EdFringe Talk: Crownless

“I’m at the point in my career that I’m exclusively celebrating the different, the new, the up-and-coming in theatre… and Fringe feels like the heart of that.”

WHO: Ashley Amodeo

WHAT: “When the ghost of her father returns seeking revenge, Hamlet has to choose: play along, or break the cycle? When she makes her choice, the ghost makes his and haunts her coat. Crownless fuses Shakespeare’s text with contemporary female poetry in a bold exploration of grief and power. It’s a ghost story, a coming-of-age tale and a stylish love letter to saying ‘no’. With sharp dialogue, unexpected laughs and a coat full of unresolved trauma, this show walks the line between comedy and heartbreak. If you’ve ever argued with a parent’s voice in your head, this one’s for you.”

WHERE: studio at C ARTS | C venues | C aquila (Venue 21) 

WHEN: 12:30 (50 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

It is! I’ve always been so fascinated by Fringe for a long time, and I’m so excited to be bringing this show there. Being an actor in New York, it’s one of those things you think “well maybe some day…” for so long. So this really is a dream come true for me. I also think I’m at the point in my career that I’m exclusively celebrating the different, the new, the up-and-coming in theatre… and Fringe feels like the heart of that. I’m honored to be a part of it.

What are the big things you’ve learned since 2024 and have you absorbed any of the lessons yet?

2023 was the year I learned to stop saying no to myself.

There were a lot of things that year that I thought I couldn’t do, but decided to do anyway. I learned that I don’t need some sort of “you’re ready” certificate to do something… I should just be doing it.

But as for fully absorbing that?

I think that will be a lifelong journey. Being a creative is a constant battle between chasing what you want to do and also doubting if you can do it. But I’m trying everyday to just tell myself “you can do this!” Because if you can’t tell yourself that, will you ever believe it from anyone else?

Tell us about your show.

I’m the writer and performer of the play! I moved here from Brooklyn to get my masters, and part of my course was to write a solo show. But when I had the idea for the play back in 2023, I basically turned myself down right away and said “I can’t write that.”

3 months later, I went back to the idea and just wrote it. (I say that like it was easy… it was a long and scary process.) When I performed it, I was shocked at how well received it was by my peers, my teachers, and the school as a whole. It’s now featured in the advertisement for the school’s postgraduate acting program. I then approached the MA course director, asking if she would like to direct it for Fringe… and she replied “Well, I was just about to tell you that I’m retiring… so let’s do it!”

The show is a one-woman Hamlet, told from the perspective of the Ghost of Hamlet’s Father. It’s modernized, so instead of being royalty, the family are well known writers. When Hamlet Sr. is killed by his brother, he goes to the garden and wait for his daughter, Hamlet, but she never shows up. So he decides he has to find a way to talk to her without her freaking her out too much… and ends up haunting her coat. What follows is a deep dive into their family dynamic, lots of scheming from both of the Hamlets, and a bunch of modern female poetry!

Interwoven within the text from Shakespeare’s Hamlet are excerpts of poetry from contemporary poets Leland Bardwell, Emily Dickinson, Tess Gallagher, Louise Glück, Amanda Gorman, Jane Hirshfield, Denise Levertov, Sylvia Plath, & Maya C. Popa.

The show is being produced by C-Arts for one week this Fringe, from August 18-24 at C-Aquila Studio @ 12:30 PM.

Afterwards, it will be appearing at Voila! Festival in London this November with Etcetera Theatre!

What should your audience see at the festivals after they’ve seen your show?

So many things!

A fellow actor in my agency, Sam MacGregor will be in Hold the Line with the Pleasance for the whole of Fringe. (Shout out to our agent, Nathalie Bazan!)

Also check out After Shakespeare with Slade Wolfe Enterprises Limited, Timonopoly with Brite Theater, and Shakespeare for Breakfast with C Theatre!


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“Hardiman would laugh at how uneasy I am around the animals that he loves!” – Author Susan Grossey talks about ‘Ostler: The Cambridge Hardiman Mysteries Book 1’

“If you were transported from modern Cambridge to Regency Cambridge, the first thing you would notice is how busy the river is. Nowadays it is rather pretty and has gentle punts on it, but Gregory would have seen it literally packed with boats delivering supplies to the growing town.”

WHAT: “It’s the late Regency period in Cambridge, and fine wines and precious artworks are disappearing from St Clement’s College. But just who is responsible, and how far will they go to keep their secret?

