Die Frau ohne Schatten, Mariinsky Opera @ Edinburgh Festival Theatre
Gods and kitchen sink dramas

Gods and kitchen sink dramas

Tales of dysfunction are most often the most darkly entertaining – the tale of a dysfunctional family even more so. Ramesh Meyyappan’s Snails and Ketchup pulls into a world akin...

The Dog Hill Kennel Project are a trinty of British choreographers, battling with the limits of what dance can be. They are familiar with the use of deconstruction, taking apart...

It is a pleasant surprise to find that it is possible to perform while seated – the musicians and dancers begin with stamping their feet, establishing one beat. When the...

Rhinestone country hussy

Wish you were here?

The spirit of bloody and devastating revolution by the overlooked and undervalued children against the rich forms the basis of this unsettling production, The Animals and The Children Took to...

Fiendishly entertaining, Anton’s Uncles is a play about mediocrity that is in no way mediocre. The show begins with the cast rhythmically building the set by moving the furniture rhythmically...

Amble through the city

Although its relationship to dance is not obviously apparent, Ten is a sincere and thoughtful meditation on the relationship between one man's Indian and British identities. Patel grew up feeling...

Using the comedy skill of Charlie Chaplin and Roberto Benigni, Matteo Cionini brings Sans Mots to Edinburgh. Like A World without Words, he proves that we do not really need...

The first chapter of Steven Fales’ Mormon trilogy, Confessions of a Mormon Boy, a long-running off-Broadway hit has finally arrived in Edinburgh. Following his success at the New York International...

Fighting their corners

Dancing definitely isn't just for girls. Wild and passionate, striking Flamenco performed by three men.

Meditate through theatre

Evocative Indian dance...

Been poked lately?

Ends of the Earth...

Beyond east meets west

Celebrate the female divine