Fest Magazine
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Fest Magazine
Axis of Awesome
The Axis of Awesome is an Australian troupe of musical comedians. Self-aware and post-modern, their songs are as ironic as their T-shirts. Rather typically, ... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
Adams and Rea: Blissfully Unaware
One undeniable asset of musical comedy acts is that their tunes can usefully fill any nasty gaps left by the absence of laughter. It’s an uneasy minute... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
Certain Dark Things
Franco’s brutal dictatorship of the 1950s saw paranoia and secrecy permeate every level of society, seeping into the private lives of families across S... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
The Origin of Species...
In trying to appeal to too broad a church, this appraisal of Charles Darwin's life and times falls a little short of its potential Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
Anna & Katy at Edinburgh Fringe: Review
The duo's gorgeous daftness has only lost a little of its shine Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
East 10th Street: Self Portrait With Empty House
Brought to the UK by the multi award-winning Richard Jordan Productions, East 10th Street is the autobiographical piece from the former poster-boy of New Yor... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009
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Fest Magazine
Plagiarismo
Richard DeDomenici is a performance artist whose artwork is cerebral, accessible and subversive; traits conspicuously absent in this one-man lecture. Addres... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
The Wayside/Riff
Cutting edge and complimenting each other perfectly, Sperling and Diallo have succeeded in creating a fresh and exciting showcase of contemporary dance Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
The Rap Guide to Evolution
Following up on his critically acclaimed reworking of Geoffrey Chaucer's masterpiece in The Rap Canterbury Tales, Canadian actor and rap artist Baba Brinkman... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
Chronicles of Long Kesh
For the most part, this story of hardship in HMP Maze (aka Long Kesh) is fairly orthodox in its prison saga methods. Opened in 1971 for the internment of Nor... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
David Leddy's White Tea
White Tea begins with the audience donning kimonos, and the two-woman cast distributing cups of tea. This would seem stranger still if we weren't already dis... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
Lochhead and Laula: Love, Love, Love
Theirs is a pairing, Liz Lochhead tells us, which has been bubbling under the surface for decades. A collection of piece from poet Lochhead and songs from tr... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
Alistair McGowan: The One and Many
The impressionist stays mostly within his comfort zone in his first Fringe show this decade Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
The Kosh in The Storeroom
Fringe veterans The Kosh return with a one-woman theatre piece, which, after a slow start, has all the hallmarks of the quality one has come to expect from t... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009 -
Fest Magazine
Icarus 2.0 Review
Icarus 2.0 is the latest offering from Fringe First winning pair Sebastian Lawson and Jamie Wood. It's a complex, curious tale:a hybrid story combining a Pro... Read more »| 08 Aug 2009