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Post by ellisael on Aug 16, 2023 14:04:18 GMT
did yall check out this video play by Indian Nisha Abdulla? It was mind blowing
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Post by joem on Aug 16, 2023 23:11:56 GMT
Getting towards the end.
Shortlist
Very good two-hander by Brian Parks about warring authors competing for literary awards and more, then embarking on a sort-of joint quest. Particularly strong in its first few minutes, highly recommended.
Sunshine on Leith
Good quality production amdram revival of this musical with songs from The Proclaimers. If you enjoy their music (I do) you'll love this, especially seeing it where the whole thing started for the twins.
The Ballad of Truman Capote
Despite his cattiness and the way he wasted his talents in later life I love Truman Capote's writing but - good as the performance/impression of Capote by Patrick Moys in this play by Andrew O'Hagan is - listening to Capote's constant lithpy whine for nearly an hour grates. This would have benefitted from some variety of tone.
Food
My only dip into the "International" bit of the Festival and easily the nadir of the week so far. What a waste of resources when compared to the limited budgets on the fringe. Starts off like a comic turn then churns onto interminably long dumb shows. If its about waste and/or the environment, then boy this is one huge waste. An hour and a half of my life I'll never get back.
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Post by distantcousin on Aug 17, 2023 11:25:45 GMT
Bit of advice please, experts!
We're on our way up now. When a show says on the official website "no allocation, contact the venue" what's the best thing to do?
Try phoning? (Is that even possible?!) Just turn up early and hope to buy tickets at the venue?
Or is it just a polite way of telling you it's "sold out"?!
Thanks
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 17, 2023 11:45:53 GMT
Bit of advice please, experts! We're on our way up now. When a show says on the official website "no allocation, contact the venue" what's the best thing to do? Try phoning? (Is that even possible?!) Just turn up early and hope to buy tickets at the venue? Or is it just a polite way of telling you it's "sold out"?! Thanks Fringe website and venue website may be different allocations so check on both. Also, plenty of 'sold out' shows make house seats available for sale an hour before the show so worth checking the Fringe and venue websites then (or enquire at the box office). Also, keep an eye out for any extra performances at different time slots being announced.
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Post by joem on Aug 17, 2023 23:59:01 GMT
Last day! I wish I could live my entire life like this.....
And This Is My Friend Mr Laurel
Jeffrey Holland reprises his role in this one-man show by Gail Louw as Stan Laurel, reminiscing about his life and career whilst visiting his terminally ill buddy, Oliver Hardy. Very well acted although the hysterical laughs from one member of the audience seemed rather OTT to the point where Jeffrey had to stop the show and wait for it to die down and actually joked "can you come back tomorrow?"
Violets and Vinegar
Hilarious but also at times poignant play with three different (unrelated) stories told by three women - a cancer survivor whose husband is probably cheating on her, a mature virgin who decides to go for it and a young Scouser on holiday in Magaluf looking for sex and booze. Really packed with laughs, one o them had a slight accident in the performance I attended - fell off the back of her seat - but got right back and stuck into her part. A real trooper. Very highly recommended.
The Grand Old Opera House Hotel
A triumph. This needs to tour and be seen in London. Part rom-com, part play with music with an aesthetic reminiscent of Wes Anderson's "Grand Budapest Hotel" movie, the cast rollicks its way through a bunch of scenes with influences from Carry On to Saint Saens and delivers some of opera's greatest hits into the bargain - adding some new "operatic" dialogue to move the story along. Marvellous.
Colonel Anne
Amdram with interesting tale from the '45 about a Scottish aristo's wife who calls her clans to action in the face of her hubby's vacillation. Did feel some of the cast were a little overripe for their parts but it was an entertaining watch.
Ay Up Hitler
Bad taste play about Hitler and his chums surviving the war and moving to Yorkshire which is saved by the fact it has plenty of laughs, even if it is overlong. Interesting to see what one can laugh at these days, given there are increasingly things one is not even allowed to talk about let alone use for a laugh. Punters will be reassured to hear though that at the end Hitler and Goebbels are joined on stage by usual suspects Johnson and Trump, no sacred cows are used for mirth.
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 20, 2023 8:25:37 GMT
Back in Edinburgh and boy is it busy! So many sold out shows yesterday and street and venues teeming with people!
