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Fiona Bruce’s Scottish roots and why she feels at home in the north east

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Fiona Bruce’s Scottish roots and why she feels at home in the north east

Fiona Bruce is one of the most well-kept faces on the TV. But perhaps less well known is her close connections to her Scottish roots. The BBC Antiques Roadshow host can trace her family back to a small fishing village, Hopeman, in the north east of Scotland and she’s previously told the BBC that she’s always ‘felt Scottish’ as a result.

As well as fronting a host of primetime shows including Crimewatch, News at Ten and Question Time, Fiona, 64, is also a popular motivational and after dinner speaker, and the star can speak three languages – including Italian and French.




We’ve taken a look at the interesting life off screen of Fiona Bruce, and at her Scottish heritage…

Family in north east

Fiona’s dad John comes from a fishing family in the north east but moved to Singapore, when it was still a Malaysian state, in the 60s, with her mum Rosemary, where daughter Fiona was born in 1964, as well as her two brothers.

John had started out as a postboy before moving his way up to being a boss at Unilever, so the family enjoyed a comfortable life in south east Asia. But Fiona has previously said she remembers feeling a “strange sense of belonging” when she returned to her father’s home village for her grandfather’s funeral – with everyone in the family looking like her dad, with dark hair and blue eyes.

She told the BBC she has always “felt Scottish” as a result, which led to a more thorough delve into the past when she took part in Who Do You Think You Are in 2009.

Who Do You Think You Are?

Fiona felt compelled to investigate her heritage more and so signed up to find out more. As part of WDYTYA, Fiona headed to Hopeman, on the Moray Firth, to do some digging with programme experts. As well as finding out about her great grandfather John Bruce, a trawler skipper, died during minesweeping duty during the First World War, she looked into the life of her great gran, Isabella, who then had to raise eight children alone.

Fiona Bruce in Who Do You Think You Are? (Pic:BBC)

But it was the life of her great great great grandfather, George Bruce, that proved most memorable for viewers, after Poor Relief records showed he’d died in the poor house in 1875, as a ‘drunken creature’ suffering from malnutrition.

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