What’s on Edinburgh’s stages this week? There is not a huge amount, it must be said. Unless you are reading this at the ...
The Karate Kid – The Musical, at the Festival Theatre this week and the Glasgow Theatre Royal next, is one of those shows that is touring ‘ahead of its West End debut’. While there are many things to ...
BookFest: Booking opens today, Thurs 28 June. The Edinburgh International Book Festival, now firmly established at the Edinburgh Futures Institute in Lauriston Place, has its usual quota of ...
Two of my diligent actors were crawling about the carpet floor whilst I was trying to work out how best to explain a hole in the darkness. I wasn’t doing the best job, and I had spent a week trying to ...
The Effect by Northern Assignment, upstairs at Assembly Roxy as part of a series of one-nighters in Edinburgh and Glasgow, is an intelligent production, staged with care and performed with distinction ...
Set out for a short run at the Traverse, Lung Ha’s The Table is a curious hybrid of immersive theatre, dance, spoken word and imagery. A hybrid that draws you in and leaves you asking more. The ...
Evening: 7.30pm, Sat mat: 2.30pm. (Trav 1). Based on the extraordinary true story of a sixteen-year-old girl who led France to victory in the Hundred Years War, Saint Joan explores power, gender and ...
Ben Martin Byrne’s play follows five restaurant workers down on their luck struggling in a minimum wage job in a capitalist world gone mad. A comedic tale on one of societies unfunny topics. From ...
One Day: The Musical, from the Royal Lyceum and Melting Pot, is a hugely ambitious production that has a correspondingly large impact, even with the odd problem in execution.
Scottish Opera’s The Marriage of Figaro kicks off a limited engagement at the Festival Theatre in style, delivering a revival of Sir Thomas Allen’s 2010 production full of flair, humour, and ...
A glamorous and electric production of Kinky Boots by Sound Events Scotland features at the Hill Street Theatre where it is running every morning for the whole Fringe.
One Day: The Musical, from the Royal Lyceum and Melting Pot, is a hugely ambitious production that has a correspondingly large impact, even with the odd problem in execution.