A man responsible for a series of serious sexual offences against women and children in Edinburgh has been convicted.
Yesterday at Edinburgh High Court (5th May 2022), John OâFlaherty was found guilty of serious sexual offences, including rape committed against 4 females between the 1980s and 1990s.
The 65-year-old became the subject of a public protection investigation after the victims, who are now all adults, came forward to report the abuse they were subjected to.
The sexual abuse survivors were aged between 7 and 32, with the majority of attacks taking place within the North of the city. However, other addresses and locations within the South West were also identified during the inquiry.
Detectives from Edinburghâs Public Protection Unit spent more than two years gathering evidence against OâFlaherty before he was initially arrested in June 2020, with further charges added over the following months.
He will now be sentenced at a later date.
Detective Inspector Jonny Wright said: âFor more than two decades John OâFlaherty targeted young woman who lived within, or frequented, the North of Edinburgh and subjected them to horrific levels of sexual abuse.
âThe impact of his offending had a significant and long-lasting effect on communities within the North and had it not been for the outstanding courage of these women in coming forward, then OâFlaherty would not have been brought to justice.
âI want to thank each survivor of OâFlahertyâs abuse for their strength during our investigation and I also wish to acknowledge the outstanding work of the detectives and criminal justice partners who worked so diligently to ensure this case reached a successful conclusion.
âTodayâs conviction should serve as a reassuring reminder to the public that time is no barrier to our investigation and whenever reports of sexual assault are made, we will utilise all resources at our disposal to investigate thoroughly and provide those affected with all the relevant support they require.â
CafeLife, the popular community cafe on Cheyne Street, is set to officially reopen on Monday 9th May with a brand-new menu and revamped interiors following its forced closure through the pandemic.
Run by renowned local charity LifeCare Edinburgh, all proceeds from the cafe go towards supporting the delivery of the organisationâs vital care services for older people living across Edinburgh.
The charity, which turned 80 last year, helps over 1,000 local older people a year. Essential services such as registered outreach care and day centres, help at home, meals on wheels and support for carers enable local older people to remain living full and independent lives.
The charity is today announcing that they will be joined by celebrated and best-selling Scottish crime writer Val McDermid for the official ribbon cutting event on Wednesday 11th May.
Val will sign copies of any of her books brought along on the day.  Â
Jemima Hankins, Community Hub Co-ordinator at LifeCare said âWe are absolutely delighted that we are reopening CafeLife at long last. Thereâs nothing else like us in the area and we know how much our regular customers have missed us.
“Weâve a huge bright space that appeals to all ages and stages; people pop in on their own or come with friends to enjoy good honest food and drink – with all proceeds going towards our vital care services for local people. We really are a cafe with a difference!
“Our loyal customers love to pop in to meet or make new friends, enjoy good value food and weâre relaunching with an exciting new menu designed by Chef Tony keeping our cafe staples such as soups, bacon rolls and paninis but weâve added pancakes, smoothies and milkshakes. The blueberry pancakes are a must!
“We are thrilled to be marking our reopening with a guest appearance from Val McDermid on Wednesday 11th May and we will be running lots of promotions across the week â check our socials for full details or pop-in for more info.â
LifeCare Edinburgh is a registered charity and with no service fully-funded the organisation relies on the generosity of its funders.
Maggie Tookey, a 71 year old volunteer with Edinburgh Direct Aid (EDA), is currently in Ukraine.
She has just returned to Lviv, having teamed up with Norwegian and Ukrainian volunteers to make a long and difficult trip to Kremenchuk and Kharkiv in north east Ukraine.
In Kharkiv, they delivered thyroxin & wound dressings to a hospital in the west of the city; they were lucky as the heavy shelling at that time was in the north of the city. In Kremenchuk, they brought food to traumatised displaced people from Kharkiv.
Maggie says it is the stories of the elderly that she finds particularly distressing – just as she did when helping elderly victims of the Syrian conflict in recent years: “forced not only to witness death taking place in front of them but also knowing that the final years of their lives may never be spent in their own homes again”.
This is her story …
THE FIRST WEEK IN UKRAINE BEGINNING 24th APRIL 2022
So it’s one week since arriving in Ukraine to begin EDA’s third session in this embattled but extremely resiliant country.
The resistance goes on and just about the whole world is here trying to support that resistance. Still there is the belief from all the displaced Ukranians I meet through our EDA distribution programme, that Ukraine simply can’t lose this war. We can only hope that they’re right.
I’m now in Kremenchuk in Poltava region – central/eastern Ukraine and probably considered the first reasonably safe place reachable from the hell of Kharkiv, around 200km away. We arrived here – ‘we’ being Ira, our constant translator and ‘fixer’ and Knut, our big gentle Norwegian driver with his rusty but trusty Sprinter van, late on Friday night. The journey was long and took us 2 days of fairly non stop driving.
The van is like a Tardis. It just seems to keep holding more and more valuable aid so we just kept filling it until finally Knut said enough! It was overloaded but he thought it would be OK and it was. The last item we loaded as a special request was 150 civilian body bags to help with the numbers of dead in the badly hit city of Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city. It was a sobering request but we had the space so we were able to help – why wouldn’t we? The bags would be taken onto Kharkiv from Kremenchuk.
The first portion of the journey was fine – fast on good roads and enough fuel stations to keep the tank topped up even though we were rationed to 20 litres.
The second part of the journey which was around a 1000km in total because of diversions for damaged roads etc, was far more challenging – some of it was ‘off road’ and the rest was over the most pot holed surfaces I’ve ever experienced.
It was so bad that we kept losing various fixtures and fittings off the van – the jarring was endless and exhausting but the main problem was the scarcity of diesel. We begged and pleaded but the little fuel available was reserved for emergency and military vehicles and not even to humble volunteer bringers of aid.
We had bought more fuel containers so could carry around 80 litres of diesel but these were the reserve. We needed to keep the tank reasonably full. On one occasion we were allowed up to the front of the queue but one time we sneaked in through the ‘no entry’ route on the advice of a local and came to a pump facing the queue. Smiling broadly and constantly and looking dim works wonders as does Ira our translator who probably sheltered us from much Ukranian swearing.
Kremenchuk is a small city of around 75,000 but 22,000 Internally Displaced people have arrived in the city since the beginning of this month. It’s a typical Soviet style place – mostly large blocks of flats and 70% of its population speak Russian. Most of the displaced have fled from Kharkiv and as ever, there are some terrible stories.
The distribution has taken two different pathways. We were supplying the increasing number of IDP shelters springing up out of necessity around the city – the pressure on the Municipality is great so every aid shipment is important.
We were able to unload into a big store room here and sort out what is needed for each shelter working with the local volunteer coordinator as our guide.