Day 11.
Skies in the Cloud at theSpace on the Mile.
It's a Woman's World at theSpace Triplex.
Grubby Little Mitts: Hello, Hi at Assembly George Square.
Vino Veritas at theSpace on the Mile.
Pandemonium at theSpace on the Mile.
Cabaret Impedimenta at Assembly George Square.
Day 12.
Losing the Plot at theSpace at Niddry Street.
Here You Come Again at theSpace at Surgeons Hall.
The Dead Ducks at theSpace at Surgeons Hall.
The Life Sporadic of Jess Wildgoose at Pleasance Courtyard.
A Chorus Line at Paradise in Augustines.
Laser Kiwi: Rise of the Olive at Assembly Checkpoint.
Showstopper! The Improvised Musical at Pleasance Courtyard.
Ivo Graham: Organised Fun at Pleasance Courtyard.
Edinburgh University Savoy Opera Group (EUSOG) smash it out of the park every year and their festival production of A Chorus Line is no exception. The talent in this troupe of triple threats belies the show's status as a student production. You could put the company of A Chorus Line on a West End stage and they wouldn't look out of place. Some of the standout performers look like future stars in the making, none more so than Minnie Cross as Kristine. The music is all performed live by a sizable orchestra. It was a pretty incredible experience sat on the front row sometimes mere inches from this insanely talented cast singing and dancing their socks off. The full standing ovation received was richly deserved. Truly outstanding, EUSOG's work once again sets the standard for other student productions to follow.
Another very entertaining student production comes in the form of Losing the Plot by Fruit Bowl Theatre from The University of Manchester. A group of friends try to help a struggling writer pen a new musical, set to a soundtrack of classic 80s songs, with the occasional 70s hit for good measure. This provides a high-energy start to the day, with distinctive characters well mined for comedy by the enthusiastic cast. The dance routines accompanying many of the songs, as well as plenty of amusing references to other musicals, added to the feel-good fun. This was a show and a set of characters I could have happily watched for longer than the hour-long run time.
Other highlights from the past couple of days include Laser Kiwi's eccentric, wonderfully bizarre circus cabaret, themed around the humble olive! It was also great to catch Grubby Little Mitts' follow-up to their award-winning debut sketch show last year. Featuring two alumni of The Cambridge Footlights, Rosie Nicholls and Sullivan Beau Brown, the opening and closing sketches of their new show riff off Singing In The Rain to spectacular comic effect. Their easy chemistry is palpable, the sketches often surreal, occasionally filthy, but consistently hilarious. Sometimes it's not even the material itself but how it's delivered - Rosie exudes warmth while Sullivan's facial expressions often convey more than words ever could. These are two hugely likeable performers whose new hour is easily the pick of the sketch shows I've seen at the festival this year. The opening scene and sensational finale are worth the price of admission alone!
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 21, 2023 8:10:32 GMT
Day 13.
Chasing Butterflies at Pleasance Dome.
Tink at Underbelly Bristo Square.
The Half Moon at Pleasance Dome.
2020 the Musical at Underbelly Bristo Square.
Potty the Plant at Gilded Balloon Patter Hoose.
A Good Panto Die Hard at Gilded Balloon Patter Hoose.
Gunter at Summerhall.
I wasn't sure what to expect from Potty the Plant but I loved the zany humour of the show. Described in one review as "an unholy fusion of Sesame Street and a B-movie horror film", Potty is a talking plant on Dr Acula's desk in a hospital setting where blood-sucked kids seem to be disappearing. That premise sets the tone for an hour filled with zany characters, upbeat and catchy songs, and plenty of laugh out loud comedy! There's some great one liners but I also enjoyed some of the humour in the set that's never referenced by the characters, with signage around the hospital including "More than 50% of our staff are properly qualified" and "Are you worried you're turning into a gorilla?" Sarah Oakland as Miss Lacey gets some of the best lines and has a beautiful singing voice. The mock earnestness of Miss Lacey contrasts well with the over-the-top characters, not to mention the singing pot plant, all around her. I'm still humming one of her solo numbers, Unhappy, as well as the earworm title song, the following morning! Subversive, crazy, full of knowing humour, Potty the Plant is a wickedly funny slice of Fringe fayre.
