Edinburgh Fringe

The biggest arts festival in the world.

The star lit room with a dark glitter ball spinning creates a decadent atmosphere in the already glamorous…
There is something fishy going down at Fingers. New Town has become New York for a cabaret tale of a…
Support band The Ray Summers are actually going down well, but lead vocalist Andy Ure is under no illusions…
The Edinburgh Bach Choir of about 50 voices moved to their places betwixt the pulpit and font from where they…
Despite huge expectations due to Circa’s formidable reputation, their latest show, Closer, still manages to…
From the crucible that brought us last year’s ‘La Clique’, Smoke and Mirrors is another treat from the…
Samuel Clayton’s Statements is a masterclass in character performance, that deals delicately, yet…
‘Streets’ ahead of anything I have seen on the Fringe so far.
This is a festival that has for too many years endured the double sledgehammer blow of known comedy giants…
It was a delight to hear two of last year's graduates of Edinburgh Napier University music department give…
Plays, according to the late Peter Brook, inhabit empty spaces which actors transform.
Kent based theatre company Clair/Obscur, an anglicised version of Italian chiaroscuro that describes the…
This is not, as it might appear a production about the Hindenburg disaster, but rather five short plays…
Detached amidst the crowd a girl stands on the underground platform.
In the afternoon of Tuesday 12th January 2010 a magnitude 7 earthquake devastated Haiti. There were already…
Let me just make one thing clear. It's really hard to review a show when the person doing the show makes…
Thought-provoking one-act musical with plaintiff songs
Without as much as the toot of a trumpet, the eminent art historian, critic and face of BBC’s Culture Show,…
It must be difficult to understand what being a different gender, to your own, would be like.
The story of Edinburgh’s notorious Deacon Brodie has been picked, plucked, gathered and cropped by a variety…