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Douglas Sannachan (born 1962 in Glasgow) is a Scottish actor most widely known for playing Billy the window cleaner in ''Gregory's Girl''.〔Oxley, K. (1998) Film sparked success for Scots stars,''Daily Record,'' Glasgow, 2/6/98.〕 His famous line was "If I don't see you through the week, I'll see you through a window". He grew up in the Calton area of Glasgow and was a pupil at John Street Secondary School, Glasgow. When he was 16 years old he was the subject of a chapter of a book called ''The Year of the Child'' 〔Mooney, B. (1979) ''The Year of the Child'', Hutchinson and Co, London〕 by Bel Mooney. Sannachan was a member of the Glasgow Youth Theatre and is a friend of John Gordon Sinclair and Robert Buchanan. He appeared in other films directed by Bill Forsyth such as ''That Sinking Feeling'' 〔Simo (1979) That Sinking Feeling, ''Variety,'' New York, 19/9/79.〕〔Elley, D. (1993) ''Variety Movie Guide,'' Hamlyn, London.〕 in which he played Simmy, and as well as playing Willy, was also the voice of the ice cream van, in ''Comfort and Joy''. He also played Gerry in ''Submarine Escape'', Edward in the Cold War drama ''Winter Flight'' and Tam in ''Living Apart Together''. On television, Douglas was in the children's programme ''Waiting for Elvis'' which was part of ''Dramarama (TV series)'' written by Alex Norton. The episode featured Fergie (played by Sannachan), a young singer, trying to impress Elvis Presley during his short stop at Prestwick Airport in 1960 on his only confirmed visit to the UK. He played Billy a paramedic, in ''Life Support'' (BBC1), Jim in ''Strathblair'' (BBC1), Sneck in ''End of the Line'' (BBC1) and a murderer Jimmy, in ''Taggart - Murder in Season'' 〔McManus, M. and Chandler, G. (1989) ''Taggart's Glasgow,'' p40 and p149, Lennard Publishing, Oxford.〕 on STV when Mark McManus played the title role. He played a pantomime dame in the Simply Red video for the track ''Jericho'' from the album ''Picture Book''. He has continued to act on stage and screen and played the owner of a sauna in ''Rebus - Resurrection Men''. He has also appeared on stage in productions such as ''The Jesuit'' in Edinburgh, ''The Lyons of Lisbon'' Glasgow, ''A Family Affair'' Edinburgh, ''Rents'' 〔Coveney, M. (1984) Rents/Lyric, Hammersmith, ''Financial Times'', London, 8/2/84.〕 London and ''The Lemmings are Coming'', London. He has made over thirty appearances at the Pavilion Theatre, Glasgow, including ''Peter Pan'', ''Cinderella'', ''The Wizard of Never Woz'' 〔Simpson, J. (2008) Dorothy role a dream come true for actress, ''Evening Times,'' Glasgow, 25/10/08.〕 ''Please Stay'', ''The Bigot'' 〔Hickey, B. (1996) Curtain up on a firm favourite, ''Evening Times,'' Glasgow, 11/9//96.〕 and ''Paras Over the Baras''.〔Segal, L. (1997) Just hanging about, ''Evening Times'', Glasgow, 14/2/97.〕 He has also recorded his voice for radio ''The Bell and the Tree'' (Radio Clyde), ''Choke the Gaffer'' (Radio Scotland) and ''Short Plays for Radio'' (Radio 4) and recorded voiceovers for adverts and a website (Placeconnect.com)(link ). Currently he is directing an independent film "Starcache" (Link ). The film is based on the worldwide hobby of Geocaching, but rather than people finding caches hidden in the woods, they are more likely to be killed in unusual and gruesome ways. This has led Sannachan to coin the phrase "Slasher Cacher" to describe the genre. The film should be completed in late 2014. ==Personal life== He is currently married with two children and is living in East Kilbride. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Douglas Sannachan」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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