Elaine Constance Smith is a Scottish actress, comedian, and political activist. She has starred in the BBC Scotland sitcoms City Lights, Rab C. Nesbitt and Two Doors Down, for which she won a BAFTA Scotland award. Her stage credits include the original productions of The Steamie and I Dreamed a Dream. She has actively campaigned for Scottish independence.
In 1984, she made her TV debut on the BBC Scotland comedy Laugh??? I Nearly Paid My Licence Fee, however her first major television appearance came in 1986 as a star on the sketch showNaked Video. Made by BBC Scotland, it was shown throughout the UK on BBC Two. In between seasons of Naked Video, Smith also starred in the Scottish sitcom City Lights, which ran for four years on the BBC. Smith is best known for her role as Mary 'Mary Doll' Nesbitt in the BBC sitcom Rab C. Nesbitt, a series based on characters in a Naked Video sketch. Launched in 1990 and set in Glasgow, the show was a cult hit, and ran for nine years on BBC2. The show was revived for a Christmas special in 2008, two new series in 2010 and 2011, and a New Year special in 2014. Smith has appeared in the BBC dramas Two Thousand Acres of Sky and 55 Degrees North, performed alongside Helena Bonham Carter in the British filmWomen Talking Dirty, and toured Scotland with her stand-up comedy show. In 2010 she took part in an STV tribute to Scottish actor Gerard Kelly. In January 2011 she appeared on Celebrity Mastermind with singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell as her specialist subject. She finished second on the programme. Since 2015, Smith has presented a documentary-style show entitled Burdz Eye View, broadcast by STV, in which she tours Scotland with her comedy act and talks about Scottish life and culture. In 2015, Smith had a part in the third series of Kay Mellor's BBC drama The Syndicate. In 2016, she began starring in the BBC Scotland sitcom Two Doors Down. She won the BAFTA Scotland award for Actress Television in 2018 for her performance.
Theatre
For many years she was a regular in pantomime at the Kings' Theatre, Glasgow, starring alongside Gerard Kelly in performances such as Aladdin, Mother Goose and Sleeping Beauty. More recently, she has appeared in her own seasonal show, 12 Nights of Christmas at the Oran Mor, Glasgow. She has also toured Scotland in straight plays, notably with Andy Gray, in The Woman Who Cooked Her Husband, Two and The Rise and Fall of Little Voice. Other notable Scottish theatre roles include The Steamie, Guys and Dolls and Shirley Valentine. She has also performed in new works at the Tron Theatre, Glasgow and the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh. In September 2008 she began touring the UK in a stage version of the hit British film Calendar Girls, along with Lynda Bellingham, Patricia Hodge, Siân Phillips, Gaynor Faye and Brigit Forsyth. The show opened in London's West End at the Noël Coward Theatre in April 2009. The original cast left the show at the end of July 2009 but Smith returned in a different role as part of a national tour in 2010. From 2009 to 2016, Smith starred in Christmas pantomimes at His Majesty's Theatre, Aberdeen. In 2017 she returned to pantomimes at the King's Theatre, Glasgow. In 2012, she played Scottish singer Susan Boyle in the touring musical I Dreamed a Dream, based on Boyle's life and rise to fame. There were plans to tour the show in Australia in 2013 but these plans were cancelled. In 2016 Smith toured Scotland as Miss Hannigan in the musical Annie. In 2017 she toured Scotland in a musical version of Kay Mellor's Fat Friends.
Other work
Until 2009, Smith wrote a weekly column in the Sunday Mail newspaper. In May 2007, she declared her support for Scottish independence by aligning herself with the Scottish National Party. She had been a member of the Labour Party but left due to Labour's failure to publicly back the 1984–1985 miners' strike. In August 2007, she was appointed to the Scottish Broadcasting Commission established by the Scottish Government. In October 2007, she appeared in an episode of the Jennifer Saunders sitcom The Life and Times of Vivienne Vyle. She is a supporter of numerous charities, including Zero Tolerance and Relationships Scotland. She is the patron of the Women and Girl's Programme at Celtic FC. In late 2009, her autobiography, Nothing Like a Dame, was published.