The second pathway involved working with the local priest who helps many individual families in his ‘parish’, listing their needs and passing these on to anyone who might be able to help. We were royally treated by the priest and his family – they were a delight. We were hugely over fed! Once again the admiration for these volunteers and the support they try to bring to their communities is admirable.
Food shortages cause problems for all in Ukraine and although these local volunteers are not enduring constant rocket attacks like Kharkiv and other places, the deprivations of war are suffered by all.
Once again the terrible stories are told when we visit the IDP’s in the shelters. Most here are from Kharkiv, some from Donetsk and the Donbas.
They are all distressing stories but perhaps none more so than by the elderly who are forced not only to witness death take place in front of them but know that the final years of their lives may never be spent in their own homes again. I find these the hardest to deal with.
One lady of 85, Varanella, from a rural village near Luhanske, came face to face with a Russian soldier when he entered her house as she was trying to escape.
He pointed his gun at her chest ready to shoot – terrified she turned and ran into the toilet but he opened fire on her fleeing back -somehow he missed and she bolted the door but he continued firing – the bullets only partially penetrated the metal door and thick walls – she cowered in terror and finally he seemed to get bored and went off to some other house but not before trashing the inside of hers.
She stayed there until dark and then managed to get help escaping from the village to a safer town and onto Kremenchuk. She cried constantly through the telling of this story, still reliving the horror of what happened. Many of her elderly neighbours were not so lucky. She was severely traumatised.
So now she has safety, warmth, support, companionship, and food – what she doesn’t have is her beloved home and this is the greatest wish for all those I met in Kremenchuk. We spent 4 days around the shelters and individual families distributing a lot of aid but mostly we talked.
I seemed to represent some symbol of hope to them but I felt a fraud. In the end what can I do – listen and hug!
UPDATE: THURSDAY 5th MAY
EDA is just back late last night from Kharkiv very close to the Russian border and a very dangerous place to be. There is constant shelling in some parts of the city and many have died there.
I was part of a larger food and medical aid delivery by the Ukraine Guardian Angels group – all volunteers just like us.
EDA was delivering much needed Thyroxin and eye medication and wound dressings. We were pleased to complete the job safely.
EDA and its team had also just completed a 4 day distribution of urgent food and hygiene goods in the small city of Kremenchuk, in Central/eastern Ukraine.
The city and its fantastic local Ukrainian teams of volunteers are now under huge pressure to offer shelter to over 22,000 displaced and traumatised people who have fled Kharkiv and other Eastern cities being flattened by constant Russian shelling.
Edinburgh Direct Aid does what it can but it can only do what the funding allows. We need delivery transport, food and medical supplies. These are the basics. If we get help with these we can DELIVER. We are now back in Lviv taking a breather!
The Edinburgh Direct Aid Ukraine Relief Fund, which supports Maggie’s work, can be found at:
20 national charitable organisations to be recognised by The Queen for their work empowering young people
The UK Government yesterday announced a special one-off addition to the annual Queenâs Award for Voluntary Service (QAVS), in honour of Her Majesty the Queenâs Platinum Jubilee.
Her Majesty has displayed a life-long commitment to public service throughout her 70-year reign, and the annual QAVS is the highest award given to small volunteer groups across the UK. Awardees cover a wide range of activities such as dementia support clubs, community theatres and therapeutic garden projects.
The Queenâs Platinum Jubilee Award for Volunteering will now shine a spotlight on 20 national charities working to empower young people aged 16-25. The number 20 has been chosen to reflect 20 years of QAVS.
A special judging panel has been convened for the award, comprising civil society sector experts and youth representatives including Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson, Fionnuala Jay OâBoyle and Ndidi Okezie.
Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries said: “Since The Queenâs Award for Voluntary Service was set up 20 years ago to commemorate the Golden Jubilee, thousands of hard working local volunteer groups across the UK have been recognised for benefiting their communities.
“Weâre delighted to be extending our recognition this year to some outstanding national charities through this special Queenâs Platinum Jubilee Award for Volunteering.
“We want to celebrate the important work done by national charities to empower young people with the skills they need to develop and grow. This is a fitting way to recognise the 70 years of selfless service Her Majesty has given to this country.”
Sir Martyn Lewis CBE, the QAVS Chair said: “Her Majestyâs faithful service to the nation over 70 years has been an inspiration to us all and is mirrored by countless acts of volunteering happening each day across the UK.
“For this special Jubilee Award we are looking forward to celebrating outstanding work with young people, helping them to flourish and be the best they can be. Itâs a theme thatâs important to all of us and is close to Her Majestyâs heart.”
The Platinum Jubilee Queenâs Award for Voluntary Service is now open for applications until 17 June. Nationally registered charities helping young people (aged 16-25), who have had a national impact either on a UK-wide, or England, Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland basis are invited to apply.
A judging panel including sector experts and young people will select 20 winners to be announced in The Gazette in October. Winners will be presented with this special award at a ceremony in November.
Recent QAVS winners include:
Small Acts of Kindness who provide practical gift bags to lonely and socially isolated older people in Hertfordshire and signpost them to support services.
Equation in Nottingham who deliver projects in schools and the community to help prevent domestic abuse and encourage healthy relationships.
Gurnos Menâs Project in Glamorgan who get disengaged young men involved in community volunteering and horticulture, as well as helping them improve core skills.
Second Wave Centre for Youth Arts in London who run creative projects with young people and work with them to explore key issues such as knife crime and grooming.
Friends of M.V. Freedom in Dorset who take disabled people out to sea on a specially adapted boat.
Via Wings in County Down who provide a wide range of support to those in need, including a food bank, teenage supper club, homework support, learning, and counselling.
Westhill & District Menâs Shed in Aberdeenshire where socially isolated men can share skills, make friends and work together on repairing/refurbishing projects for the community.
Nominations for the 2023 QAVS awards are now open until 15 September 2022.
Heart Research UK Healthy Heart Tip, written by the Health Promotion and Education Team at Heart Research UK
Thursday 28th of April 2022 was Britainâs âOn Your Feetâ day. This is a national awareness day to promote the benefits of sitting less and moving more.
Cutting down on the amount of time we sit can help to reduce your risk of developing heart disease, becoming overweight or obese and developing diabetes.
Here are a few tips on how to reduce sitting time:
Small changes
Think of one or two small changes you could make to help you to move more throughout the day. For example, try taking regular breaks from your computer, use the stairs more often, or stand during phone calls and presentations. If you work at a desk, you may even consider improving your setup by investing in a standing desk!
Keeping children active
Only 20-23% of children meet the physical activity guidelines of one hour per day so we should try to encourage children to exercise daily. On days off, aim to get outside and play some games in the garden, visit the local park, or go for a family bike ride instead of spending too much time on the couch.
Walk for a Healthier Heart
Making walking a more important part of our everyday life means taking positive steps towards a healthier heart and body.
