It’s not funny: Edinburgh Fringe ‘on brink of revolt’

Edgy comics edged out to the fringes by ‘money-making mafia?’

Edinburgh Fringe is in on the brink of a revolt because it’s becoming too exclusive and mainstream. A group of comedians have joined forces to speak out about the festival which they believe to be catering for “white boys in skinny jeans and posh voices”. Continue reading It’s not funny: Edinburgh Fringe ‘on brink of revolt’

Free Fringe with North Edinburgh Arts

Free visit to the Edinburgh Fringe!

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North Edinburgh Arts has partnered up with the Fringe Society to offer 20 free places on a trip to the Edinburgh Fringe. This is a fantastic opportunity, so book now before places fill up.

The trip will be on Wednesday 17th August and will leave NEA between 6-7pm, depending on which show is chosen. The choice of shows all have a political theme.

The choice of shows to vote for are:

Mark Thomas: The Red Shed
The Inspectors Call
Faslane
Discretion Guaranteed

 

TO BOOK:

Telephone 0131 315 2151

Email admin@northedinburgharts.co.uk

or in person at North Edinburgh Arts.

When you book, please state which show you would prefer to see. The show with the most votes is the show that everyone will go to see.

Spaces are limited and will be allocated on a first come, first served basis. The trip is free, including the cost of your return bus fare.

Please note: This trip is only suitable for adults

Mind Bending Painting Live on Stage With Chris Dugdale!

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With his 14th Royal Performance recently under his belt, there is nowhere Chris Dugdale prefers performing than Edinburgh!
In this year’s show you will see an unusual painting that plays games with the mind, a signed card penetrate a sealed bottle of wine, a hypnotic rubik’s cube and real genuine mind control…
Chris Dugdale
Full Circle
Assembly George Square – 16:10
Suitable 10+

Out of the Blue at Forest Fringe

Out of the Blue at Forest Fringe 

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The Forest Fringe grew from a totally independent, not-for-profit space in the midst of the Edinburgh Festival …

Out of the Blue grew from a totally independent, not-for-profit space in the midst of Edinburgh – all year round …

Now Out of the Blue and the Forest Fringe are engaged in a merging of space, ideas and productions at the Out of the Blue Drill Hall as part of as an ever audacious programme of experimentation and adventure which makes exciting, improbable, spectacular things happen.

Out of the Blue’s contribution of home grown Leith talent is wide ranging.

Tales from the Hanging Captain
Sat 13th & Sun 14th August

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An exuberant theatre production – made in Leith for the people of Leith – and beyond! Having previewed as part of this year’s Leith Festival the company regroup to get their stories out to the wider world.

As locals gather in the fictional Leith bar ‘The Hanging Captain’, auld Sandy takes the audience on a voyage through time and shares the stories of the Dockers involvement in the whaling industry, the ‘Darien Scheme’ and the strikes of 1913.

As Joyce Mcmillan has said: “if ever there was a town full of stories, that knew how to persevere in telling them, it’s the venerable, beautiful and unpredictable Port of Leith.”

And who better to perform the riveting stories than two of Out of the Blue’s all year round resident theatre companies, Active Inquiry and Strange Town.

Joyce McMillan said in her 2015 review of the companies’ “Persevere” production: “difficult not to be moved and shaken by the profound sense of place, time and continuity conjured up by this fine 24-strong community company” (June 2015)

Local people involved in the production also commented:

“It was a great experience to be part of a project which engaged with the history of our local area, whilst simultaneously engaging with the community that lives here now”

Chains on sink plugs
Thu 18 & Fri 19th August, 12pm

David Nicol is a long time participant at the Out of the Blue Drill Hall who is a poet and actor, musician and painter.

Chains on sink plugs is his first solo show.

Chains on sink plugs is a personal journey explore what it like being in a wheelchair from the 1970s to 21st century. What it’s like being on wheels instead of legs. And gives people a glimpse of a world many don’t know exists.