A Good Panto Die Hard is also a blast. This reworking of the film sees Die Hard get The 39 Steps treatment, with a cast of four where one plays John McClane and the other three multirole to hilarious effect. Throw in some songs from the era, like Something Happened on the Way to Heaven and several Duran Duran numbers, then add many of the essential ingredients of a panto (minus a dame) and some inspired sight gags and you have an idea of what to expect! The concept is executed quite brilliantly by a cast of all the talents. Meanwhile, the audience gets into the spirit of things from the off with shouts of "He's behind you" and "oh no it isn't". Frankly, this is a show that is so much better than it has any right to be. Die Hard is crunched into a 75-minute format that can be enjoyed by fans and those unfamiliar with the movie alike, but it also seamlessly weaves in panto tropes and delivers some brilliant musical numbers. The singalong finale of Fairytale of New York is somehow quite moving. This is a work of genius that belongs on the Fringe, while also settling the age old debate of whether or not Die Hard is a Christmas movie!
I ended the day with Gunter at Summerhall, where Dirty Hare are retelling a true story of deception, magic and torture from 1605. Two boys have been murdered and their mum wants justice. This precipitates a feud between two families and when the murderer's daughter falls ill, there’s only one thing that could evidently have happened - she must have been bewitched. This was one of the most powerful pieces of drama I've ever seen, heightened by its musical storytelling style and in-your-face exposition. A chaotic reimagining of the most notorious bewitchment case you've never heard of in a vibrant fusion of drama, physical theatre, music, and history. The immersive setting of the anatomy lecture theatre at Summerhall only heightens the atmosphere and tension. This is an hour like no other at the festival. A triumph for all involved.
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Post by aingidh on Aug 21, 2023 11:51:48 GMT
4 shows for me today:
Cat sh*t Crazy - theSpace Triplex Hello Kitty Must Die - Pleasance Courtyard Chloe Petts - Pleasance Courtyard Tom Lawrinson - Underbelly Bristo Square
Was meant to be at England & Son but received an email this morning saying it had been cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances. Luckily managed to find Cat sh*t Crazy as a replacement.
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Post by kz on Aug 21, 2023 19:26:53 GMT
Was back out again today.
Started with Best of the Fest Day Time- a mixed bill of magic, comedy, circus and cabaret. I'm hoping to be able to fit in the full length shows for What Does Stuff Do?- a very talented juggler with an edge of physics, and Tom Crosbie- Actions Speak Louder Than Nerds.
I then saw Home. As others have said, this was really impressive theatre and the use of lighting, set pieces and movement was exceptional. I was a bit unsure of the story at times but I think that might be the intention. I did leave feeling completely overstimulated but I think that says more about the intensity of the experience.
After This Plane Has Landed- a musical about the experiences of John McCarthy (news producer taken hostage in Lebanon) and Jill Morrell. I found this really quite disappointing. Benedict Powell and Claire Russell are both hugely talented and acted and sang well but there were so many songs that just felt pedestrian. It felt a bit confused about whether it was a serious piece or trying to be light- lots of chat about "We're in a musical" at the start. There could be something in the idea as it's an interesting story, highlighted by the delightful audience member who spent most of the show reading about the story on Wikipedia on their phone....
Ended with The Brief Life & Mysterious Death of Boris III, King of Bulgaria. An enjoyable play with excellent use of music. Some slightly distracting overacting from one cast member (I know it's supposed to be over the top but I felt it was maybe just a bit much) and an audience member who laughed so loudly and so often that it drew the attention of the cast. This made me want to read more about the real events, although not on Wikipedia on my phone during the show...
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 22, 2023 22:26:35 GMT
Day 14.
Lara Ricote: Work in Progress at Monkey Barrel.
The Great Ruckus at Pleasance Courtyard.
Edmonds at Pleasance Courtyard.
Graveyard of the Outcast Dead at theSpace on the Mile.
Black Martini at theSpace on the Mile.
Talkies: Improvised Classic Hollywood Comedy at Just the Tonic at the Caves.
What If They Ate The Baby? at theSpace on the Mile.
Day 15.
Hooked: Mr Sister at Just the Tonic at the Caves.
The Bristol Suspensions: Susps - The Acapella Friends Show at theSpace at Niddry Street.
