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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Theatre
Dance Base Show 1...Iskander, Curve Foundation, Karl Jay-Lewin & Michael Popper (skinnyfest 2) dance
In this diverse program of four, it is the charged atmosphere, the delicate use of pace and pause found in 'It's About Time', that captures your attention. ... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Aeneas Faversham review - SkinnyFest 2
The absurd logic of the Victorian psyche is superbly sourced in this bright sketch show by the players of The Penny Dreadfuls. Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Rich Hall review - SkinnyFest 2
Nobody with a soul can claim to dislike re-heated pizza, but on the other hand only a paltry few will claim that it tastes better than one that's straight fr... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Reginald D. Hunter review - SkinnyFest 2
Reginald D. Hunter may now be a contented resident of London, but he, and his show, continue to be well and truly American. Neither 'well' nor 'truly' is ina... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Tim Minchin review - SkinnyFest 2
I'll never read Prufrock without fondly thinking of my nether regions again! Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Dutch Elm Conservatoire review - SkinnyFest 2
Prison has never really appealed to me. Bad food, soap, S&M, yeech. Yet, being in prison with last year's Perrier-nominated quintet, the Dutch Elm Conservato... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006
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Fest Magazine
Adam Hills review - SkinnyFest 2
Anyone who can sit through an hour of Adam Hills and not come out with renewed sense of optimism and joy is not worth knowing. This is because Adam is a fund... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Russell Kane review - SkinnyFest 2
Like a sugar-coated soft-chew bar called Tourette's, Russell Kane bounds and slithers and twitches around the stage, reminding us that it's important to star... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Paul Sinha review - SkinnyFest 2
Paul Sinha is a man blessed with so much natural material that his comedy contempories could carve him up among themselves and dine out on the laughs for yea... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Gamarjobat review - SkinnyFest)
Highly acclaimed 'silent-comedy' practitioners Gamarjobat return to Edinburgh this year with a show that delights and frustrates in equal measure. The openin... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Frankie Boyle review - SkinnyFest
There's all this talk about gay marriage, announces Frankie Boyle in a tone of affected informality. "I don't know what all the fuss is about. I'd have loved... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Justin Edwards review - SKINNYFest 2
That was the shipping forecast. And now there's just time to tell you about another programme coming up on Radio 4. Former Perrier Best Newcomer Justin Edwar... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Four World Cups and One World Pope review - SkinnyFest 2
At times, it's like being in the room with a borderline misogynist. Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Simon Munnery column - SkinnyFest 2
An impudent sprite with piercing insight in the middle of the night informed me I was a ghost. It cut me to the quick; I knew I was sick but I hadn't realise... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006 -
Fest Magazine
Will Smith review - SkinnyFest 2
Comfortable middle-class humour for comfortable middle-class people. The largely sweater-wearing crowd were in tittering hysterics over Smith's many foibles,... Read more »| 14 Aug 2006