Theatre

The Fringe doesn’t officially start until tomorrow (Friday) but many shows are getting a good run-
Some twittering birdsong and gentle music welcomes the tiny tots and their parents/carers to this latest…
The Marriage of Figaro was written by Pierre Beaumarchais in 1778 as part of his Figaro Trilogy.
Nothing is black or white in this powerful play from Brooklyn based Smoke and Mirrors Collaborative.
Nicholas Hytner’s ‘Balancing Acts’ is the latest in a considerable line of memoirs produced by former…
Shattered Head is the title of a piece of sculpture made by Scots Italian artist, Eduardo Paolozzi in 1956.…
‘Some Other Stars’ opens in darkness but shimmers throughout in its own special light; Cath (Kirsten Murray)…
Spring Awakening, Frank Wedekind’s play first performed in 1906, is as much a child of its time as of its…
Curiosity may have killed the cat but it is a natural human trait to wonder about the lives of others and how…
This ambitious project is a bi-national production between the Scottish company Stellar Quines, that…
There’s always something problematic about a fiction based on a truth; unavoidably both are compromised in…
Lucas Petit (Alasdair Hankinson) may wear a jacket bright enough to be coveted by Michael Portillo, but he is…
On 9th September, 2015, Elizabeth II became our longest reigning monarch reaching 63 years, 216 days…
“Not another one!” This was the only thought in my mind as I fumbled through the Porridge program, eagerly…
How to people behave when removed from society’s mores and are thrown to the claim of nature?
Polish writer Lidia Amejko’s The Lives of the High-Rise Saints (an intriguing take on Butler’s classic 18th…
It was not without anticipation that I approached this revival of Mike Stott’s “comedy classic” that had…
In a one-woman performance of delicate sensitivity Donna Rutherford softly brings to the surface the issues…
Rona Munro’s trilogy of plays featuring the first three of Scotland’s kings to be named James offers a rare…
“Can you understand? Someone, somewhere, can you understand me a little, love me a little? For all my despair…