The Knot at theSpace at Niddry Street.
Junk Monkey at Gilded Balloon Patter Hoose.
Public the Musical at Pleasance Courtyard.
Frank Skinner: 30 Years of Dirt at Assembly George Square.
Public the Musical is a strong contender, along with We'll Have Nun of It and Potty the Plant, for my favourite musical at this year's festival. Four strangers become trapped in a gender-neutral public toilet and we follow them in real-time through the following hour as they wait to be let out. With meticulously crafted characters, an intelligent appraisal of gender identity issues, and a banging score filled with guitar-led hooks, there's lots to enjoy here. Public feels fresh and exciting and tailor made for a transfer to somewhere like Southwark Playhouse. The cast of four features Annabel Marlow from the original student cast of Six. I saw Annabel's solo musical cabaret show a couple of weeks ago an in some respects this is also the Annabel Marlow show, as she milks every line to brilliant comic effect.
Talkies is a new improv show harking back to the golden age of Hollywood. While Talkies might be making its Fringe debut, there's familiar faces in a cast that's something of a supergroup of improvised comedy. Members of the troupe have previously appeared in the likes of Murder She Didn't Write, Paul Merton's Impro Chums, and Racing Minds. This is by far the best improvised show I've seen at the festival this year. By a mile. Sheer class and packed with laughs and a cohesive narrative from start to finish.
Olivia McLeod's Fringe debut, Pash, was one of my favourite solo shows in 2022. She returns this year with a new play, Junk Monkey, which is a masterpiece of solo theatre. After a chance encounter on a train, with a girl who might just be the love of her life, Olivia sets about finding out who the stranger is and conspires to bring their worlds together. Interspersed with brief memories of crushes and sexual encounters growing up, this is a show about missed connections, crushing obsession, and the power of a single day. Olivia is an energetic, quite mesmerising performer, with a whirlwind script that's immensely funny and a character who's dizzyingly un-self aware. The story recaps the 12 hours after the initial encounter on the train, drawing the audience into Olivia's world and portraying just how easily we can construct a fantasy around a total stranger. The breaking of the fourth wall in the play's closing moments provides a nicely judged, tongue-in-cheek final twist. Building on the success of Pash, Junk Monkey demonstrates that as a writer and a performer, Olivia is a star in the making.
Time to sleep now before checking into The Grand Old Opera House Hotel in the morning.
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Post by Dave B on Aug 23, 2023 8:42:27 GMT
The Life Sporadic of Jess Wildgoose at Pleasance Courtyard. Oooh, what did you think? I'm a big fan of Voloz Collective. I saw this in one of the first previews in London a couple of months ago and really liked it. At the time they were quite open about still working on and I suspect it will have ended up a bit tighter by now, slightly under an hour running?
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Post by Deleted on Aug 23, 2023 14:00:45 GMT
With the fringe is it still all about being "discovered" or is it more a launch pad for a comedy performer to unveil a few show to take on tour in the following autumn/winter/spring and then the cycle starts again. We get the established performers/veterans taking a show up there too maybe they have been doing so for years or want to do it as a one off or return after many years.
What are the show prices like? I'd assume that apart from major ones they wouldn't be much over a tenner if you want to see a lot of shows. It must be tiring for all concerned but a great thing to do and why not spend the same amount seeing a lot of shows and discovering some hidden gems than spending it all on a major show/concert.
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 24, 2023 8:23:33 GMT
Day 16.
The Grand Old Opera House Hotel at Traverse Theatre.
In Everglade Studio at Assembly George Square.
Salty Irina at Summerhall.
Help Yourself at Summerhall.
Strategic Love Play at Summerhall.
Quitting Comedy at PBH's Free Fringe at Legends.
1 Tent, 4 Girls at Greenside Infirmary Street.
The St Andrews Revue: Here Come The Worms at Just the Tonic at the Caves.
Three brilliant plays back to back at Summerhall were among the highlights of yesterday. Salty Irina is a romantic thriller about two girls falling in love and fighting fascists. Strategic Love Play follows the cat-and-mouse play of an awkward first date. In between those two productions in the Roundabout tent, I saw Help Yourself, a spoof wellness seminar with a five-step plan to eliminate sadness from your life. This was a reflection on grief, disguised in comic form, and the sort of unique show that you can only experience at the Fringe. Well worth a watch if you're looking for something completely different!