Walking is free, requires no specialised equipment, can be done by all ages and abilities and fits in any lifestyle. Compete with friends, family and colleagues by logging your steps, miles or walking routes over the week.
A business that specialises in matching players to the right musical instrument has increased sales by 400% after receiving support from DigitalBoost, Scotlandâs national digital upskilling programme, delivered by Business Gateway.
Founded by Tim and Helen Wright, former professional musicians, in December 2015, Tim Wright Fine Violins is an independent violin dealership based in Edinburgh, selling violins, violas, cellos and their bows.
Helen approached Business Gateway for advice during the pandemic when she and Tim decided to adapt the business. Lockdown had presented challenges for customers who were unable to trial their instruments in person, a fundamental process when it came to purchasing their products.
Working closely with Business Gateway, Helen conducted a strategic review of the business and accessed specialist digital support through DigitalBoost. This helped her to develop their website into an online shop, enabling clients to âget to knowâ the instruments before playing them for a trial period.
The business also accessed regular 1:1 support from a dedicated business adviser, as part of Business Gatewayâs Growth Service, as well as advice on marketing practises.
This has resulted in significant growth for the business, and business enquiries have increased by 700%. They have also expanded their overall market reach to new clients across Scotland, beyond the Edinburgh market, with customers coming from the USA, Japan, Africa, and across Europe.
Tim Wright, Founder, Tim Wright Fine Violins said: âWe were already thinking about ways to grow the business. When the pandemic hit, this became more important, so we approached Business Gateway for advice as about how we could find ways to raise the profile of our service and share our expertise and knowledge of our products virtually.
âThanks to the support from our DigitalBoost consultant, our website has grown into a digital shop-front, which has not only seen us through the pandemic but also allowed us to grow and reach the global marketplace for fine string instruments.
âWorking with Business Gateway has helped us to develop processes for making action plans and sticking to them. Our business was based around our love of violins as opposed to any more formal business planning, we needed support to learn how to make decisions for business growth. We had reached a point where success felt intimidating, we now feel as though we have a secure, manageable plan for our growth.â
Al Bryce, adviser, Business Gateway said:âTim and Helen have a unique business and, with the support of Business Gateway specialists, they adapted their services to work for an online platform. In doing so, they reached a much wider market, achieving significant growth and success throughout the pandemic and beyond.
âTim Wright Violins is a fantastic example the success that can be achieved by adapting your service and getting your business online. We would encourage all businesses to make use of the free DigitalBoost service if there are areas where support is needed.â
Scots charity revives inspirational awards that help transform assisted living
An inspirational competition to bring tomorrowâs world to life has relaunched after a two-year break forced by the pandemic â and is also marking Blackwoodâs 50th year enabling people to live independently.
The Scottish-based challenge has previously delivered a host of life aids for people who are ageing or have disabilities, including an app that helps make living spaces safer for people with dementia and a “spill proof” spoon for those affected by conditions which cause them to shake.
Now the Blackwood Design Awards â which attracts entries from all over the world – are resuming bigger than before and hope to inspire a new army of inventors to get involved in the Dragon’s Den-style challenge with new designs, technologies and adaptations submitted.
Fanchea Kelly, CEO of Blackwood, one of Scotland’s most respected experts in specialist housing and care, said: “It feels incredible to have the design awards back – and we can’t wait to see the pent-up inventiveness that is about to be unleashed.
âOver the nine years since we created and launched the awards, it has always amazed us to see how varied the entries have been. From intricate, high-tech products to basic designs and ideas that simply havenât been considered before.
âThere is an entire world of untapped innovation out there. Weâre delighted to be offering an outlet for that creativity and inventiveness again and feel certain weâll be helping more transformative products to become a reality.â
The Scottish independent living specialistâs competition is open for inventions, designs and concepts that can boost independent living and enable people with disabilities to live life to the full.
The deadline for submissions in June 30.
This yearâs competition will be judged the following distinct categories: Best Collaborative Project, Best New Concept and Best New Aids, Equipment or Accessible Technology.
The competition can be entered by groups or individuals and is open to both seasoned professionals and gifted amateurs, meaning that both technologically advanced and those simpler, yet often most successful designs, are equally welcome.
Fanchea added: âThe main thing we look for is the innovation to make a huge difference in helping those living with disabilities or age-related conditions to live more independently.
âMany previous entrants have gone on to achieve great things so itâs a fantastic opportunity for all budding designers out thereâ.
Blackwood operates more than 1500 properties across 29 local authorities, and invests in innovation and technology to help people live life to the full. The charity has already built two developments of tech-smart âBlackwood Homesâ in Glasgow and Dundee which use a âCleverCogsâ digital system to make life easier for older people and people with disabilities
People looking to join can find more information at:
Alice Gully and Kate Mactaggart, business women and mothers, both aged 46 from the Scottish Borders have been selected out of thousands of applicants to participate in the August 2022 Mongol Derby race.
Gully and Mactaggart (AKA Doddieâ5 Dazzlers) are racing to raise ÂŁ30,000 in aid of My Nameâ5 Doddie Foundation, set up by fellow Scot, Doddie Weir OBE. The Foundation is committed to helping improve the lives of those affected by Motor Neuron Disease.
With just 40 selected jockeys riding, this gruelling 1000km course takes up to 10 days and it is regarded as the longest and toughest horse race in the world. It is genuinely dangerous with a high chance of injury and typically only half the jockeys complete the race.
This is the greatest equine adventure in the world â high passes, huge valleys, wooded hills, river crossings, wetland, dunes and of course open steppe.
The jockeys live with the herders at night, eat local food (a diet of mutton and offal) and rely on their wits and skill during the day. Weather extremes are expected in the Mongol Derby with temperatures ranging from freezing to 38â°C and anything from horizontal rain to scorching sun.
To prepare for this epic race, Alice and Kate are both currently undergoing an intense training and exercise regime, which includes cycling 100 miles and rowing 21,000 meters per week, as well as a weekly 5k run, 20,000 steps per day and over 7hrs in the saddle each week.
A huge commitment to undertake in addition to their businesses and family life, with 6 children between them!
In 1224 Genghis Khan set up the worldâs first long-distance horse messenger system, which connected half of the planet.
Using a massive network of horse stations (âmorin urtuusâ in Mongolian) his hardy messengers could gallop from Kharkhorin to the Caspian Sea in a number of days.
Nearly 800 years later, for 10 days each August, the Mongol Derby recreates this legendary system, utilising a network of urtuus at 40km intervals along the entire 1000km course.
Over 2,070 shows now available to browse online, with more to be announced monthly in the lead up to the Fringeâs 75th anniversary this August
Today (Thursday 5 May), the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society is delighted to announce that tickets for a further 1,281 Edinburgh Festival Fringe shows are now available to browse and book atedfringe.com.