After the horrors of the Napoleonic Wars, ex-soldier Gregory Hardiman is enjoying the quiet life of an ostler at a Cambridge coaching inn. But when the inn’s cook is found drowned in the river in the spring of 1825 and his distraught widow pleads for help, Gregory finds himself caught up in the unexpectedly murky world of college life in the town. He navigates uneasily between the public world of the coaching inn and the hidden life behind the high walls of the college. And when a new law requires the university to create a cadre of constables, will Gregory take on the challenge?”

WHO: “For twenty-five years Susan Grossman ran her own anti-money laundering consultancy. In 2013 she published ‘Fatal Forgery’ – a mystery focused on the case of a historical real-life Regency banker. Her narrator, a well-meaning, slightly crusty, deeply honourable magistrates’ constable called Sam Plank, would return for a further six novels.

In 2023 Susan released the first of her Gregory Hardiman series set in Regency Cambridge where she herself had been a student.”

MORE? Here!


Why Ostler?

While I was writing my London series – narrated by magistrates’ constable Sam Plank – I started to wonder whether my hometown of Cambridge had had a similar, experimental period of policing. When I discovered that in 1825 – right in the middle of my favourite decade – parliament had passed a piece of legislation called the Universities Act, permitting the universities (at the time, only Cambridge and Oxford) to appoint their own constables, my fate was sealed.

However, being a university constable was only a part-time job: six o’clock to ten o’clock, about five nights a week. No man could have survived on those wages, so I had to give my constable a day job. I wanted him to be able to move freely about the town and to know people at the university – and then I read about ostlers. They look after horses at the inns, and are usually the first to hear all the gossip – and that seemed an ideal choice.

When did you first “meet” Gregory Hardiman? Did he arrive in your mind’s eye all at once, or did a portrait of him establish one layer at a time? Is he based on or inspired by a particular individual?

The first thing I chose was his name. I knew I wanted a fish out of water – a country lad living in a town – and Hardiman was a common Norfolk surname at the time. I then wanted to hint delicately at another of his outsider characteristics: his religion. And Gregory is a popular Catholic name…

I was worried that Gregory would end up a carbon copy of Sam Plank (whom I loved), so I wrote down a list of how he could be different. Sam is married, so Gregory is not. Sam spent his whole life in London, so Gregory has travelled: I put him in the army, and he spent time in Spain, Gibraltar and Australia. And then I realised I had a big problem: I know nothing of military history. I was moaning about this one day during the lunch-break at court (I am a magistrate) and in one of those serendipitous moments of life, my fellow magistrate said that he was an expert in Napoleonic history and would be happy to devise a service history for Gregory! He has done that, and I stick to it like glue.

Finally, Sam is rather vain, so I wanted Gregory to be the opposite. In fact, I wanted him to be ashamed of his appearance, so I decided he should be disabled in some way. I initially thought of making him an amputee – very common in the period, with old soldiers – but of course that would mean he couldn’t be a constable, as they had to be physically fit. I eventually lighted on a large facial scar, which does not affect his health but makes people react to him.

Hardiman is an instinctive and experienced horse handler. Is that something you know about, or something you’ve had to learn? How would Hardiman judge and asses your horsemanship?

I lived in Newmarket – the home of horseracing – for five years when I was a child, so I know a little of the expensive end of horse ownership. And I know that horses are skittish and intelligent. But I have no natural skill as a horsewoman and now avoid riding at all costs after being rolled on by a fat Thelwell pony when I was nine! Thankfully, I am friends with another self-published author who is a horse-owner and knows everything I could possibly ask her about the care and management of horses – and I run every horse-based scene past her for approval. Hardiman would laugh at how uneasy I am around the animals that he loves!

The Hardiman mysteries are set in Regency Cambridge. What sights, sounds, and scenes should be included in the discerning Time Traveller’s itinerary? Where would you recommend staying overnight?

The second question is easy: you should of course stay at the Hoop Inn, run by the ambitious William Bird, and where ostler Gregory Hardiman will take excellent care of your horse. If you were transported from modern Cambridge to Regency Cambridge, the first thing you would notice is how busy the river is. Nowadays it is rather pretty and has gentle punts on it, but Gregory would have seen it literally packed with boats delivering supplies to the growing town. The boat folk were hard-working and coarse, and their shouts as they steered through the water-based throng would have been heard all over town.