I also really enjoyed Malia Simon and Caroline Haynes' comedy play within a play, which places their standup routines, both as themselves and in character, in a narrative about why they're (not really) quitting comedy. Malia Simon in particular is absolutely hilarious.
Special mention from yesterday has to go to The Grand Opera House Hotel. This is 90 minutes of inspired writing from Isabel McCarthur that morphs a comedy into a full-on opera with triumphant results. The faceless modern hotel of the title, of the type where every room is identical, is built on the grounds of an old opera house which was destroyed by fire. Nowadays, the hotel is a health and safety nightmare, with fusing electrics and doors that jam shut. The play begins with a new member of staff, Aaron, arriving for training ahead of his first day. While trying to locate the training room, he hears the haunting voice of what he presumes to be a ghost, perhaps an opera singer who perished in the flames all those years ago? In fact, it’s another staff member, opera loving Amy, singing along to her Walkman, and Aaron sets out to track her down.
As the two would-be lovers pursue each other from floor to anonymous floor, the play steadily evolves into a thrilling, unique fusion of art forms. The closer Ali Watt’s Aaron and Karen Fishwick’s Amy get to meeting, the more the bedroom farce becomes an opera and the arias come sweeping in. Wild, romantic gestures take the place of overworked staff dealing with awkward, oversexed guests. The first hour is full of humour and laughter, but when the production fully gives in to what it wants to become, it soars even higher. The end result is a thrilling combination of farce and opera that, like Pride and Prejudice (Sort Of) with Austen, somehow manages to both send up and celebrate the conventions of opera.
The cast are outstanding, from the central pairing to the ensemble multiroling as a variety of hotel staff, guests and the ghosts of former opera singers. The set is ingenious with some great visual gags and the many doors every good farce requires. Surely this play will have a life beyond the festival? Certainly, it proves that Isabel McArthur's successful debut was no fluke. The Grand Old Opera House Hotel sees one of our most exciting writers hit new heights. From its array of eccentric characters and the love story at its heart, to the hilariously re-worded sections of celebrated opera melodies, The Grand Old Opera House Hotel is a complete joy and a masterpiece of slapstick and operatic invention.
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 24, 2023 8:38:43 GMT
The Life Sporadic of Jess Wildgoose at Pleasance Courtyard. Oooh, what did you think? I'm a big fan of Voloz Collective. I saw this in one of the first previews in London a couple of months ago and really liked it. At the time they were quite open about still working on and I suspect it will have ended up a bit tighter by now, slightly under an hour running? I enjoyed it. It's highly stylised in a similar vein as The Man Who Knew Too Much but with a darker subject matter. I thought it was wonderfully inventive but maybe so frenetic that it lacked a bit of the emotional impact they were going for. I'm not sure how they do those two shows almost back to back every day, they must be exhausted by this point of the festival! With the fringe is it still all about being "discovered" or is it more a launch pad for a comedy performer to unveil a few show to take on tour in the following autumn/winter/spring and then the cycle starts again. We get the established performers/veterans taking a show up there too maybe they have been doing so for years or want to do it as a one off or return after many years. What are the show prices like? I'd assume that apart from major ones they wouldn't be much over a tenner if you want to see a lot of shows. It must be tiring for all concerned but a great thing to do and why not spend the same amount seeing a lot of shows and discovering some hidden gems than spending it all on a major show/concert. I think it's both, there's established comics like Marcus Brigstocke who's been coming to the Fringe since 1996 and continues to do so. But they are outnumbered by the emerging artists. Average show price across the major venues is probably £10-£15 this year, but there's plenty of cheaper shows, as well as those which offer pay what you can pricing or the option to buy in advance or get in for free (subject to availability). There's hundreds of free non-ticketed shows that are part of the Fringe too. The free shows have a collection at the end. There's also two-for-one ticket offers on certain days, more widely if you sign up as a friend of the Fringe, and the half price hut from the first Wednesday of the festival which has a capped number of half-price tickets for lots of shows. Edfest.com also run various offers, both before and during the festival, and performers will also sometimes advertise free tickets for paid shows if advance sales are low. The main challenge, for artists and audiences alike, is the cost of accommodation. The show prices are creeping up but generally still pretty reasonable. Some of the big circus shows are the most expensive, I think, at around £21 a ticket this year.