This is the third set of tickets to be released for 2022, with the first 283 shows revealed in March and 796 in April.
In total, there are 2,074 shows now available, with more set to be announced on Thursday 09 June. The official programme launch will take place on Thursday 07 July.
The 75th anniversary of the Fringe takes place from 05 â 29 August 2022 and will feature an exciting range of shows, with theatre, comedy, music, dance, circus, musicals, variety, cabaret, events and more all featured in the programme so far.
Below is a small representative sample of shows available to book from today. The full list of shows released so far can be found at edfringe.com.
Theatre
Paines Plough return to Summerhall this August with a programme of work, including Caste-ing, which explores âthe experiences of three black actresses using beatboxing, rap, song and spoken wordâ, Kathy and Stella Solve a Murder is âa true-crime podcast reframed as âa hilarious murder-mystery musicalââ; and Feeling Afraid as If Something Terrible Is Going to Happen is âa dark new comedy about vulnerability, intimacy, ego and truthâ starring Samuel Barnett, written by Marcelo Dos Santos and directed by Matthew Xia.
Hamlet with Ian McKellen features McKellen alongside Danish ballet dancer Peter Schaufuss in a new performance concept adapted from William Shakespeareâs play. It takes place at Ashton Hall, Saint Stephens Stockbridge.
Black Sheep at Assembly follows Livia: an aspiring circus star who uses âpoetry, music and performance to speak about the challenges a Black woman faces when daring to move into her powerâ.
A Hundred Words for Snow follows a teenage girl on âa comic, complex, epic, undulating storyâ as she journeys to the North Pole with her father’s ashes. Thatâs at Leith Arches, as is Bits N’ Pieces, âan access-all-areas approach to working-class life and what itâs like to come of age at the height of Scotlandâs drug crisisâ by Saltire Sky.
Something About Productions present two biographical music shows at Assembly: Something About George deals with Beatles star George Harrison, while Something About Simon tackles the life and work of Paul Simon.
At the French Institute in Scotland youâll find S-ex-iety, exploring the impact pornography has on the lives of âthree roommates on an intense journey through the adult industryâ.
Online, Ben Hur: The Theatre Show follows âa young princeâ whose eventful life includes slavery, revenge and an encounter with a man from Nazareth; while Outside the Gate is a dramedy about two mums meeting at the school gates, featuring an Iranian and an American living in Middle England.
Tinted at Gilded Balloon, âoriginally written as a disabled response to #MeTooâ, examines bodily autonomy and consent from a blind womanâs perspective. At the same venue is Angel by Henry Naylor: an award-winning story of a female anti-ISIS sniper who allegedly has more than 100 kills to her name. Fans of Naylor can also catch the European premiere of Afghanistan Is Not Funny by Henry Naylor, a description of the playwrightâs experiences in the war-torn region performed by the man himself.
Tamara Al-Bassam makes her Fringe debut with Able(ish) (Greenside), âa lighthearted monologue about one womanâs uphill struggle applying for disability support while coming to terms with her own strengths and limitationsâ. Also at Greenside, I just like you | a gay myth is âan intimate two-hander about the messy complexities of the contemporary gay dating experience.â
At Hill Street Theatre is Hey Thatâs My Wife!, a pastiche of 1950s Americana that follows two advertising executives as they navigate a tale as old as time: whoâs sleeping with whose wife? Hill Street Theatre is also where youâll find OCD Me, a one-woman comedy about what itâs like living with OCD, written and directed by Aisling Smith.
Theatre Paradok, âEdinburgh’s premiere experimental theatre societyâ, present Paradok Platform at Just the Tonic: âmore than ten brand new experimental pieces of theatre, ranging from comedy and drama to musicals and movementâ.
At Laughing Horse, Horrible History for Adults (Or Those That Think They Are!) offers âa zany mix of stand-up and historical reportage. Fearless lives, fearlessly lived from Lord Byron to Quentin Crispâ. Plus, Apradhini â Women Without Men is by India-based Theatre Nisha. Apradhini is âa collection of stories about women who have been incarcerated for life for crimes including armed robberyâ and murder.
Return to the Hiding Place, âCorrie Ten Boom’s biographical tale of forgiveness and reconciliation in the shadows of WW2â, is being staged at Palmerston Place Church, and focuses on a Dutch family hiding Jews in their small clock shop. Also at Palmerston Place Church is The Liberator, in which âa strange man radiating loveâ upends normality in a corrupt, cynical environment. âHow long before the powers that be crack down on this subversive, this quiet revolutionary, this liberator?â
Emil Ferzola stars in Bathroom of a Bar on Bleecker (Paradise in The Vault), the âtragicomic final recording of Americaâs number one comedy podcastâ. In the same venue is The Richard Osman Fan Club, âa farcical comedy based around a park bench, where we find an elderly lady and Richard Osman fan Greta, supposedly writing a novel, joined by young jogger and Granny killer Adam who ends up making various futile attempts to end Gretaâs life.â
At theSpace on North Bridge, A Young Girl’s Guide to Madness âtruly displays how draining it is to be a teenager in the 21st centuryâ; while The Hound of the Baskervilles at the same venue is an adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyleâs âside-splitting, bone-chilling mysteryâ.
PBH’s Free Fringe is hosting a pair of magic-themed theatrical shows: Reclaiming Harry, âa fabulously queer questâ from Rich Watkins (creator and star of Happily Ever Poofter), and Nightmare Magic: âa ghost story told using magicâ by writer and magician David Alnwick.
Fringe regulars Pianodrome are occupying a new space at the Old Royal High this year. Among their shows are Clara: Sex, Love and Classical Music, âthe story of 19th century piano star Clara Schumannâ, and Some Other Mirror, âa solo show about a gender identity crisis, in the high-pressure isolation of lockdownâ, written and performed by Laurence Owen and produced by Chronic Insanity.
Rapsody (Pleasance), is âa raw look at inner-city life in Britain todayâ, featuring four characters confronting âthe realities of our modern-day class system through live rap, trap and drillâ. No Place Like Home âis a tragic odyssey into gay club culture and the places we can call homeâ.
Captivate Theatre brings the comedy One Man Two Guvnors to the Rose Theatre this August, joining Francis Henshall in 1960s Brighton as he attempts to stop his two employers from meeting each other.
At the RSE Theatre, Hiding Anne Frank focuses on the story of Miep Gies, Otto Frankâs 32-year-old secretary who helped him and his family hide from the Nazis at great risk to her own life. RSE Theatre is also where youâll find The Gay Train, âa vicious love letter to the middle-class horror that is weekday morning TVâ by Yellow Mug Theatre that follows the events resulting from an attack of a non-binary student in a pub bathroom.