#artcore radio plays
DEAD ENDS
Fri 12th – Fri 19th August

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“DEAD ENDS” is a new radio drama serial created for and performed by 18-25 year olds, which is launching as part of this year’s Forest Fringe based at the Out of the Blue Drill Hall.  It features a realistic story about a group of young people who work in a fictitious historical/ghost tour company in Edinburgh. They are poorly trained, badly paid. Some of them care about their work and others do not . . .

The current series consists of eight episodes, released at midnight each day of the run.

To find out more, to listen to the latest episode, or to subscribe to the podcast via iTunes once it goes live on Friday 12th August, visit; www.deadendtours.co.uk

“DEAD ENDS” is produced by Strange Town for #artcore

The youth arts project, #artcore is based at Out of the Blue, and is one of nine youth arts hubs in Scotland, funded by Creative Scotland’s Time to Shine Fund

www.artcore.org.uk   www.strangetown.org.uk

Listing Information

All performances are at the Out of the Blue Drill Hall, 36 Dalmeny Street, Edinburgh, EH6 8RG

Performance dates and times

Forest Fringe: Thu 11th – Sat 20th Aug
Tales from the Hanging Captain: Sat 13th & Sun 14th August, 1pm
Chains on sink plugs: Thu 18 & Fri 19th August, 12pm
#artcore radio plays DEAD ENDS: Fri 12th – Fri 19th August

Tickets

All tickets are free by donation
To book tickets, please visit http://www.outoftheblue.org.uk/category/forest-fringe/

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ForestFringe

A Pleasance Fringe for families

Providing children from the earliest age with access to high quality children’s theatre while offering a dedicated space for under 10s and their families to relax is the mission of the Pleasance Kidzone.

Started in 2009 as a way of supporting the children’s theatre programme, the Kidzone has led to an explosion in children’s activities at the Pleasance over the last eight years. In 2015 ticket sales for Children’s shows exceeded 40,000 compared to only 4,000 when it started in 2009. This year, 18 different children’s shows feature in the Pleasance programme.

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The Pleasance remains the only venue in Edinburgh to offer a completely dedicated child-friendly area. The Kidzone features a giant inflatable igloo theatre, home to a varied and largely interactive theatre programme, a cafe serving child-friendly food, a nappy change, pram shelter and weather-proof art pods where children (and adults) can engage in imaginative and fun arts and crafts activities.This year, Kite-making, face-painting and grizzly monster-making are just a few of the workshops taking place in a new workshop tent adjacent to the art pods.

Pleasance Kids Coordinator Candida Alderson said: We created the Pleasance Kidzone to give parents and children a hassle-free and inexpensive way to experience the Fringe.

“Deciding which shows to see, worrying about food, where you’re going to put your pram and change a nappy, as well as working out how you’re going to keep the kids occupied between shows, are all big concerns when you’re planning a family day out on the Fringe. We are easy to get to, and have all the things you need, close at hand, which hopefully ensures a great Fringe Day Out for the whole family.

“It’s become a popular Fringe destination for families, many of whom returneach year, because we programme top class children’s theatre from around the globe for all ages, and run lots of creative and imaginative activities to occupy the kids between shows, so that the adults can sit for a while and read the papers, chat to other parents (it’s the best place to pick up word-of-mouth show suggestions) and enjoy the hustle and bustle of the Courtyard, without feeling that they’re getting in the way. It’s very easy to spend a whole day with us, and not feel too frazzled by the end of it!”

One of this year’s highlights – model-making workshops from renowned Aardman model maker, Jim Parkyn, who will also be creating an ongoing installation, with the help of performers and passers-by, on Beside, the venue next door to the Kidzone. Pleasance Kids also makes its pop-up debut at the Edinburgh International Conference Centre, with two very special interactive shows for young children, from Edinburgh-based Starcatchers, and the renowned Bootworks Theatre.