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 25, 2023 22:38:55 GMT
Day 17.
Cooked at Bedlam Theatre.
Dugsi Dayz at Underbelly Cowgate.
It's a Motherf**king Pleasure at Underbelly Bristo Square.
One's a Musical Comedian and One Isn't at Just the Tonic at Grassmarket Centre.
Troll at Underbelly Cowgate.
Lies All The Way Down at theSpace at Niddry Street.
How to Rob a Millionaire (in Five Easy Steps) at Greenside Infirmary Street.
Day 18.
After the Act at Traverse Theatre.
Lena at Assembly George Square.
Shoot the Cameraman at Assembly Roxy.
Palindrome at theSpace at Niddry Street.
Lost and Found at Just the Tonic at the Caves.
Puppets at Gilded Balloon Patter Hoose.
Oscar at The Crown at Assembly George Square.
I really enjoyed the chamber musical Lies All The Way Down, a two-hander plus four-piece band, with its exploration of friendship and lies.
The Cambridge University Musical Theatre Society's new offering, Palindrome, has a gorgeous score and top notch performances.
Shoot the Cameraman fuses media and live performance with its sinister exploration of an abusive relationship. The two performers on stage are followed throughout by two camera operators. The impact of the live filming, so every moment can be seen from multiple angles, is quite fascinating. The camera operators are an integral part of the performance and contribute to an epic piece of physical theatre that's breathtaking to watch. The sound design is equally spectacular. As one review on the Fringe website puts it, "I don't know what on earth we just saw, but it was incredible!"
A late contender for my standout show of the festival is Lena, a play with music by Tim Whitnall. The play commemorates child star Lena Zavaroni who appeared on Opportunity Knocks and won the show for a record five weeks. Charting how Lena was whisked away from her family aged 10 to appear on the show, we see her become a singing sensation, only for the pressures of fame to have tragic consequences.
Leading a cast which includes Jon Culshaw as host Hughie Green, Erin Armstrong is sensational as Lena. From the young enthusiastic child to the broken adult, Erin captures the pressures of a world that Lena just wasn't ready to face on her own quite exquisitely. If there's an award for best performance at the Fringe, Erin would be a deserving recipient.
Making this particular performance of Lena especially poignant, the visibly emotional cast announced at the end that Lena's father was in the audience this afternoon.
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Post by kz on Aug 26, 2023 22:40:15 GMT
Busy few days to end the Fringe for me. Thursday: Dusk: A Love Bite Story- Twilight parody musical. Some very funny caricatures and strong singing from the cast but about 45 minutes longer than it needed to be as most of the jokes had already been made. I also struggled with the endless scene changes carrying tables in and out. CSI: Crime Scene Improvisation- This was a strange one for me. Some funny moments with the cast improvising around the suggested murder weapon. Then the audience were asked to question the actors (as their characters) and it suddenly felt very serious. Talented cast none the less. God Catcher- a really lovely musical drawing on Greek mythology. Great performances, really nice score and a surprisingly interesting story. The dialogue slightly less strong (I think someone else mentioned this could be sung through and I completely agree). A highly enjoyable hour. Kathy and Stella Solve a Murder- I saw this last year and thought it was even stronger this year. The lighting and expanded band elevate what was an already great musical. Fantastic performances from the whole cast. We had a show stop for a slightly scary medical emergency a few seats away from me, but it was well managed by all involved and the show ended on a high. Dan Tiernan- very, very funny comedian. I laughed till I cried. Friday: Sunday in the Park with George- This was a Sondheim show I had never seen so I really didn't know what to expect aside from a few of the songs. This was such a strong production. I didn't get cast names but particular credit to the actors playing George and Dot/Marie. They definitely did justice to a complex score. The show itself was interesting. Similar to Into the Woods, the first act alone could have been a complete show but good to hear Children and Art in Act 2. A great morning of theatre. What Does Stuff Do?