The Edinburgh Makars adapt Neil Simonâs Barefoot in the Park (The Royal Scots Club) this August. âCorrie, a romantic free spirit, decides to set up her conservative widowed mother with an eccentric, bohemian neighbour,â setting up conflict with her strait-laced new husband Paul. The Royal Scots Club also hosts Tay Bridge, âa homage to the victims of the Tay Bridge disaster of 1879 realised as a series of set piecesâ and an âinsight into the ordinary people of Victorian Dundeeâ.
Pip Utton as Bacon is at The Standâs New Town Theatre, depicting âthe gutters, sleazy bars, rough sex and alcoholâ of artist Francis Baconâs life. Timeâs Plague, also at The Standâs New Town Theatre, sees David Hayman return as everyman Bob Cunninghame, who rants âabout injustice and the state of the world⊠laughing at everything, including himself.â Itâs written by Chris Dolan, and directed by David Hayman Jr.
Winston and David (Underbelly, Bristo Square) sees Winston Churchill and David Lloyd George âwrestle with love, ambition and friendshipâ as Britain goes to war in 1914.
Comedy
Edinburgh Comedy Award winner John Robins presents his Work In Progress / Progress In Work at Just the Tonic, âa heady mixture of ropey material and competent crowd workâ. In the same venue, Taiwanese comic Kuan-wen curates Comedy with an Accent, a line-up of âcomedians from all over the world who are not native English speakersâ.
Shazia Mirza brings her show, Coconut, to Gilded Balloon, reflecting on the events of the past two years, while Rob Rouse (Bottom, BBC’s Upstart Crow) performs No Refunds. At the same venue, Tehran Von Ghasri (who was ânamed to honour the city of his birthâ) is a âcharismatic, sexy, no-holds-barred, Black, Iranian, Jewish, Baptist, Muslim, Zoroastrian, agnostic comedianâ who promises heâs GONNA GET CANCELLED.
Phil Wang assures us he is The Real Hero in All This at Assembly this Fringe, with more material âabout race, family and everything that’s been going on in his Philly little lifeâ. At Assembly Rooms, Reginald D. Hunter tackles âclimate change, mass unemployment, economic pandemics and the rise of global fascismâ in Bombe Shuffleur. And musical comedy duo Flo & Joan âare climbing out of their pits, armed with a piano and percussion section to bring you a brand new showâ: Sweet Release.
The Mash Reportâs Rachel Parris performs at Underbelly this year, performing âstand-up and songs about sudden love, the highs and lows of relationships, family, weddings, kids, going viral, going mental, and the baffling state of play in society right nowâ. And Sudanese-Aussie comedian Emo Majok presents his European debut, Black Santa, with âstories of adjusting from a refugee camp in East Africa to gifting out jokes globallyâ.
Pleasance hosts the return of three Fringe regulars as part of its programme: Nick Mohammed Presents The Very Best and Worst of Mr Swallow, Tim Key: Mulberry and Tim Vine: Breeeep!
At Frankenstein Pub, impressionist Danny Posthill âhas decided to put the world to rights with a brand-new show Stand Up for the People, where he takes you on a journey where comedians will be running our countryâ. At the same venue, This Is Your Trial returns to the Fringe: a âcomedy courtroom show where audience members accuse friends of crimesâ and comedians take on the roles of judge, prosecutor and defence lawyers.
Online, we have Mo-to-the-oncle, âa socially conscious solo comedy about a teen who must wear a monocle after his dad loses their insurance.â And Rob McLennan: Pool Shark offers âsmorgasbord of pun-heavy one-liners, quickfire jokes and sight gagsâ filmed on the go from various locations in New Zealand.
Potty Training With Joey Rinaldi is at Greenside, sharing âthe outrageous and humiliating details of being the only kid at school who peed into a urine bag while battling the church and his tormented momâ. Horrible Herstories presents an opportunity for âthe women of history to set the record straightâ.
Laughing Horse is home to Thor and Freya: Norse as F*ck, an hour of stand-up from emerging comedians Freya Mallard and Thor Stenhaug; while Sameer Katz (âthree-quarters of a PhD from Cambridgeâ) presents Agnostic Economist.
Monkey Barrell is home to the debut show from English stand-up and actress Thanyia Moore, Just Being Funny, while All Killa No Filla co-host Rachel Fairburn performs Can I Be Awful?.
Fringe regulars #Jollyboat return with two shows at PBH’s Free Fringe: Daft Puns, âa high-energy show of comedy songs,â and The Best of Jollyboat, âtheir best comedy songs from 10 yearsâ at the festival. Plus, two Edinburgh Newcomer nominees try out new material in Huge Davies and Janine Harouni Do New Jokes (WIP).
At RSE Theatre, Vik Footringâs Blood and Sorbet ârecounts the defining moments in growing up in a world where growing up happens later and laterâ, while Here Goes Nothing! joins New York comedian Brandon Barrera as he shares tales from his eventful life, from âcracking jokes with prostitutes in Amsterdam’s red light district to running with the bulls in Spainâ.
I’m Not a Girlboss, Not Yet a Womanboss (The Chrisroads Redux) presents âhumour, music and a reason to drink at middayâ from Edinburgh locals Chris Weir and Chris Iskander (Scottish Comedy Festival). At the same venue, Jay Lafferty presents Club Sets by herself and guests, offering âundiluted, unadulteratedâ material honed on the comedy circuit.
Poet, comedian and musician John Hegley returns to Summerhall with John Hegley’s Biscuit of Destiny, incorporating stories of John Keatsâ romantic adventures alongside Hegleyâs own life. Also at Summerhall, Edinburgh Deaf Festival Presents Perspectives with Gavin Lilley, âa deaf comedian who’s performed his signed shows to audiences across Europe. In his entertaining style, Gavin shares his experiences as a deaf person navigating a hearing world with hilarious consequencesâ.
The Edinburgh Yes Hub hosts Full Throttle OCD by Jim Dziobek and Kevin Turner: the former offering âfresh takes on lifeâ to help you âforget about this cesspool of a world we are leaving our childrenâ; the latter âthe fourth of five kids, a military veteran in a divided country, and â as if things can’t get worse â he’s got Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.â
Mark Thomas is back at The Stand Comedy Club this August with Black and White, âabout the simple act of being in a room together and toppling international capitalism.â A short distance away at The Standâs New Town Theatre, âEdinburgh-born supermodel Eunice Olumideâ presents AfroPolitiCool: âa hilarious exploration into the crazy and complicated world of the modern day political narcissists, sociopaths and psychopaths running the planet we live on todayâ.