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CHILDRENS SHOWS

Little Red is clever. Little Red is bright. Little Red will find a way to beat you in a fight. Olivier-winning producer Paul Taylor-Mills and the writing duo behind the success of The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 ¾ bring their musical hit Red Riding Hood to Pleasance Beyond for a limited run. The same Taylor-Mills is behind the much-loved take on Dr Seuss’s The Cat In The Hat which comes back to Pleasance One for undoubtedly another sell-out run.

The Showstoppers, Olivier-winning West End improvisation group, bring their children’s show back to the Fringe and it promises to be one crazy adventure filled with music and laughter! Children aged 0-5 can also enjoy Moo on the Fringe, an interactive music session on The Green.

Pleasance Kids presents a pop-up venue within the Edinburgh International Conference Centre this August, which hosts two special interactive shows: Hup andThe Many Doors of Frank Feelbad. For the very little ones, Scottish based, pioneering organisation Starcatchers in association with the RSNO and Pleasance Kids present Hup, taking both babies and grown-ups alike on an unforgettable music journey. How do we cope when things go missing? From Bootworks Theatre, who brought the highly-acclaimed The Incredible Book Eating Boy, comes The Many Doors of Frank Feelbad – Frank has lost his Mum and uses everything from a scavenger hunt to dub-step to find her.

Equally superb in dealing with a difficult matter is Follow Me, the story of Nansi who has just become a big sister for the first time and, worrying her world will change forever, escapes to an imaginary world. Future Perfect by Small Storiesrevolves around Dominic who goes back in time to change the past and make his future perfect.

Acclaimed Edinburgh based Drama Specialists, The Acting Scene are running interactive drama workshops based around a brave snail on a life-changing adventure, whilst a different snail also embarks on an adventure on the tail of a humpback whale with her seafaring father in Tall Stories’ wonderful production ofThe Snail and The Whale, based on Julia Donaldson’s popular book. Mermalade is not a tale of a Little Mermaid but of a mermaid on a quest to make sense of a cryptic note and a pearl she was left with – brought to Edinburgh by Manhattan Children’s Theatre and following its successful show The Last of the Dragons last year.

The theme of the sea continues in Jellyfish, an inspiring story of a family sharing a house with a giant glowing jellyfish which uses puppetry and original music to explore the topic of parenthood and mental health. Ribber Ribbet Croak is a playful story of Grandma and Grandpa Frog who leave their pond to plan for a big surprise. This interactive show by Moulded Theatre uses puppetry, Makaton (language programme using signs and symbols to help people communicate) and music and is suitable for children of all needs.

Also on a quest – to rescue his kidnapped friends – is Captain Flinn in Les Petits Theatre’s Captain Flinn and The Pirate Dinosaurs 2: The Magic Cutlass. This is a sequel to Primary Times Children’s Choice Award-winning part one.

The Pleasance’s favourite regulars are also back: Aardman’s animator Jim Parkyncomes to The Green with series of model-making workshops for children and adults alike – creating a mini masterpiece to feed into The Amazing Scene Machine and celebrating Aardman’s 40th birthday is The Amazing Scene Machine Does Aardinburgh! where audiences will help create a very special 3D painting of Edinburgh featuring some of Aardman’s stars including Morph, Shaun the Sheepand Wallace and Gromit.

Also returning is The Guardian’s cartoonist Harry Venning with Release Your Inner Cartoonist and the irreverently funny I Hate Children Children’s Show, as well as the much-loved Art Pods on the Green. And staying along an interactive theme Pleasance Kids has commissioned kite-making workshops from Go Fly Your Kite, Grizzly Monster-making activities with our extraordinary resident designer, Paul Garner and Make-Up Workshops with remarkably gifted regular Kidzone face painter Lynn Fraser (Fantoosh).

PLEASANCE FUTURES

Pleasance Kids is part of Pleasance Futures, the development arm of The Pleasance Theatre Trust.  The Pleasance’s enduring mission is to provide a launch pad for the very best emerging talent and the brightest of new ideas. In 2016 The Pleasance Theatre Trust will provide over £125,000 of direct financial support to up and coming talent both on and off stage through a number of Pleasance Futures projects.

