Coronation Street

Coronation Street’s Simon Gregson calls fans ‘weird’ and avoids autographs to protect his cars

The Coronation Street legend, who has played Steve McDonald for 35 years, said he would often drive past the soap's set and refuse to give autographs to fans

Coronation Street legend Simon Gregson hates giving autographs to the soap’s “weird” fans.

The actor, who has played Steve McDonald for 35 years, admits he usually drives past admirers gathered outside the show’s set, fearing they will scratch his precious car’s paint. Simon says: “I’m massively into my cars… they’re my thing and I don’t want people with bags and metal things all crowding round it and scratching the hell out of it. So I’m, like, ‘No!'”

The 49-year-old is one of the country’s most recognisable TV stars, having appeared in more than 3,600 episodes of the ITV soap. But he has struggled with the attention fame brings, and even admits being repulsed by superfans. Simon says: “There’d be people on the gate all the time asking for photographs and sometimes asking for a kiss, which was horrible. There was a certain elderly lady who always had biscuits round her mouth and she would go, ‘Give us a kiss!’ It was, yeah… weird days. You never get used to it.”

Speaking about stardom, the actor who reportedly earns £150,000 a year says: “I don’t understand why anyone would want to be famous. It is the downside of the job. I was on holiday with my mates and somebody literally grabbed hold of me and dragged me across the street.”

“I didn’t know what was going on and [they] held me while they took a photograph then they walked off. People would do that. They’d drag you from one end of the pub to the other ‘Look who I’ve got!’ Very, very weird.”

You never get used to fame, Simon says
Simon Gregson says you never get used to fame (Image: Mcpix Ltd/REX/Shutterstock)

And he said that fans will often interrupt him when he’s out with his wife Emma, 40, who runs their award-winning tea room, and their three sons. “People think you’re public property,” he says. “They think they’ve got the God-given right to come and sit at your table while you’re sitting there with your family, having a meal.”

“I’ve always been kind of very good with everybody. There’s been a couple of occasions where I’ve said no when I’m with my kids and they are so put out by it and so annoyed by it that it’s a lot easier just to say yes! They go, ‘I can see you’re on holiday with your children’. I’m, like, ‘But you’re gonna come over anyway!'”

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