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Departures of Note

Departure of Note

Alexander Morton

Portrait of Alexander Morton
Plate · source unattributed

Alexander Morton (1945–2026) was a Scottish actor best known for his role as the ghillie Golly Mackenzie in the BBC series Monarch of the Glen.

3 Reports

Particulars

Born in Glasgow on 24 March 1945, Alexander Morton trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London before embarking on a prolific acting career across television, film, and stage. He quickly became a familiar face in Scottish drama, appearing in series such as Taggart, Second Sight, and Casualty.\n\nMorton achieved his greatest public recognition as Golly Mackenzie, the affable ghillie in the BBC's Monarch of the Glen, a role he inhabited in all 64 episodes from 2000 to 2005. Earlier, he was remembered for his long‑running portrayal of the villainous Andy Semple in the soap Take the High Road and later as Billy Kennedy in River City, returning for the show's 20th‑anniversary episode in 2022.\n\nBeyond screen work, Morton was a founding member of the Raindog Theatre Company and performed leading roles with companies such as 7:84 and Borderline, appearing at venues like the Traverse and the Royal Court. He also contributed to radio dramas, notably as the first voice of Detective Inspector John Rebus, and lent his voice to video games including Heavenly Sword and The Witcher series.\n\nMorton was married three times and fathered four children. He died in April 2026 at the age of 81, leaving a legacy of versatile performances that spanned four decades of Scottish entertainment.

Compiled from source reports and Wikipedia. Automated record.

Sources Cited

  1. Alexander Morton — WikipediaWikipediaReference
  2. Monarch of the Glen actor Alexander Morton dies aged 81bbc-entertainment

The Register is compiled continuously from public dispatches. Times indicate when each report first reached the Register, not the moment of departure. The Registrar makes no claim of completeness or of accuracy; particulars are drawn from early and unconfirmed reports, and may later prove mistaken.