Pleasance Kids aims to nurture a love of the creative arts from an early age, using it to inspire and engage children to learn. This year, Pleasance Kids is seeking funding to programme theatre from around the UK, specifically supporting topics in the Curriculum for Excellence, initially into primary schools in the Edinburgh and the Lothians.  To kick this off, from 15th August, Pleasance is offering schools a specialBack to School ticket offer, with the added opportunity of performers visiting schools to run a workshop or activity after the show (for schools who have booked 20 or more tickets) for free.

Tickets available at:

www.pleasance.co.uk or by phoning 0131 556 6550

Will Pickvance: Anatomy of the Piano (for beginners)

Will Pickvance

presents

Anatomy of the Piano (for beginners)

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 At the Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2016 and part of the Made in Scotland Showcase 2016 

VENUE: Scottish Storytelling Centre Venue 30a

DATES: Aug 4 Preview; Aug 5-28 (not 17, 22, 23, 24)

Aug 10 BSL interpreted performance

TIME: 13:00 (55 mins)

Will Pickvance’s acclaimed family show, Anatomy of the Piano (for beginners) returns to the Fringe, taking audiences on an entertaining, musical journey through piano history. The performance combines brilliantly played piano music with a fascinating exploration of the instrument Will loves.

An Edinburgh-based pianist, storyteller and renowned Fringe performer; Will Pickvance has an infectious passion for inspiring audiences of all ages to enjoy and make music.

One Christmas, Will asks Father Christmas for a space rocket. Instead, he gets a piano. Despite his initial disappointment, Will realises that his new gift might even be better – now he can travel wherever and whenever he wants. In Anatomy of the Piano (for beginners) we join Will on a fantastical musical adventure through space and time, finding out where pianos come from, how they evolved; experiencing Beethoven’s bad moods, Bach’s cave piano and jamming with Fats Waller along the way.

‘Highly entertaining maestro for young and old alike’ **** The Stage

Will’s virtuoso musical skills, whirlwind piano playing, witty conversational style and spinning of fabulous yarns, are complemented by quirky, hand-drawn projections by local artist Tim Vincent-Smith. 

Anatomy of the Piano (for beginners) is a hugely entertaining celebration of the piano, enthralling audiences of all ages. Will’s inspirational love of music and his impressive self-taught piano skills will encourage and entice the musician within us all.

‘the pace of the show is riveting, adults shaking their shoulders, children banging the floor while their mouths hang open in astonishment’ ArtsHub Australia

Recommended for ages 6 and over, Anatomy of the Piano (for beginners) was the Runner-Up, Best Children’s Show, Fringe World Festival 2015.

Created and performed by Will Pickvance

Direction by Magda Dragan

Dramaturgical development by Robert Alan Evans

Producing support by Alice McGrath / Red Bridge Arts 

willpickvance.com

redbridgearts.co.uk

 

LISTINGS

VENUE: Scottish Storytelling Centre Venue 30a

DATES: Aug 4 Preview; Aug 5-28 (not 17, 22, 23, 24)

Aug 10 BSL interpreted performance

TIME: 13:00 (55 mins)

TICKETS:  £9/£7 /£28 Family; (Preview – £7/£5 /£20 Family)

BOX OFFICE: 0131 556 9579 www.scottishstorytellingcente.co.uk

Hess resurrected for Festival Fringe

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ON the 75th anniversary of Hitler’s deputy Rudolf Hess bailing out over Scotland on a self-appointed peace mission – and the 70th anniversary of the start of the Nuremberg Trials – Kinbur Productions and the Gilded Balloon are reviving HESS, Michael Burrell’s award-winning, one-man play, for the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Continue reading Hess resurrected for Festival Fringe

Leaf by Niggle: Tolkein at Storytelling Centre

PUPPET STATE THEATRE COMPANY presents

JRR Tolkien’s Leaf by Niggle

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At the Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2016 and part of the Made in Scotland Showcase 2016 

