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| *Big supporter: Sean Connery with fellow Scot, Andy Murray. Photo: Getty Images
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Some of Scotland's best-loved exports, after its famed whisky, will
help kick off the Commonwealth Games on Wednesday, the beginning of a
two-week party in Glasgow.
Singer Susan Boyle has already been announced as a star of
Wednesday's opening ceremony, while veteran mod icon Rod Stewart will
perform in a homecoming of sorts.
Boyle has sold 19 million albums since her breakthrough
performance on a television talent show in 2009, when she left judges
speechless with a rendition of 'I Dreamed a Dream' from the musical Les
Miserables.
The singer, who hails from Blackburn, 25 miles (40 kilometers) to the
east of Glasgow, has since sung for the pope and Queen Elizabeth II,
but was tight-lipped about her performance at Celtic Park, home of
European football giants Celtic.
"Watch this space, is all I'm willing to say," said "SuBo", 53, adding it was "a great honour" to be asked to perform.
Stewart, who was brought up in London but has a Scottish
father, is an avid Celtic supporter and is a regular visitor to the
historic 60,000 capacity stadium.
The 100-million-record-selling star, whose hits include "Young
Turks", "Sailing" and "Maggie May", namechecks the club in song "You're
in my Heart" and was spotted blubbing uncontrollably in the stands after
their epic 2012 Champions League victory over Barcelona.
Games chief executive David Grevemberg said the 69-year-old
Stewart's appearance would take the "excitement and anticipation to a
whole new level".
Other confirmed performers include indie singer Amy Macdonald and classical violinist Nicola Benedetti.
Despite being from Edinburgh, Sean Connery, arguably the most
famous living Scotsman, threw his weight behind the Games from the
beginning.
Recognised by many as the definitive James Bond, the
83-year-old was an official Games ambassador who helped Glasgow win the
bid in 2007.
It is not known whether modern Scottish acting stars such as
"X-Men"'s James McAvoy and "300" heartthrob Gerard Butler will be
involved in the ceremony.
Pushing 007 for the title of most distinctive Scotsman is
eccentric comedian and actor Billy Connolly, who in 2012 also became an
official Games ambassador.
The "Big Yin" also narrated the story of Clyde, the
part-human, part-thistle Games mascot named after the river on whose
banks Connolly was born and raised.
The river once welcomed Atlantic-faring ships ladened with
cotton, tobacco, sugar and rum and later became the centre of Glasgow's
mammoth ship-building industry, which spawned iconic liners the Queen
Mary and the QE2.
The city's grand city centre serves as a reminder of this
proud past, and many of those who helped build its reputation are
honoured with statues.
Those recognised include James Watt, the engineer whose
inventions were key to the industrial revolution, and adventurer David
Livingston, believed to be the first European to discover Victoria
Falls.
Those not lucky enough to be in the city can join the
estimated one billion people around the world expected to watch the
ceremony on their television sets, invented by John Logie Baird, a
Scotsman, in 1926.
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