Background
He was born in Aberdeen in 1940 into a Traveller family which had settled there.
He was born in Aberdeen in 1940 into a Traveller family which had settled there.
He was the keyworker for the Heritage Lottery-funded "Oral and Cultural Traditions of Scottish Travellers" project at the Elphinstone Institute, University of Aberdeen, from April 2002 until April 2005. Stanley"s storytelling was affected by the different trades at which he worked, including his long years spent filleting in the Aberdeen fish houses, where he gathered many contemporary stories. In June 2003, he represented the University of Aberdeen and Scotland at the Smithsonian Institution"s Folklife Festival in Washington, District of Columbia He published three successful plays and seven books, some written in his local Scots dialect.
He was featured in more than 100 radio programmes and 50 television appearances and made numerous personal appearances on stage and in theatres, schools and colleges.
On 27 November 2008, at age 68, Stanley Robertson, who was an Honorary Research Associate at the University of Aberdeen"s Elphinstone Institute, was conferred an honorary degree of Master of the University (MUniv), in recognition for the work he had done. He was a frequent broadcaster and appeared regularly at storytelling festivals.
Stanley died at his home in Aberdeen on Sunday, 2 August 2009. A musical about Robertson"s life by Kyle Jarrow and Bright Lights, Big City composer Paul Scott Goodman tentatively titled Reek Roon is currently under development, reportedly commissioned by Fela! producer Steve Hendel.
In 2016, in memory of Robertson"s significant influence as a storyteller, the Grampian Association of Storytellers commissioned the "Stanley Robertson Award for Traditional Storytelling" to be given out at the Aberdeen Traditional Music and Song Association"s yearly competitions.
As an acknowledged expert and member of the Traveller community, Robertson documented his own lore and that of other members of this group, and promoted the cultural traditions of Scottish Travellers among young people in schools and community groups.