there until the actor, best known as the star of BBC cop drama Line Of Duty, came across them years later.

image

The Scots Magazine'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

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