Joffrey! The Pantomime is at theSpaceUK, retelling âthe true story of Joffreyâs fight to secure his rightful place on the Iron Throne, untainted by certain Season Eightâ. And Siobhan Argyle presents You’re on Mute! (A Musical Walk Down Lockdown Memory Lane). âCome experience the lighter, brighter, funny side of lockdown with songs to make you smile and laugh ranging from toilet roll shortages, online yoga, being on mute, work clothes for the lazy and many more!â
Music
The Nothing Ever Happens HereNEHH Presents⊠concert series returns to Summerhall this August with a programme including world music DJ Auntie Flo; musician and producer Cate Le Bon; experimental, electronic chamber-pop outfit Efterklang; shimmery, summery indie-pop duo Sacred Paws and off-kilter twosome Tune-Yards.
Mairi Campbell is at the Acoustic Music Centre, performing songs and stories with âdeep bardic heritage and masterful Celtic courage.â. At the same venue, John Carnie and Spider Mackenzie explore the bluesier side of a music legend in Tangled Up in the Blues: The Blues of Bob Dylan.
When theyâre not busy penning crime fiction novels, Mark Billingham, Val McDermid, Chris Brookmyre, Luca Veste, Doug Johnstone and Stuart Neville join forces as the Fun Lovinâ Crime Writers, âhappily murdering much-loved songs by The Clash, Elvis Costello, The Beatlesâ and more. You can catch them this year at The Standâs New Town Theatre.
In âa rare intimate evening of dark and light songsâ, Fringe stalwart Camille O’Sullivan will perform Dreaming at Underbelly, Bristo Square, incorporating songs by âBowie, Cohen, Pulp, Radiohead and Rufus Wainwrightâ.
At Pianodrome at the Old Royal High, âSean Logan presents funky and furious keyboard acrobatics with musings on life as a neurodiverse musicianâ with his show Full Spectrum, while harpist and vocalist Esther Swift âcombines her love of folk, jazz, classical and all things in-between” in Sound Effects, a brand-new commission from Celtic Connections.
The Jennifer Ewan Band performs the Bonnie Bayou Blues at the Argyle Cellar Bar, bringing together âa mix of heartfelt original songs, Louisiana accordion blues and old-time Cajun dance music with a Celtic tintâ. At the same venue, Los Chichanos bring to the Fringe âa live fiesta of psychedelic Latin vibesâ with Tropical Jungle Cumbia Fiesta.
Dancing on the Edge of Blue and Green is a concert of new music for solo piano, performed at at theSpaceUK.
At Assembly, The Three Seas features âan international, cross-cultural ensemble fusing West Bengali Baul music and Himalayan folk song with contemporary sounds from Sydney and Kolkataâ. Meanwhile, Stewart D’Arrietta shares âpoetry, stories and insightsâ as part of My Leonard Cohen: Up Close and Personal.
Bannermans hosts a selection of music performances at this yearâs Fringe, including Absolutely (Not) Free â An Evening of Zappa (performed by Pygmy Twylyte) and Beefheart â New Beef Dreams! by Orange Claw Hammer.
Gilded Balloon hosts an Epic Film Music Concert, âfeaturing violin, piano, guitar and a superb light showâ, and spanning soundtracks such as Pirates of the Caribbeans, Star Wars, Harry Potter, Game of Thrones and more. Plus, The Oxford Alternotives offer creative choral takes on contemporary music.
Scottish troubadour Dean Owens performs songs and stories from his back catalogue in From Leith to Tucson (Pleasance), blending the âunfettered enthusiasm of a rock’n’roller and the sympathetic delivery of folk’s best storytellers. Plus The Sorries return to perform âa Corries-inspired hour of uplifting traditional musicâ.
Perfect Forthâs Athena (Rose Theatre) combines âoriginal music inspired by Greek mythology and fresh arrangements of modern hitsâ.
Irish trad singer Cara Dillon will take to the stage at Musselburghâs The Brunton this Fringe, performing old favourites as well as material from her new album, Wanderer. At the same venue youâll find the Young Classical Artists Trust Showcase Concerts, as performed by Kronberg Academy musicians IrĂšne Duval, Jean-Selim Abdelmoula and Maciej Kulakowski.
The Jazz Bar includes some tributes to musical greats among its Fringe 2022 programme, including Cat Stevens Reconstructed (as reinterpreted by New York vocalist Jess Abrams) and Riding With the King: The Music of Eric Clapton, from âup-and-coming Czech jazz fusion guitaristâ Honza Kourimsky.
At The Queen’s Hall, experimental composer Michael Beggâs Black Glass Ensemble âreveals new music from the borderlands of classical and experimental musicâ in Black Glass in Pieces, while 70s folk-rock pioneers Lindisfarne return with âa classic five-piece line-up of long-time members, fronted by founding member Rod Clementsâ.
Stewart D’Arrietta heads to theSpaceUK to perform Tom Waits For No Man, tackling Waitsâ back catalogue with âcharacteristic gravel-voiced sensitivityâ. While WeMu âreimagines the traditional in a concert combining Western and Korean instruments, creating modern music based on ancient customsâ in Six Stories.
Cabaret and Variety
With late-night cabaret line-ups, the Kaye Hole Hosted by Reuben Kaye returns to Assembly, while Briefs will be âmanufacturing a conveyor belt of high-quality circus treatsâ with their show, Sweatshop.
Cab-arette Showtour, hosted in a taxi cab, offers an immersive experience as it takes an audience of five on a musical comedy tour.
At Underbelly, Definitely Maybe Actually Nevermind, sees drag artist Crystal Bollix in a ânew cabaret extravaganza all about the pitfalls of chick-flicks and Colin Firthâ. At Underbellyâs Circus Hub on the Meadows is âsubversive break-out hit of the international cabaret and circus circuitâ Blunderland, featuring âoutrageous nightlife naughtiness, club-kid antics and a heady dose of arthouse weirdâ.
At Gilded Balloon, Jesus LâOreal brings Nailed It!, as the âfabulous influencerâ tells stories from his life in a âhigh-octane hour of song, dance and interactive Jehovah’s Fitnessâ. Meanwhile, A Secret Show by magician Cameron Young offers a show âfilled with wonder, illusion and laughsâ.
In Darren McGarveyâs The Social Distance Between Us â Live at The Standâs New Town Theatre the Orwell prize-winning author and celebrated hip-hop artist Darren McGarvey asks: âIf all the best people are in all the best jobs, why is Britain such f*cking bin fire?â and more.
At Summerhall is Grandmother’s Closet, in which Luke Hereford (he/they) âstumbles along his journey of queer self-discovery through the glamorous spirit of his very own personal cheerleader â his Nan⊠all to the tune of Madonna, Kylie, Kate Bush and all of his favourite pop divasâ. Also at Summerhall is Life Is Soft by Turner prize-winning artist, performer and composer Martin Creed.