You would also notice the stink of the town: the King’s Ditch (now thankfully covered up and superseded by modern sewers) ran right through the middle of town. The town would have been much darker at night – electric street lighting came only to a couple of streets in the 1820s – and bickering over whose responsibility it was to keep the streets clean and safe was almost a full-time occupation for the Mayor of the town and the Vice-Chancellor of the University. And a visit to the daily market was a must: much larger than it is now, and with a huge range of goods brought in on those boats, Cambridge’s market was famous for miles around. Particularly popular was the local butter, which was sold by the yard.

Who are the authors and sources you most rely on while recreating Regency Cambridge? Have you made any deliberate departures?

It has been hard to find many contemporary descriptions of Cambridge – the two main diarists were Henry Gunning (who wrote up to 1820) and Josiah Chater (writing in the 1840s). And very few people at all have written novels set in the 1820s – which is partly why I love it so! But that’s not to say I have been without original sources. I rely heavily on archives of the two newspapers at the time: the conservative Cambridge Chronicle and Journal (which offered no editorial comment at all) and the left-wing Independent Press (which offered perhaps too much). And – as always – local historians and librarians are an astonishing and generous source of information, no matter how obscure the question.

And no, I am very careful not to make any deliberate departures. One of the joys for me of writing historical – rather than contemporary – fiction is the puzzle of having to fit my made-up story within the known confines of history. I cannot alter something that happened or existed just because it does not fit my story; rather, I must alter the story so that it works. As I say, it’s sometimes a puzzle, but one that I love solving.

Has diving deep into Regency Cambridge shifted, altered, or enhanced your perspective on today’s Town and Gown? Is there something they got right that we are getting wrong?

Interestingly, the year I am researching and writing about now – 1827 – was the year of the first acknowledged Town and Gown Riot, on 5 November. But I am not yet sure how that will affect my story, with Gregory being a university constable while having many friends in the town. What is clear is that the two halves of Cambridge life have always found it difficult to understand each other. I have to say that my sympathy in the 1820s is with the town, because the University was so parsimonious and condescending when it came to paying its (agreed, fair) share of lighting, sewage and cleaning bills. Indeed, when I look at college accounts from the period, it seems that the colleges spent most of their money on coal and alcohol, to keep warm and drunk in the frigid Cambridge climate!

How does writing Gregory Hardiman’s Cambridge compare and contrast to writing Sam Plank’s London?

In some ways, it is easier to write about a smaller, more distinct community – London was (is!) such a vast and sprawling and cosmopolitan place that you have to pick only a small element to concentrate on. I feel I have more of a general grasp of life in Cambridge, as it is a more manageable size. That said, I can feel myself getting completist about it and wanting to know EVERYTHING about Cambridge in the 1820s, which is of course impossible.

When I was writing the London series I was fierce with myself about visiting every location that Sam went to, and – where possible – following the routes he took. We called this Walking the Plank! I used to book days in my diary, go down on the train, and just walk and walk and walk. All of this is much simpler now that I am setting books in Cambridge; if I want to check a location, I can just whizz out on my bike and get my answer within minutes.

You’ve had a rather interesting pre-literary career. Where on the journey did you turn around and say, “I really ought to put this in a book?”

For twenty-five years I ran an anti-money laundering consultancy, advising banks, accountancy and law firms, trust companies, casinos, estate agencies and the like on how to spot and avoid criminal money. But I read English at university, and I always suspected that one day I would want to try and write a novel. When that urge became irresistible (and I thought, if not now, then when?) I realised that I had become obsessed with criminal money, and that it would make a great angle for a crime novel. I published my first eight novels while I was still working full-time, and it was such fun to escape into the past but armed with my understanding of criminal attitudes to money. Of course, in the 1820s they hanged fraudsters…

You self-publish your work. How are you finding that process, and what’s the biggest thing you’ve learnt that you wish you’d known on Day 1?

I should say that I did not choose to self-publish my novels. Once I had finished the first Sam Plank book Fatal Forgery (although at the time I did not realise it was the first book – I thought it was the only book!) I submitted it to nine agents and publishing houses. They all replied in the same vein: it’s a good story, well-written, but we can’t sell it because no-one is interested in financial crime. I disagreed – remember my obsession? – and as I had already self-published dozens of non-fiction books in my working life, I decided to self-publish the novel. And that was it: I never tried again with the agents or publishing houses. I enjoy the process of self-publishing, which has changed and improved immeasurably over the years. And I like feeling that each novel is all my own work: I write it, produce it and sell it.

