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
Bardy on down!
It seems clear that some of the most memorable comedy moments at this year's Fringe, and future festivals, will come from performance poets and not their traditional stand-up counterparts Read more »| 12 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Tony Law: Revenge of the Dog of Time at Edinburgh Fringe Festival
If you're willing to go with the flow, the laughs will jump up and wind you when you least expect it. Read more »| 12 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Steve Hughes
Hughes' half-baked ranting might not appeal to everybody Read more »| 12 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Reginald D Hunter
Reginald 'Da Voice' Hunter returns with a ""five-star voice, the best voice you'll hear this festival"" (Fest Magazine) Read more »| 12 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Shelley Cooper
The show has some genuine laugh out loud moments but it feels patchy in places, in need of polishing Read more »| 12 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Murray Lachlan Young
Murray Lachlan Young invests far more in verse than just the words, press ganging the sounds and spaces into doing at least half of the work Read more »| 11 Aug 2007
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Fest Magazine
Punt and Dennis
Punt and Dennis give a flat, though polished, performance stuffed with overworked and ultimately disappointing jokes Read more »| 11 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Barry Cryer
For an upstart reviewer, attempting to evaluate Barry Cryer is like listening to A Hard Day’s Night and publishing a few derogatory comments abou... Read more »| 11 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Dan Clark
Dan Clark signs, seals and delivers an enjoyable hour of well-worked standup Read more »| 11 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Breaker Morant
The trial of an Australian folk hero demonstrates the hypocrisy of Empire Read more »| 11 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Karbido
Ever wondered what a razor blade striking a wooden table sounds like? Read more »| 11 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Manos The Greek
Manos the Greek confuses smut for comedy Read more »| 11 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Preview: Edinburgh International Film Festival
If a picture paints a thousand words, Laurence Olivier’s Hamlet, consisting of 232,500 frames, would work out to be nearly ten times as substantial... Read more »| 11 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Hit List 14/08
Fest's best art exhibitions over the coming days Read more »| 11 Aug 2007 -
Fest Magazine
Chav! and ASBO!: Neds and Scallies go musical
Two chav musicals compete for the title of most mediocre: only one gang of neds can win Read more »| 11 Aug 2007