Beta Help us improve: share your feedback on our new website.

Andrew Keir

Versatile character actor, especially known for his work with Hammer House of Horror.

Plaque Inscription

Andrew Keir
1926–1997
Actor on stage, screen and television, appeared in many Hammer Film productions
Lived here on the 2nd floor 1952–1960

Black and white portrait photo of a person dressed as a priest and pretending to give a sermon. They are standing in a pulpit, looking down at the camera with their right arm raised into a fist as if strongly talking about something.
Andrew Keir filming a scene from the Scottish TV series Adam Smith in Corstorphine Old Parish Church in Edinburgh, January 1972 - © The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor SCRAN.

Location

Flat 2/1, 151 Greenhead Street, Bridgeton

Category

Film, TV and stage

Year

2020

Andrew Keir was a highly versatile character actor whose 50-year career spanned stage, screen and television. He was especially known for his appearances in a string of Hammer Horror productions in the 1960s and ‘70s.

The son of a coal miner, Keir was born Andrew Buggy in Shotts, Lanarkshire, in 1926. At the age of fourteen he left school to work alongside his father in the mines. He discovered acting by accident when he was persuaded to replace an absent cast member in a play at the Miners’ Welfare Hall.

Enjoying the experience, Keir became a regular in the group until he was spotted in Inverness and invited to join Unity Theatre in Glasgow, then the Citizens' Theatre, where he remained for nine years. In 1952, Keir performed his first major screen role in ‘The Brave Don't Cry’, a film about a group of miners trapped underground.

Through the 1950s and 60s, while continuing to act on stage, Keir won increasingly prominent film roles, such as Agrippa in the 1963 Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor epic ‘Cleopatra’. He also appeared in numerous television programmes, including ‘The Avengers’, ‘The Saint’, and ‘Z Cars’.

Keir’s best-known role for Hammer was as Professor Bernard Quatermass in the 1967 film ‘Quatermass and the Pit’. He continued to appear on screen throughout the 1970s and 80s, in television series and films such as ‘The Thirty-Nine Steps’.

When Keir died 1997, his obituary in ‘The Times’ praised his “considerable range and undeniable distinction”.

Read more

Explore more plaques

View all

Madge Easton Anderson

Trail blazing lawyer and Scotland’s first female solicitor.

Groups of women at some kind of reception sit at tables decorated with flowers. There is a row of five women of varying ages in the rear of photo, along a straight table.

Alexander Bain

Inventor of the fax machine and electric clock.

Black and white portrait photograph of a person. They are wearing a suit with a bow tie, and they have a long, full beard.

Andrew Blain Baird

Blacksmith who attempted the first heavier-than-air powered flight in Scotland.

Old, sepia-toned portrait photograph of Andrew Baird. He is well dressed with dark hair and a large moustache.

John Logie Baird

Inventive engineer who was the first person to demonstrate a working television live.

Black and white photograph of a person seated behind a microphone and a bank of light bulbs. They are holding a ventriloquist's doll in each hand as if they are having a conversation.

Charles Glover Barkla

1917 Nobel Prize winner for Physics.

Black and white photograph of a person wearing a suit and tie seated at a table. They are looking into the camera and holding a large book in their hands, as if reading.

Sir Arnold Bax

Leading composer of 20th century symphonies.

Black and white photo of three people seated at a table inside a public house. All are drinking and smiling, as if sharing a joke, and the person in the centre is looking at the camera and holding a pipe.