Edinburgh Fringe
The Skinny guide to Edinburgh Fringe Festival. We bring you everything you need to get the most out of the Fringe, including previews, interviews, reviews and features.
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Fest Magazine
Scottish Dance Theatre
Famous for creating work that is personally engaging, choreographer Liv Lorent continues to find and express an "emotional commonplace" through dance. In the... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Dance Base Presents ... Rosie Kay Dance Company & Odd Johan Fritzoe
All the way from Norway to open up this boisterous bill come contemporary dance piece, 'Balls'. Choreographed in collaboration with visual artist Torild Ber... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
The Duchess
Experimental theatre has a bad reputation among the general public, and rightly so. Few would risk committing themselves to experimental thespian efforts, b... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Black Stuff
Topicality is one of those elusive qualities that can make, but never break Fringe productions. The problem is that, while Black Stuff is topical and relevan... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
The Time Step
This far-fetched yet entirely uninspired piece of family-centric drama is baffling in almost every way. Ageing sweet shop owner Cid and her daughter Ginger ... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Transient
A filthy network of cavernous rooms grabs the audience, sucking them into the shattered world of 1945 Germany. It's a frightening and gutted land where fami... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008
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Fest Magazine
The Year That I Got Younger
The Apex City Hotel on Edinburgh's Grassmarket is a very upmarket affair, and completely at odds with the show that it's hosting – The Year That I Got ... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Saving Tania's Privates
It's a brave performer these days who takes to the stage without a gimmick. It's hard to promote a show with no angle. Whether it's a comedy magic act, or ... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Confessions & Obsessions of a Thirtysomething Divorcee
Melanie Sherwood’s one-woman play is predictable and uninspired Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Invasion Festival: Soul Traders
In this era of the Andrew Lloyd Webber, reality-talent-show contaminated, pop musical, the good old days of dazzling tap-dance routines, catchy melodies and ... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Not Stalking David Tennant (aka Having It All)
Like Jerry Springer before him, David Tennant probably won’t have time to come to Edinburgh and see the show bearing his name, after all it’s ver... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
The Expert at the Card Table
The lights are dimmed, a piano is tinkling in the background and a gentleman sits in a well-cut waistcoat reading a book beside a green card table. The gentl... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Dogs Barking
Love, revenge, violence and an awful lot of alcohol: all the ingredients necessary for an exhilarating drama. Written by Richard Zajdlic, creator of the BBC ... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Golden
This show markets itself as a “political satire based on Shakespeare’s Macbeth.” You wouldn’t guess that from watching it. The idea o... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008 -
Fest Magazine
Moliere's Tartuffe
Immediately censored after its first performance in 1664, Tartuffe is a contentious play which relentlessly targets figures of religious authority. But with ... Read more »| 17 Aug 2008