- juggling with some physics/maths. I wondered if the performer was maybe impacted by nerves as the front row was made up of people he clearly knew (perhaps also performers?) and the juggling wasn't quite as strong as when I saw him at Best of the Fest. There was also a typical Fringe moment of watching audience members trying and failing to blow up a malfunctioning paddling pool! That said, the audience was fully invested and desperate for the performer to succeed. Definitely a talented man with some really interesting juggling/physics insights. Palindrome- stevej678 I'm wondering if we were perhaps both there? I enjoyed the music for this one and agree, there were some great performances. I just didn't feel there was enough to the plot. It might benefit from a longer running time to expand on the plot points. The couple next to me actually got the giggles when the post office plot was resolved as it was so simple. The cast mentioned they were taking the show to London next although not sure where/what they're involved in. Laughing Horse Pick of the Fringe- a mixed bill of comedians. Despite being really poorly attended, this was actually a very enjoyable hour. Pirates of Penzance- Gilbert and Sulliven at its best. Extremely silly and great fun. Strong performances from all the leads. The actress playing Mabel had lost her voice through the week so sang for the first time on the run, having had someone sing in her part, but she was really excellent despite having been unwell. Saturday: Lena- I really loved this. It captured the darkness of her life story and the despair of the family perfectly. Hard hitting and emotional, with exceptional performances from the small cast, particularly Erin Armstrong. stevej678 Goodness me, I can't imagine the emotion of having her father in the audience. That must have been very special for all involved. Tom Crosbie: Actions Speak Louder than Nerds- a fantastic hour of Rubiks cubes, feats of memory and warm audience interaction. A highly supportive crowd watching an incredibly talented man who appears to be genuinely lovely too. Showstopper- Isabel Klein's one woman show. A very funny performance demonstrating her acting talents to great comedic effect. Incredibly quick witted- I'm not sure even she was prepared to be presented with a brand new fancy blank journal in the segment where the audience are "encouraged" to seek autographs. Another show where the audience and atmosphere were a key part of the show and a thoroughly enjoyable experience for all involved. Final show tomorrow for me. Although I'm not sure I like how busy the city becomes and the hours in highly uncomfortable venues, I absolutely love the opportunity to have a month of solid theatre. Very special indeed.
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 28, 2023 10:22:33 GMT
Back home from Edinburgh after a busy last two days at the Fringe.
Day 19
Beats on Pointe at Assembly George Square.
Silly Little Things at Just the Tonic at the Caves.
Glass Ceiling Beneath the Stars at Pleasance Dome.
We'll Have Nun of It at Underbelly Cowgate (return visit).
Without at Underbelly Cowgate.
Paved with Gold and Ashes at Greenside Infirmary Street.
Winging It at theSpace on the Mile.
A Little Less Conversation, A Little More Action Please at Laughing Horse @ The Three Sisters.
Day 20
Polko at Summerhall.
Chance at Paradise in the Vault.
Party Ghost at Assembly Checkpoint.
Frankie Thompson and Liv Ello: Body Show at Pleasance Courtyard.
The Cambridge Footlights: The Search Continues at Pleasance Dome.
Highlights include the retelling of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in New York in 1911 through spoken word and acapella singing in Paved With Gold and Ashes.
It was great to catch the dance spectacular that is Beats on Pointe again after first seeing it last year. It's an exhilarating hour of almost non-stop dancing from a talented ensemble.
There were shades of Once in Without, a new musical about two strangers finding a connection through music. The score is really strong in this, as we meet the two central characters at different stages of their lives who find solace in helping each other.
Silly Little Things is a charming solo show about life's ups and downs and the power of friendship. Laura Knaggs holds the audience in the palm of her hands for an hour sharing a joyful and relatable story full of laughter and heartwarming moments. She struggled to get to her "thanks for coming and spread the word" speech at the end because the audience wouldn't stop cheering and applauding her, so she ended up taking another bow!
Glass Ceiling Beneath the Stars is a play that uses multimedia in a similar vein to Shoot the Cameraman with the live action on stage being filmed by camera operators and shown on a screen above the stage. Some of the close-ups here were particularly clever in their execution. It's an interesting story too, based on the first African American female astronaut going into space, as well as the first woman to go into space with her husband, and how the media responded to, and interrogated, these two pioneers.
And that was it for Edinburgh Fringe 2023. There's a few other shows in this year's lineup I've either seen before or am seeing elsewhere.