As for what I wish I had known on Day 1, well, it’s that nothing is forever. You can always change things: pressing the big red Publish button is not the end of the world. You can upload a new file, you can change the cover, you can publish via a different system. All of that would have made it less scary and more fun – much more like it is now!

What are you currently working on?

I am currently writing Gregory 3, which I promise you will have a better title by the time it appears in early December. It is set in 1827, and touches – among other things – on silver mines in Bolivia, balloon rides in Cambridge, and quack remedies in London.

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‘At Home With Will Shakespeare’ (Venue 33, until AUG 26th)

“Not since the age of Allan Ramsay has Edinburgh enjoyed portraiture of such soaring humility and intimate majesty.”

Editorial Rating: 5 Stars (Outstanding)

I’m standing in the queue for the lavies after the show. It’s a long and slow-moving wait. Behind me another Pip Utton mega fan is waxing lyrical on the master’s stage presence, his timing, his audience work, his gift for telling big stories with little touches. It was a much better review than the one you’re about to read.

We enter to find Mr Shakespeare is recovering from the night before. This is not a specific moment in the Bard’s life. It’s one of those out of time and space encounters which are the signature of the Utton canon. Over the coming hour we will explore Shakespeare’s triumphs, examine his tragedies, extirpate some myths, and excite the green-eyed monster jealousies which (still) pettily peep out from the shadow cast by this huge-legged colossus not of an age but for all time.

Plays about Shakespeare are ten a penny. In fact, there are probably more of them staged at any given EdFringe than actual revivals of the words what he wrote. Who was this man of inky glory? What powered his genius? There are more potential questions with more possible answers than there are moves on a chessboard. It takes a grounded hubris to attempt to scale the towering heights of Shakespeare. It takes the eye of an Olympian climber to identify the swiftest, but surest route up in the time allowed. It takes nimbleness, subtly, and strength to arrive with time enough to spare so as to enjoy the view.

Utton gets Shakespeare the grafter because no other actor grafts like Utton. Utton comprehends Shakespeare the crafter because no other theatrical producer is so reliable in the quality of their craft as Utton. Utton lauds Shakespeare with the gentle, self-mocking laughter of one who has similarly reached the top and managed to stay there.

Nicola Fleming’s direction is fluid, lucid, and candid. Here is the show which comes closest to recovering what was lost when the late, great Rodney Bewes took his final curtain call. Bewes was the gourmet master of the EdFringe potboiler solo show. His genius was to make each performance come alive with an offhand delivery that sent the ball wheezing over the boundary line for six time and again. Utton is similarly loved by his audience and, as I am reminded in the queue for the loos, that relationship is deepening with each successive success.

Not since the age of Allan Ramsay has Edinburgh enjoyed portraiture of such soaring humility and intimate majesty. Not having Pip Utton at an EdFringe is like not having whisky cream sauce on your haggis – it is possible, but the best festival there is or ever was is just better with the work of Pip Utton featuring in the line-up.

Get your doublets on and go see this!


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‘In This Body of Flame’ (Venue 29, until AUG 25th)

“Charlie Grant as Pepys reflects the hubris and nemesis of a superbly talented man going places but treading on important toes as he rises. Grant is a Pepysian’s Pepys.”

Editorial Rating: 4 Stars (Nae Bad)

Student drama is special. Student drama is important. The first appearance of a Stirling University Drama Society (SUDS) production at EdFringe is both special and important, an opportunity to plant a flag and sow a seed. The artistic choices made matter and SUDS’ first choice, to stage a drama centred on the diarist Samuel Pepys is, in my (not especially humble) opinion, an excellent one.

Hands up, cards on the table, I’m a massive card-carrying, club-tie-wearing Pepysian. And why not? Pepys was the confidant of Royalty, a correspondent with Newton, and the saviour of the navy. Pepys was a lover of music, a book collector, and a very regular theatre-goer. Oh, and he also kept a diary – a meticulous record of people and place in his time, a vital record of earth-shattering events, a most honest catalogue of marital infidelity and human weakness.

Sofia Sculati was introduced to the life, work, and world of Samuel Pepys on a recent tour of London. After researching the diarist more, Sculati was inspired to undertake a historical retelling of his adult life. Together with Madelynne Kestner, Sculati wrote and directed an experimental historical drama about Pepys, his diary and the people from his life. Their script is sound, pacy, and absolutely captures the big and little dramas that make The Diary such a compelling read and re-read.