Scottish Storytelling Centre, Venue 30a

Aug 4 Preview 17:00; Aug 5-28 (not 10, 15, 22, 23) 17:00 (75mins)

Aug 17 17:00 BSL interpreted performance

Performed by Richard Medrington

Soundtrack composed by Karine Polwart and Michael John McCarthy

Directed by Andy Cannon; Lighting by Gerron Stewart; Design Support by Ailie Cohen; Movement support by Janice Parker; Stage Management by Elspeth Murray

Puppet State Theatre Company returns to the Scottish Storytelling Centre for this year’s Festival Fringe, as part of Made in Scotland, with its acclaimed new production of JRR Tolkien’s little-known short story, Leaf by Niggle.

“Exquisite … so beautifully told … completely seductive” ****The Scotsman

This solo storytelling show, created and performed by Richard Medrington, draws on Richard’s personal family history as an introduction to Tolkien’s original story. Surrounded by ladders, bicycles and heirlooms, Richard Medrington (Jean from The Man Who Planted Trees) recounts Tolkien’s miniature masterpiece with a beautiful soundtrack composed by Karine Polwart and Michael John McCarthy.

“Tolkien’s lord of small things…enchanting one-man show” ****The Guardian 

Leaf by Niggle is considered by some to be Tolkien’s most autobiographical work, springing from his fear of not finishing The Lord of the Rings. In 1939, as war clouds were darkening, he woke up one morning with the story almost complete in his mind and wrote it down.

Niggle is a struggling artist who is trying to complete his magnum opus, a painting of a curious tree. He isn’t sure when he will need to set out on his journey, but he is worried that he won’t be able to finish the painting before it’s time to leave.

Leaf by Niggle is often seen as an allegory of Tolkien’s own creative process, and, to an extent, of his life. It is a tale of transformation, which examines the relationship between an artist, his creation and his community.

Richard Medrington is the artistic director of Puppet State Theatre Company and for the past nine years the company has been touring the world with its much lauded production of Jean Giono’s The Man Who Planted Trees.

This new adaptation of Leaf by Niggle is a reflection of Richard’s long held ambition to perform a staged version of the story. In 1993, Richard gave an acclaimed one-off storytelling performance of the piece at the Carberry Festival and has nurtured hopes of performing it to a wider audience ever since.

“a salve on the soul” **** The List

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As a result of appearing in the very first Made in Scotland showcase in 2009 with The Man Who Planted Trees, Puppet State’s international touring has included two tours to Australia and New Zealand. In 2013 we took part in the Sydney Opera House’s first live stream of a performance to multiple remote audiences, some over 700 miles away. I am looking forward to performing our new show, Leaf by Niggle, in this year’s Made in Scotland showcase and seeing where this unique opportunity will lead us.” Richard Medrington

“This is my first ever commission to compose for theatre and it’s a challenge and a joy to collaborate with such an accomplished creative posse. Niggle’s journey, and Richard Medrington’s beautifully personal and familial framing of it, feels quite close to the bone for me, and very relevant to our times. There are so many possible ways to receive it and get inside of it, as there are always with deep stories. But to me it’s about the fundamental human impulse to create and find meaning and beauty in life, and how duty, convention and the sheer necessity of toil can cut against this. The gap between the world as we imagine it and the world as it sometimes is – in all its reductive, mechanistic brutality – can be hard to hold in a single heart. But Niggle’s story feels hopeful nonetheless”. Karine Polwart 

With thanks to the Tolkien Trust and the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh

Supported by Creative Scotland | Produced by Alice McGrath & Red Bridge Arts

Suitable for adults and young people aged 10 and over

LISTINGS:

Scottish Storytelling Centre Venue 30a

Aug 4 Preview 17:00 (75 mins) | £6

Aug 5-28 (not 10, 15, 22, 23) 17:00 (75 mins) | £10/£8 conc. /£32 Family (2 adults, 2 children)

Aug 17 17:00 (75 mins) BSL interpreted performance

Box Office: 0131 556 9579 www. scottishstorytellingcentre.co.uk