Rebus: Rankin's gritty Scottish detective to make stage debut

Author has worked with playwright Rona Munro for complex cop’s stage bow

Rebus, the abrasive, hard-drinking and brilliant Edinburgh detective created by Ian Rankin, is to be the star of a new stage play.

The author has collaborated with the playwright Rona Munro for a new crime story to be solved by the dour detective, the protagonist of 24 books that have sold more than 30m copies across the world.

Rebus has twice been portrayed on television, by John Hannah and Ken Stott. This week producers will announce that he is now heading to the stage.

Rankin said he had long wanted to put Rebus in theatres and had talked to various producers and directors over the years. When Munro’s name was floated he was delighted. “When she said yes I thought: let’s give it a go,” Rankin said.

He follows many crime writers, notably Agatha Christie, who have had their work dramatised for the stage. Often it is an adaptation of a book, but in this case Rankin and Munro have worked together on a new and distinct story.

“It is always a challenge for a novelist because a novelist gets to play God,” said Rankin. “Nobody else gets a say in what I’m doing or how I’m doing it.

“As soon as it becomes a collaborative process there’s got to be some give and take, but one of the great things about writing this was that when we got together it was always exciting, we were always coming up with ideas, finding solutions to problems.”

The play has been written to fit in with the timeline of the novels’ universe, featuring a retired Rebus consulting on cold cases.

“His health is catching up with him,” said Rankin. “He’s no longer able to get into fights or chase suspects in the way he could 20 years ago, but we all go through that. I think readers like that, fans of the books like that as they are getting older and creakier so is Rebus.”

Rankin said the play was a whodunnit that would require the audience to work. “At the same time we were focused on it as a character study; a study of this complex man towards the end of his working life, wondering if he still makes a difference or not.”

Munro, a prolific playwright, is also known by sci-fi fans as the writer of the last of the “classic” Doctor Who stories – the 1989 serial Survival in which Sylvester McCoy battles The Master on a planet of cheetah people.

Munro said she was a Rankin fan whose mother always asked, in conversations about her writing, whether she had read the latest Rebus. “I was always under the shadow of a greater writer and it’s testament to his writing that I don’t hate his guts,” she said.

She said adapting Rebus had been “daunting and exhilarating”. The character was a brilliant example of a certain type of Scottishness, she said – a man far more aware of his flaws than those around him.

Rebus: Long Shadows will premiere at the Birmingham Repertory theatre in September, directed by the Rep’s artistic director, Roxana Silbert. It is expected to tour the UK afterwards, including Rebus’s Edinburgh stomping ground.

The actor Charles Lawson, best known as Jim McDonald in Coronation Street, will play Rebus. Rankin said: “I don’t really know what Rebus looks like because I’m looking at the world through his eyes.

“When people say ‘is this actor a close fit for Rebus?’, I go: ‘I’ve no idea, I really don’t.’”

The 25th Rebus mystery will be published in October. But now the detective has retired from the police force, the lingering question is: how much longer can Rankin keep him going? “I don’t know, I just always think … maybe there’s one more?” he said.

Contributor

Mark Brown Arts correspondent

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Rebus: Long Shadows review – Ian Rankin's sleuth fails to arrest
Charles Lawson is on fine form as a retired John Rebus but the novelist’s Edinburgh underworld is missing

Michael Billington

26, Sep, 2018 @12:08 PM

Article image
Ian Rankin's Rebus to make another comeback
Will the dogged cop ever get a chance to enjoy his retirement?

Guardian staff

28, Jan, 2015 @5:00 PM

Article image
Ian Rankin to complete William McIlvanney’s final novel The Dark Remains
Due out next year, the novel will see the Rebus creator fill out notes for another Laidlaw mystery left by the revered Scottish crime writer on his death in 2015

Alison Flood

05, Dec, 2020 @6:01 AM

Article image
Life after Rebus: Ian Rankin turns his hand to the comic strip

Best-selling crime writer pens murder story with a twist for CLiNT magazine

Mark Brown, arts correspondent

27, Feb, 2011 @2:47 PM

Article image
Edinburgh festival fringe sets stage for summer of online shows
Organisers prepare for ‘weird’ visitor-free season including weekly variety performance

Mark Brown Arts correspondent

13, Jul, 2020 @12:49 PM

Article image
Edinburgh's August festivals cancelled due to coronavirus
Fringe joins international, book and art festivals and military tattoo in pulling plug

Mark Brown and Severin Carrell

01, Apr, 2020 @12:11 PM

Article image
Rebus at 30: Edinburgh celebrates
RebusFest, featuring Ian Rankin, is taking place all over the city, dedicated to ‘the many facets of the irascible old rogue’, DI John Rebus

Katy Guest

30, Jun, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
Rebus: Long Shadows review – Rankin’s dour detective takes to the stage
The now-retired inspector returns in a new story by Ian Rankin and playwright Rona Munro

Clare Brennan

30, Sep, 2018 @7:00 AM

Article image
Top 10 Scottish crime novels
Scottish novelists from William McIlvanney to Ian Rankin and Denise Mina deliver all the gut-punch thrills of crime without forgetting its human cost

Craig Robertson

27, May, 2020 @10:00 AM

Article image
Edinburgh festival slashes ticket prices to increase youth participation
International festival director Nicola Benedetti says new manifesto is designed to make event more open and affordable

Severin Carrell Scotland editor

07, Mar, 2024 @12:00 PM