Theatre

The Royal New Zealand Ballet’s resurrection of Giselle is a revelation.
Online dating provides even the shyest of wall flowers an opportunity to abandon their usual social…
Citadel Arts Group’s eighth production for Leith Festival, Stories of the Sea: Women, Whaling and War!, gives…
Sparks is a beautifully raw two hander that plays witness to the inner monologue of a women who has found…
The world has only been at peace for about 8% of its recorded history.
A memory from les evenements (the term is used advisedly) in Tahrir Square. A young woman, smartly dressed,…
A touching tale of female love.
Guid honest fun fae the Honest Toun!
Anthropomorphising is a little lost on me at the best of times and I confess that the appeal of Peppa Pig and…
Des Dillon first made his name as a poet, novelist and short story writer before turning to the theatre.…
Given the success of theatrical forays such as The Vagina Monologues and Grumpy Old Women, one might have had…
manipulate Festival is now in its 9th year and its regular successful Snapshots sessions are designed to…
This year, London based master puppeteers, Blind Summit, bring their UK première of Henry: A Puppet Possessed…
Icelandic writer and director Kolbrun Bjort Sigfusdottir’s Bitter Sweet explores a toxic relationship in a…
Cirque Berserk’s tagline, ‘real circus made for theatre’ hints at the show’s attempt to weave some…
Company of Wolves, regulars to Summerhall, return this Fringe with their new performance ‘A Brief History of…
On 11th November 1918 the guns fell silent after four years of battle, ending the First World War.
History, hilarity, and debauchery ensue with Maeve Marsden and Libby Wood, accompanied by the marvelous Tom…
Laughter in the Rain – the Neil Sedaka Story was full of surprises and all of them good. Although the songs…
A mother and daughter live on an island where they tend a herd of cows that belongs to the monks from the…