There are certain faces that belong to Glasgow the way the Clyde belongs to the city — inseparable, irreplaceable, and liable to make you laugh even when the weather is doing its worst.
Gregor Fisher is one of those faces. And on 22nd and 23rd April 2026, he is bringing it — along with four decades of stories, characters, and comic genius — to The Pavilion Theatre for An Evening With Gregor Fisher, two nights that promise to be among the most entertaining Glasgow has seen in years.
A Career That Belongs to Scotland
To call Gregor Fisher "Rab C. Nesbitt" is both perfectly understandable and hopelessly incomplete. Yes, the string-vested, bandage-headed philosopher of Govan is the role that made Fisher a household name — and what a creation it was. From his first appearance on BBC Scotland's Naked Video in 1986 to the full series that ran from 1988 to 2014, Nesbitt became more than a sitcom character. He became a mirror held up to Glasgow itself: funny, furious, tender, and utterly unafraid of the truth.
But Fisher's range extends far beyond Mary Doll's living room. There was The Baldy Man, which earned its own ITV spin-off series. There was The Tales of Para Handy (1994), in which Fisher brought Neil Munro's beloved Highland skipper to gentle, irresistible life alongside Rikki Fulton. He appeared as Parsons in Michael Radford's film of Nineteen Eighty-Four, played Solanio opposite Al Pacino in The Merchant of Venice (2004), and took on Mr Bumble in the BBC's Oliver Twist with such relish that, by his own admission, people stopped recognising him as Nesbitt and started stopping him in the street for Bumble instead.
Then there is his scene-stealing turn as Joe, the long-suffering manager to Bill Nighy's magnificently washed-up rock star in Love Actually (2003) — a performance of deadpan loyalty and quiet exasperation that became one of the film's most endearing double acts. Most recently, Fisher has won fresh acclaim as Ken Pritchard in the BBC Scotland sitcom Only Child, now confirmed for a second series.
The Pavilion: The Perfect Stage
There is no venue in Scotland more fitting for this kind of show than The Pavilion Theatre. Standing proud on Renfield Street since 1904, the Pavilion is Glasgow's last surviving independent variety theatre — a place where the art of live performance has never gone out of fashion.
While other theatres have chased corporate bookings and West End transfers, the Pavilion has remained stubbornly, gloriously itself: a home for pantomime, comedy, and the kind of variety entertainment that built Scottish showbusiness. Its intimate auditorium has hosted everyone from Stanley Baxter to Billy Connolly, and its audience expects one thing above all else — a proper night out.
Gregor Fisher on the Pavilion stage is, in other words, a marriage made in theatrical heaven.
What to Expect
Billed as An Evening With Gregor Fisher, the show sees Fisher joined on stage by his long-time friend and collaborator Nigel West for a relaxed, laughter-filled conversation drawing on a career spanning five decades. Expect stories, expect surprises, and expect the kind of warmth and timing that only comes from a performer who has spent forty years perfecting his craft in front of audiences who don't suffer fools gladly.
Fisher himself has described it as sharing tales from "the daft and wonderful journey" of his career — from the creation of Rab C. Nesbitt to freezing nights on location in a string vest, from Christmas-movie magic to the wigs that deserved their own dressing room.
Tickets and Details
An Evening With Gregor Fisher plays at The Pavilion Theatre, 121 Renfield Street, Glasgow on Wednesday 22nd and Thursday 23rd April 2026 at 7.30pm. The show runs for approximately one hour and 50 minutes, including an interval. Age restriction: over-18s only.
Tickets start from £33.50 and are available through the Pavilion Theatre box office and via Trafalgar Tickets. Given the calibre of the performer and the intimacy of the venue, early booking is strongly advised.
The Glasgow dates are part of a wider Scottish and UK tour, with Scottish stops including Dunfermline, Edinburgh, Greenock, and Aberdeen. For a city that has given the world some of its finest comic talent, this is a homecoming worth celebrating. Don't miss it.