Like Other Girls at theSpaceUK âis the sensible roast of musical theater’s finest historical women that you’ve been waiting forâ. And Becoming Chavela âis a docu-cabaret performance of iconic Mexican singer Chavela Vargas Chavelaâs life and music, set within the art world and social milieu of mid-century Mexico Cityâ.
In Madame Chandelier’s Opera House Party at Greenside, you can join Madame Chandelier and âall her favourite opera characters for jokes, party games and lots of dramatic death scenesâ. At the same venue, The Magic Show Starring Liam A Black as the Glittering Prince of Magic, is a âbrand-new Las Vegas-style magic spectacularâ.
Just the Tonic will host Sugarcoated Sisters: Bittersweet at the Caves as they âunleash their multi-million-hit TikTok personas onto the stage⊠Armed with original songs, guitar and double bassâ. And âdrag queen Vanity von Glow swaps the studio for the stage as she interviews the stars of the Fringe in this hour-long live podcastâ, in The Vanity Project.
In Ask a Stripper at Laughing Horse, âStacey ‘The Legs’ Clare aka the Ethical Stripper is back with her work wife, Morag, to impart stripper-style wisdom into your lives and deliver some no-holes-barred stories from the Pubic Triangleâ. And the award-winning Lifeâs a Drag âtakes you on a reality-shaking rollercoaster ride of what it really takes to be a queenâ with âAustralian vocal powerhouseâ Dean Misdale.
Mono Restaurant is playing host to Drag Queen Wine Tasting, in which you can join âdrag queen, Vanity von Glow and wine expert, Beth Brickenden to taste through three wines and a snack, with a dash of mischief, a dollop of humour and a twist of glamourâ.
At Outhouse, Little West End Theatre Cabaret will present an âevening of sizzling cabaret fun using songs from many well-known cabarets and musical showsâ.
Absolute Burlesque Cabaret at Paradise Green is âEdinburghâs only homegrown burlesque and cabaret showâ, demonstrating that âregardless of age, gender, or belief system, everybody is a burlesque bodyâ.
At PBH’s Free Fringe, 1 Hour Straitjacket Escape Magic Show promises âmind-melting magic, showstopping laughs and unexpected twistsâ from award-winning magician and entertainer Arron Jones. And Laurie Black will be âjump-starting musical comedy into the future with synths and sick beatsâ, with her show, Dystopiano.
In Fladam’s Musical Comedy Hootennany! at Pleasance, Florence Poskitt and Adam Sowterâs âheartfelt and humorous songs tackle the topical with witty wordplay, rollicking piano and a dash of the Carry On!â. And The Magic of Jim, is âresident close-up table magicianâ and annual courtyard fixtureâs first indoor residency, promising an âjaw-dropping magic and true talesâ.
At the Voodoo Rooms is Elliot Bibby and the Magical Beach Ball. In this show, the multi award-winning magician is supported by his faithful friend Barry the Beach Ball for âan evening of mind reading, illusions and feats of the impossibleâ. Also Viva GlasVegas Burlesque Showcase, in which GlasVegas Showgirl Roxy Stardust âpresents an hour of burlesque performance featuring a host of homegrown heroes and traveling performers from far and wideâ.
Bamboozled at French Institute in Scotland sees artists Sonia Killmann and Constant Vigier invite you to their house-warming party. Expect âlive piano and electronic music, dance and projectionsâ.
Catch Ordinary via Fringe Online, âa modern pantomime solo show depicting all the parts of human life.â
At Greenside, A Death Has Occurred sees Kennedy Muntanga Dance Theatre return to the Fringe with their newest creation. This contemporary work tells the story of the miraculous journey of a young lion-hearted journalist. And Alice in Wonderland is an adaptation of the classic tale told through ballet.
Transhumance – winner of Best Weekly Award for Circus and Physical Theatre at Adelaide Fringe in 2020 â is at Laughing Horse. In this, âaward-winning clown Ania Upstill playfully explores what it means to be a trans human.â
At Summerhall, Dance Body sees internationally acclaimed writer and performer Yolanda Mercy (Quarter Life Crisis) âchallenge what being a plus-sized body means in the contemporary dance worldâ. And Taiwan Season: Tomato âis an absurdly funny expression of dancer-choreographer Chou Kuan-Jou’s ongoing interest in gender issues from a feminist perspectiveâ.
At Underbelly, Havana Steet celebrates the street dance culture of Cuba; while Rebel is a live circus rock tribute to David Bowie, bringing to life a body of work spanning more then 50 years.
Spoken word
At Pleasance at EICC, LBC broadcaster Iain Dale will appear in conversation with several public figures, including Keir Starmer, Jeremy Corbyn,Mary Beard, Ruth Davidson and Nadine Dorries.
Tales from the City Below is at Arthur Conan Doyle Centre. In this, Edinburgh medium, Ewan Irvine, âtells the tales of this city where it is said many still reside despite their earthly demiseâ – including the likes of Burke and Hare.
Triggernometry, theâ hit political and cultural podcast and YouTube phenomenonâ is in town for two nights only at Gilded Balloon.
At Greenside, Pauline Holmes Goes to the Dogs, is a âpoetry show for dog lovers, celebrating the opportunistic thieves stealing the Sunday roast, the family dogs who vet boyfriends and the rebels running amok on the heathâ. Plus, The Taste of Sweat and Sand is âa creative expedition through life after military service, exploring encounters with trauma and struggles with civilian adjustment.â
Guerilla Autistics Year 8 â Scenes From an Undiagnosed Life is at Laughing Horse. âFor the eighth year of this universally unique, neurodiversifying, audience-participatory solo show, Paul Wady has changed the name to Guerilla Autistics and wants to take you all back in time.â
At Paradise Green, Poems on Gender is âa series of poems on gender, sex and revolutionâ by David Lee Morgan.
PBHâs Free Fringe has Attila the Stockbroker â 40 Years in Rhyme. âCelebrating his 40th anniversary earning his living as a poet/musician, Attila is using this year’s Fringe to launch Heart On My Sleeve, his collected works, and 40 Years in Rhyme, his new dub poetry album.â Plus, In This Is Not Therapy, âjoin Tina as she tackles her fifties with as much humour, grace and sensible footwear as she can muster.â
At Summerhall, Stop Trying to Be Fantastic is a new work from award-winning writer/performer Molly Naylor. Itâs a âmostly true story about suffering, saviour complex, self acceptance and a magpie who refuses to quit.â
And at TheSpaceUK, The Church of the Fall is âone manâs award-winning celebration of the work of the late writer, musician and working-class genius that is Salford’s Mark E Smith and his group The Fall.â
Childrenâs shows
Roustabout adapts Dinosaurs and All That Rubbish, Michael Foremanâs rock-n-roll-fuelled environmental tale of dancing dinosaurs, at Assembly this August. At the same venue, Knuckle and Joint present The Adventures of Bo Peep, âa perfect theatre introduction for 2 to 6-year-olds with an interactive story and sensory learningâ.
