Robbie Coltrane

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Robbie Coltrane

Robbie Coltrane as Dr. Eddie "Fitz" Fitzgerald
Birth name Anthony Robert McMillan
Born March 30, 1950 (age 57)
Flag of Scotland Rutherglen, South Lanarkshire, Scotland
Notable roles Fitz in Cracker
Rubeus Hagrid in the Harry Potter movies

Robbie Coltrane, OBE (born Anthony Robert McMillan on March 30, 1950) is a Scottish Television and Film actor.

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Coltrane was born in Rutherglen, South Lanarkshire to a doctor father. He is the great-grandson of Scottish businessman Thomas W. Howie. He was educated at Glenalmond College, in Perth and Kinross, Glasgow School of Art, and the Moray House College Of Education in Edinburgh.

Coltrane moved into acting in his early twenties, taking the stage name Coltrane (in tribute to jazz saxophonist John Coltrane) and working in theatre and stand-up comedy. Appearing in the 1981 BBC television comedy series A Kick Up the Eighties, his comic skills also brought him roles in the The Comic Strip Presents (1982) series and he was one of the stars of Laugh? I Nearly Paid My Licence Fee (1984).

Coltrane soon moved into films, obtaining roles in a number of movies such as Death Watch (1980), Scrubbers (1983), Krull (1983), Absolute Beginners (1986), Mona Lisa (1986) and appeared as "Annabelle" in The Fruit Machine (1988). On television, he also appeared in The Young Ones, Tutti Frutti (1987), as Samuel Johnson in Blackadder (1987) (a role he later reprised in the more serious Boswell and Johnson's Tour of the Western Islands (1993)), and in a number of stand-up and sketch comedy shows.

Coltrane as Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky in Goldeneye
Coltrane as Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky in Goldeneye

Coltrane co-starred with Eric Idle in Nuns on the Run (1990), and played the Pope in The Pope Must Die (1991). He also played a would-be private detective obsessed with Humphrey Bogart in the TV play The Bogie Man. His roles went from strength to strength in the 1990s with the TV series Cracker (1993-1996, 2006 one-off special) and a BAFTA award as the stepping stone to parts in bigger films such as the James Bond films GoldenEye (1995) and The World Is Not Enough (1999) and a major supporting role in From Hell (2001) as well as half-giant Rubeus Hagrid in the Harry Potter films (2001-present). J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series, has stated that she created the character of Hagrid based on Coltrane's likeness.

Coltrane lives in Stirlingshire. He is currently separated from his wife, with whom he fathered two children, Spencer and Alice.[citation needed] He collects vintage cars.

  • He was voted #10 in ITV's "TV's 50 Greatest Stars"
  • He was voted #6 in a poll of 2000 adults across the UK to find the 'most famous Scot', behind the Loch Ness Monster, Robert Burns, Sean Connery, Robert the Bruce and William Wallace

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