KEEPING alive the spirit of adventure in live entertainment is Calum

Kennedy. A veteran of many a tour of the Highlands and Islands. So

precarious were the physical rigours of the road, his troupes became

known as Calum's Commandos. Frequently a case of all hands to the pumps,

shoulders to the wagons, as these intrepid players got through. Then it

was on with the show.

''We have had so many good laughs, it has been worth putting up with

the hardships just for these,'' he says.

This former Mod gold medallist from Stornoway on the Island of Lewis

can charm the birds off the trees -- which is why he has never needed a

press gang to enlist new recruits for difficult journeys. Or should that

be campaigns? Some of the adventures have been quite life-threatening,

and the funny side of them been retrospective. Like the time in Glencoe

when Calum and a Pakistani magician called Ben Ali were trapped in huge

snow drifts.

Jimmy Logan had been trying to contact him to appear in a BBC New Year

television show. But no one could find him. Then came one of those

miracles that can only happen with Calum.

There was an AA box in Glencoe, barely visible in the blizzard. Stuck

up to the axles, Calum had been wondering what to do and saying to Ben

Ali: ''You're the bloody magician -- get us out of here!'' When through

the muffling white drifts he heard the phone ring in the AA box. He had

a key to the box, and, with a lot of effort, got it open and picked up

the persistent phone. ''I'm looking for a fellow called Calum Kennedy,''

said the voice of a newspaper reporter in Glasgow. ''Have you seen

him?'' ''No, I haven't. I'm him,'' said Calum. ''You don't understand,

I'm looking for Calum Kennedy.'' ''Speaking,'' said Calum with due

patience.

''He sounded as though he was nearly falling off his chair in

Glasgow,'' says Calum. ''Just couldn't believe it. He was still talking

about it years later.'' All Calum had in the way of sustenance for that

journey were two sandwiches and a bottle of Drambuie. ''It so happened

that they were bacon sandwiches and because of his religion, Ben Ali,

who is no longer with us, was forbidden to eat them. But eventually he

cracked. And he drank most of the Drambuie.''

Now Calum is back in business, staging a show at the Glasgow Royal

Concert Hall in aid of several charities, including the Stars

Organisation for Spastics, tonight. And topping the bill will be three

great troupers who have all undergone triple heart by-pass surgery --

himself, Jimmy Logan and Jack Milroy. Also on the bill, ''Auntie'' Mary

Lee, the Glasgow Gaelic Choir, 18 world champion Irish dancers, and the

Skye Pipe Band.

And at the Ayr Gaiety Theatre on May 12, 13 and 14 he will be staging

a good old-fashioned variety show. Jimmy Logan will again be a co-star.

On the bill will be the Jimmy Cosker Band, comedian Ben Gunn, singer

Stewart Macrae, plus Calum's wife Christine, a gold medal winner at the

English-language equivalent of the Mods.

In the business Calum has always managed to overcome the difficulties.

A bonnie fichter indeed.