45 minutes is a very narrow time frame in which to fit so much quality source material and there are several moments when less might have been more. The production design is dark, brooding, and bloody – who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him? It’s not always an easy fit but provides a springboard for some strong character work. Charlie Grant as Pepys reflects the hubris and nemesis of a superbly talented man going places but treading on important toes as he rises. Grant is a Pepysian’s Pepys. Oliver O’Hare as The General and Callum Edwards as The Monarchy are the commandant Ying and campy Yang buttressing the narrative.

Ailsa Tully and Freya Stevenson are the women in Pepys’ life. Ours is an age with such divergent morality from Pepys’ own, which cannot be a bad thing. So it’s strange that the writers treat his infidelities with such a scolding traditionality. Emilia Finucane as The Plague stole the show, either breaking out of the design or realising its true potential.

Student drama is never dull. The choices are big, bold, rarely precise, occasionally in harmony, often brilliant, occasionally dazzling. Here is a show that needs a few more trips to the tailors. What matters is that SUDS’ collective instincts are demonstrably pointed in the right direction. I’m not the only auld hack in Auld Reekie who will be looking out for SUDS productions in Fringes yet to come.

Here’s hoping that what has been planted will grow into a regular return. For in the maelstrom of the world’s largest arts festival, it is grand to see a fearlessly Fringey production featuring so much local(ish) talent bringing life to new writing. If EdFringe is to survive as the world capital of Fringe Theatre it needs producers like SUDS who can be relied on to deliver something completely different. Get your frock coats on and go see this!


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EdFringe Talk: Don Quixote

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“We evolved the show all the time during the festival,
according to the reactions we got.”

WHO: Tamsin Hurtado Clarke & Scarlett Plouviez: Performer & Director

WHAT: “‘This double act is unmissable’ ***** (WestEndBestFriend.co.uk). With 200 shows and 30,000 spectators a year, Red Nose Company is the most decorated touring theatre in Finland. Now they are back with their five-star show. Join Don Quixote and Sancho Panza on their road trip as they attack all the injustices in the world. ‘Warm-hearted, clever and very funny!’ ***** (ThreeWeeks). ‘If you think you hate red noses, this might just be the show to cure you’ **** (AllEdinburghTheatre.com).”

WHERE: Assembly Rooms – Bijou (Venue 20) 

WHEN: 14:30 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This is our second time to Edinburgh. We came here last year with the same show, received
great reviews and wonderful feedback from the audiences, so it was an easy decision to
return! When we came here last year, we fell in love with the Fringe at once. What we love
most is the TOTAL experience that surrounds you 24/7 – not just the shows but all that buzz.
And because we have to be so fast to put up and take down our show, it means that even
we artists have plenty of time to stroll around and see other people's shows!!!

What are the big things you’ve learned since 2023 and have you absorbed any of the lessons yet?

In our shows the most important element is to connect with the audience. Last year’s gigs
were for us our first in the UK. We evolved the show all the time during the festival,
according to the reactions we got. So this year we're even better than last year (expecting 6-
star reviews 😉

Tell us about your show.

We've been working together as a clown duo since 2012, and together we have created six
shows. We write and direct our own shows. Don Quixote premiered in 2019, and we've
played it over 100 times in Finland. We created it together with director Otso Kautto.
Don Quixote is produced by Red Nose Company, our theatre group.

What should your audience see at the festivals after they’ve seen your show?

The Blind Summit: The sex live of Puppets seems hilarious. I will definitely want to see that
show. Distraction by The Umbilical Brothers is amazingly funny and skilfull. Big
recommendation for both!


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EdFringe Talk: Rory Cargill: Television 1

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“Despite the all-consuming physical and mental battering, I love it here.”

WHO: Rory Cargill

WHAT: “100 years of television in one hour. Comedian Rory Cargill celebrates the centenary of national broadcaster Television 1 in a multimedia sketch and parody show that spans decades of British TV evolution. ‘A blissful 60 minutes of silliness.’ ***** (BroadwayWorld.com). ‘Really well made.’ **** (ThreeWeeks). ‘Truly exemplary.’ (AYoungishPerspective.co.uk). ‘Excellent, professionally slick visual mania.’ (TheQR.co.uk).”

