The biggest arts festival in the world.
Edinburgh Fringe
In this wonderfully rich and evocative play by Carole Levine, we meet Elizabeth I in her later years.
Eileen Mahony welcomes us to her loft. A full loft, containers large and small neatly packed under th
“The train is a small world moving through a larger world.” - Elisha Cooper
The fragrant scent of sizzling spices pervades the real life Theatre kitchen where a chef stands at a stove
In film noir chiaroscuro a mysterious traveller arrives at an airport. His many bags have been flagge
Standing beside a coffin supported on a catafalque is Fern, a civil celebrant, smartly dressed and good at
In this tent there is an ordinary town.
It’s the Summer of 2021, lockdown from the pandemic is just over and it’s time for old friends to get toget
Breakfast shows are a staple of the Fringe – free tea or coffee and a croissant, together with some theatre
Charles Dickins was a lover of the spooky tale.
This year’s offering from the extremely talented Slade Wolfe team is a two-hander focusing on Richard III,
An endearing, whirlwind tour of the murder mystery genre, this is a delightfully entertaining show.
Midway through his new Fringe show, local-boy-done-well Colin Cloud shares a story from his armchair about
The history of the witch trials in Scotland is a part of our past that many are vaguely aware of, but the r
In one of the smallest theatres of the Fringe, you will find this beautifully atmospheric gem of a show.
Opening with a full-pelt, rapid-fire monologue that brings us into the mind and world of Nicole Nadler,
“My Sunshine in the sunshine” announces the Man as he makes his way towards his partner lounging on the bea
'What do you want me to say? That the world's ending? Would that be helpful?'
In the “backyard” away from the roar of the crowds if not the smell of the greasepaint some classic circus
Edinburgh’s Fringe festival doesn’t officially start until tomorrow (Friday, 2nd August), but it already fe