These include:
Julia Masli: Choosh (seen at Edinburgh Fringe 2022 and at the Unity Theatre in Liverpool in July 2023).
Kathy and Stella Solve a Murder (seen at Edinburgh Fringe 2022 and seeing the new version at HOME in Manchester in October 2023).
Police Cops: The Musical (seen at Edinburgh Fringe 2022).
Almost Adult (seen at Edinburgh Fringe 2022).
Tony! The Tony Blair Rock Opera (seeing this at The Lowry in October 2023).
Murder, She Didn't Write (seen at Edinburgh Fringe 2022, previous festivals and on tour).
It's been a great festival. It will be interesting to see the ticket sales announced by the Fringe Society this afternoon. This year has felt like a full resurgence for the Fringe after a strong comeback given the circumstances of 2022. The second half of the festival last year felt noticeably quieter than usual, whereas Edinburgh has felt busy throughout this time around, both on the crowded streets and in the packed venues.
The existential threats to the festival are still there, none more so than the availability of affordable accommodation. The Keep it Fringe fund was a step in the right direction this year but it's a drop in the ocean when so many more companies and artists require financial support to bring their work to Edinburgh.
With the short term lets legislation being introduced in Edinburgh this autumn, along with the ongoing cost of living crisis, those challenges aren't going away. There are also additional hurdles facing some of the leading venues ahead of the Fringe 2024. Assembly is £1.5m out of pocket from the collapse of the Coventry City of Culture Trust. Gilded Balloon's Teviot House hub will be unavailable next summer due to an 18-month refurbishment of the building starting later this year. Meanwhile, Greenside are losing their Infirmary Street site to the Fringe Society. If today's ticket sales show the remarkable resilience of the festival, that certainly shouldn't be cause for complacency.
One of the things I love about the Fringe is that, despite the vast size of the festival, word of mouth is still a real, tangible thing rather than a nebulous concept. People going to see Isabel Klein's Showstopper from a recommendation in this thread is proof of that! I'm chuffed other forum members have been to see her and enjoyed it! Seeing Julia Masli scoop a best show award, and The Rejects, a debut play by an Edinburgh Napier University graduate, win a best comedy award, on the back of a sellout run and a string of rave reviews, is a reminder of the springboard the Fringe can provide. And, of course, it's exciting to see what's next for festival hits like Public the Musical, Lena, and The Grand Old Opera House Hotel.
As an audience member, seeing so many shows across three and a half weeks is such a thrill. It's undoubtedly the time of year I look forward to the most. The many hours (make that days!) of planning are so worth it. As much as I'm ready for a break from the chaos of it all, as I took a last look round Bristo Square yesterday, I felt quite emotional that it's all coming to an end for another year too. There's nowhere with the same atmosphere, vibrancy and explosion of creativity as Edinburgh in August. I can't wait to 'fill my boots' again next summer.
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Post by zahidf on Aug 28, 2023 14:32:33 GMT
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Post by mkb on Aug 28, 2023 14:51:28 GMT
Is that figure for app downloads correct? Maybe missing a zero, given the numbers attending?
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Post by stevej678 on Aug 28, 2023 15:17:40 GMT
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Post by properjob on Aug 28, 2023 15:22:46 GMT
Is that figure for app downloads correct? Maybe missing a zero, given the numbers attending? The google app store has it as 10k plus downloads so probably correct. It wasn't that good and anyway I suspect many, many more people use the fringe website or venue websites and there will still be a fair few people doing in person sales.
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Post by steve10086 on Sept 1, 2023 21:58:16 GMT
Quiet day. The Brief Life & Mysterious Death of Boris III, King of Bulgaria at Pleasance Dome This has already received plenty of attention, rightfully so. A hugely entertaining account of a relatively obscure episode in World War Two - Bulgaria's participation and the reign and actions of the king in place at the time Boris III. Starts off in an Ubuesque manner then gradually focuses mainly on the struggles of Boris to save his Jewish subjects. Music and high jinks lighten the heavier aspects of the play but it is undoubtedly a success and deserves a London outing - Park? Southwark? How about Arcola, 26 Sep - 21 Oct? www.arcolatheatre.com/whats-on/the-brief-life-mysterious-death-of-boris-iii-king-of-bulgaria/
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