At Deaf Action HQ you can catch Once Upon a Raindrop, âa cheerful, funny, magic show for toddlers: a walk-through performance with sensory games and magic tricksâ; and The Funny Punny Magic Show, âa riot of silly stunts and crazy magicâ from Tricky Ricky. Both shows are accessible to deaf and hard of hearing audiences, presented in partnership with Edinburgh Deaf Festival.
Pirates and Princesses vs Sea Monsters is âa family show filled with singing, dancing and comedyâ at Gilded Balloon. Meanwhile, Marcel Lucont presents Les Enfants Terribles â A Gameshow for Awful Children, âpitting children against adults and each other to try and find the most awful childâ.
Stage Door Enigma Theatre Company presents Game On! at Greenside: âan unexpected adventure with characters from alternative gaming worldsâ.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez‘s darkly comic tale, A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings, is at Summerhall. Two storytellers share a story âof magic realism⊠brought to the stage with beautiful, strange, emotional richnessâ.
Inside the Robot: Quick, I Need Your Help! is on at Just the Tonic, and features âstunning visual effects and immersive interactive technologyâ for kids aged 5 to 95. At the same venue, comedian Lee Kyle is An Actual Giant, presents âa family show for families who don’t think that kids are little angelsâ.
Performer Kat Placing devised Bubba-Licious (Laughing Horse) as âa sensory display of colour, sound, light and movement to spark joy and ignite wonderâ in babies and toddlers. For slightly older kids, Grumpy Pants is âa childrenâs show that entertains parents alongside kids with a mix of perfectly crafted juggling routines, clowning, physical comedy and fork throwing!â.
An âenchantingâ new adaptation of Beatrix Potterâs The Tale of Peter Rabbit and Benjamin Bunny will be staged outdoors for families at Musselburgh Racecourse.
Betwixt-and-Between present The Princess and The Dragon (PBH’s Free Fringe). Itâs described as a âmusic-full, modern fairy-tale about freedom, friendship and finding boundariesâ for children aged 7-11 and their families. Plus, Return of the Maths with Kyle D Evans is a âfast-paced hour of inclusive maths-based family funâ.
I Piano is âan interactive kids show about music and love, told with a piano, shadow puppetry and everyone in the room.â It takes place within the Pianodrome.
At Pleasance, Blue Badge Bunch describes itself as âthe disability Taskmasterâ â a âgame show with humour for all ages, where kids join in the games and learn about disabilityâ. Also at Pleasance, Everything has Changed is âa joyful, kaleidoscopic new show for 5 to 12 year-olds about change, why change happens and how to deal with itâ, created by theatre company Rhum + Clay and made in consultation with a child psychologist and children across London.
Physical storytelling specialists NYT bring The Lost Letters to Quaker Meeting House, âa magical portmanteau production of love, friendship and forgotten messages⊠a collection of heart-warming modern fables for older children and their families.â
At Rose Theatre, Captivate presents Smashing Shakespeare, a revolving selection of comic tales and musical tales adapting the Bardâs work for all ages.
Stockbridge Church is home to at least two âfun, interactive and educational show for babies and toddlersâ by Recitals for Wrigglers: The Lion and the Mouse, featuring music inspired by animals, and the international sounds of Wriggle Around the World! (featuring the story of the Gingerbread Man). Both feature violin and cello music.
ETC presents Our Teacher’s a Troll (theSpaceUK, a âcolourfully comic showâ written by Dennis Kelly (Matilda the Musical). And the Adventure Bubble Show with Milkshake promises âshadow bubbles, light bubbles, square bubbles, smoke bubbles, spinning carousels, track bubbles, vortexes, bubble puppets, giant bubble tubes and a million-bubble finaleâ.
Underbelly is the home of A Bee Story: âa uniquely Australian physical theatre show for children and families incorporating a kaleidoscope of circus, acrobatics, dance and live musicâ that also incorporates an important message about the environment. At the same venue, Manual Cinema Presents: Leonardo! A Wonderful Show About a Terrible Monster is an adaption of the children’s books by Mo Willems ârealised through puppets, paper cut-outs, DIY cinema and live original songsâ.
Musicals and opera
Carpe Diem Productions continue âtheir tradition of bringing powerful new music to the Fringeâ with The Last Judgement (theSpaceUK) featuring Peter D Robinson.
At Assembly Rooms, Friendsical isââa 60-minute celebration and loving parodyâ featuring characters called Ross and Rachel, but is ânot to be confused with the Warner Bros Entertainment Inc series Friendsâ.
As part of the Fringeâs online offering this year, the jazz-flavoured Cooperstown is âan opera about one heart too big and one heart too small that plays out like a present-day Othelloâ. Also online is Lag: A Zoomsical Comedy, âthe world’s first original musical created to be performed over video conferencingâ, written and directed by Haddon Kime.
A pair of musicals form part of the programme at Gilded Balloon. I Wish My Life Were Like A Musical âlifts the lid on awful auditions, debilitating dance routines, mid-performance mishaps, and backstage backstabbing â plus those magical moments that make it all worthwhileâ. RuneSical, on the other hand, is âan interactive parody musicalâ inspired by online game RuneScape.
Guilty: A Legal Musical Comedy is being staged at Greenside, giving âfictionâs greatest villains, from Hannibal Lecter to Cruella de Vil,â their day in court. And Dr Theatre uses songs from the likes of Cabaret, The Sound of Music, Blues Brothers, Wicked and more in Last Night a Musical Saved My Life!
Paradise Green is the venue for Gatsby: A New Musical, in which the team behind âJekyll!â recreate F Scott Fitzgeraldâs famous jazz-age masterpiece.
Sex With Friends (and Other Tiny Catastrophes) is a new musical following âsix friends as they fall in love and fall apartâ â you can catch it at Pleasance.
Edinburghâs Captivate Theatre has their own mini-season of work at the Rose Theatre â in addition to their own Sunshine on Leith, theyâre also staging versions of Lionel Bart’s Oliver!, Shrek the Musical and The Addams Family â A New Musical, as well as an all-female staging of We Will Rock You: Young@part from the Captivate Theatre Summer School.
Alexander Flemingâs discovery of penicillin is the subject of musical production The Mould that Changed the World at The Edinburgh Academy this August.
Seven and a Half Years (theSpaceUK) is a âunique one-man musicalâ that âtells an extraordinary true survivorâs story, touching on many issues including grief, love and mental healthâ. And Trial by Jury is âa one-act operatic satire of the British legal systemâ in the 1960s.
Fat Rascal Theatreâs Unfortunate: The Untold Story of Ursula the Sea Witch returns to Underbelly âin a tell-all tale of sex, sorcery and suckersâ.