DiCaprio will not meet Scotttish godfather during Edinburgh visit

Leonardo DiCaprio's unlikely godfather, eccentric Highland campaigner Robbie the Pict, has revealed that the film star has not been in touch, despite coming to Edinburgh this week.
Actor Leonardo DiCaprio
Picture: Getty ImagesActor Leonardo DiCaprio
Picture: Getty Images
Actor Leonardo DiCaprio Picture: Getty Images

Robbie, the self-styled leader of the Pictish Free State, has disclosed that despite DiCaprio making his first visit to Scotland, he has not contacted him and the pair have no plans to meet.

Following in the footsteps of George Clooney last year, DiCaprio will visit Edinburgh to support homeless charity sandwich shop Social Bite this Thursday.

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Robbie, formerly known as Brian Robertson, has said he will not be meeting his godson.

Robbie the Pict (Brian Robertson) at the Skye BridgeRobbie the Pict (Brian Robertson) at the Skye Bridge
Robbie the Pict (Brian Robertson) at the Skye Bridge

He said: “I’ve not had any contact. I’ve not heard from him. He’s got plenty going on in his life without a godfather his father created.”

The self-styled leader of the Pictish Free State micronation, has secretly been shouldering the role of spiritual guardian to the performer since his birth in Los Angeles in 1974.

The bearded Highlander, who lives in Broadford on the Isle of Skye, is said to have struck up a friendship with the star’s father George, a comic book writer, when he worked for a publisher in California in the 1970s.

“He used to tell me about his Italian family in New York and I would regale him with tales of Picts and Scots,” he said.

Robbie the Pict (Brian Robertson) at the Skye BridgeRobbie the Pict (Brian Robertson) at the Skye Bridge
Robbie the Pict (Brian Robertson) at the Skye Bridge

“We got on well. We had a similar sense of humour.” It was around the same time the 68-year-old Scotsman legally changed his name from Brian Robertson.

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When baby Leonardo was born, he says he was “humbled and honoured” to be chosen as his godfather. “I was very flattered when George suggested it,” he said. “It’s obviously a moment of humility when someone says , ‘Would you be my son’s godfather?’ “I felt humbled and honoured.” He added: “Much as George was proud of his Italian connections, he thought it would be an interesting break from that tradition to have a Scottish godfather.”

A supporter of Scottish independence, the former student of Aberdeen University founded the mini state of Pictland in 1977 on an acre of land gifted to him on the Misty Isle. He hasn’t seen his godson, who is now 42, for the past four decades but says he keeps tabs on his progress.

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He added: “I’m always keeping an eye on Leo and what he’s announcing publicly, what he wins and what he campaigns for.”

But perhaps some of his Scottish mentor’s character has rubbed off on the Titanic and Catch Me If You Can star, a dedicated environmentalist who has received praise from campaign groups for his activism.

Father George DiCaprio has confirmed the Scot is his son’s godfather. “Robbie used to come down here to Los Angeles and spend time with me, Leo and the family,” he said.

“He is a very colourful character.”

The Picts were tribal peoples who lived in what is today eastern and northern Scotland during the late Iron Age and early medieval periods. Many historians believe they were ‘painted people’, who may have decorated and tattooed their faces and bodies with dyes.

Robbie the Pict set up the micronation in 1977 as a means of promoting awareness of the Pictish culture. He was also a leading figure in the ultimately successful campaign to abolish tolls on the Skye Bridge, arguing that the legal paperwork was incomplete and so the levy was illegal.

The toll was abolished in 2004 after the government bought the bridge from its private owners.

Robbie the Pict also appealed to Prince Charles to help overturn the criminal convictions of those who had been prosecuted for refusing to pay the toll. The move failed.