WHERE: Assembly Roxy – Downstairs (Venue 139) 

WHEN: 19:20 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This is my second full run in Edinburgh. Despite the all-consuming physical and mental battering, I love it here. Having the chance to reset and give the show another bash every day is very freeing. It’s a place of kindred spirits too – most of my friendship group I met at previous editions here.

I came as a punter for years before finally taking the plunge with a concept I felt was worthy of a run here at the ripe old age of 32. I wish I’d done it sooner but better late than never.

What are the big things you’ve learned since 2023 and have you absorbed any of the lessons yet?

It’s a marathon, not a sprint. I have not absorbed this lesson but I’m working on it. My show is quite physical so I’m grabbing power naps wherever I can – in parks, pub booths, in the middle of my show, in the middle of other people’s shows. It’s good practice to sleep in the front row of a show so the performer can clearly see not to disturb you.

Tell us about your show.

My show is called Rory Cargill: Television 1. It’s a narrative sketch, character and spoof comedy that parodies 100 years of British television in 1 hour. I do a new show and character for every decade starting from the 50’s, including Blue Peter, Big Brother and How to Look Good Naked.

It’s packed with pop culture references from over the years and combines live and filmed portions that interplay with each other. It’s very silly and high-energy and features some cool tech and AI gimmicks.

It’s written by me and it’s first version premiered in Edinburgh in 2023. This is it’s 3rd version and it’s quite different now – I’ve since attached a main character – a Noel Edmonds parody ‘Beau Creme’ , who hosts the show -and moved it from a more traditional sketch show to something with a narrative arc that connects each sketch.

I’m looking to attach a production company for future outings in London and beyond and am already looking towards Edinburgh ’25 for version 4.0.

What should your audience see at the festivals after they’ve seen your show?

Tom Lawrinson is the funniest standup in the U.K. His show ‘Buried Alive and Loving It’ is his best work yet – you’ll laugh so hard.

Cecily Hitchcock and Jen Nolan are my other favourite stand ups. They’re doing a split bill called ‘Schrödinger’s Yats’ that’s extremely fun.

For sketch – Grubby Little Mitts, Bishops.
For clown – Ollie West and Claire Parry (unfortunately her run is done but check her out in London, my fave new discovery of the Fringe.)
For plays – Chokeslam and Don’t Call me Chinadoll – both by WWWC.


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EdFringe Talk: Window Seat

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“eing one project among many and tapping into this collective experience is thrilling – we rarely get that in everyday life.”

WHO: Cleopatra Coleman

WHAT: “‘I became the Jeremy Clarkson of tits.’ In this tender off-beat comedy, a mother and daughter survey the changes in their lives while waiting onboard a plane. One is getting used to an empty nest, the other to adulthood. They both hold high hopes for the coming trip together but, with their flight delayed, reunion proves more turbulent than anticipated. Like passengers eavesdropping, we overhear a relationship in need of renewal between two women unsure of how to navigate change. Negotiating emotional crosswinds, they surprise each other with a mischievous, zigzagging honesty.”

WHERE: Paradise in The Vault – The Annexe (Venue 29) 

WHEN: 11:40 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This is my first time at the Fringe, both as attendee and as show-maker, although various members of my company have participated in the festival before. What a revelation the Fringe is! Being one project among many and tapping into this collective experience is thrilling – we rarely get that in everyday life. It’s carnivalesque, varied, surprising; you never know what you will find or who you will meet. To quote a friend who regularly works at the festival, Edinburgh during the Fringe is ‘a sexy, pumped up place’. Agreed.

What are the big things you’ve learned since 2023 and have you absorbed any of the lessons yet?

As a 22-yr-old newbie to the scene, developing ‘Window Seat’ for EdFringe has surpassed the rigorous education I longing for. At every stage in the process, but particularly during the festival itself, there has been no other option but to learn and adapt – on the spot. This is hugely exciting and leaves me feeling very lucky.

It’s also great fun. Of course, there’s A LOT of work in putting together a show and finding a public, but fun is what makes it irresistible, to audience and performer. Both in what I have watched at the Fringe and what I have sought to bring to ‘Window Seat’: playful remains paramount.

Maud May and Helen Rose-Hampton, Window Seat’s two actors, have taught me so much. We’re at different ages and came to the project with various artistic, personal and professional experiences, but their openness and their willingness to be challenged has been inspiring.

Other golden advice I keep returning to:
– It’s about doing what you love, being courteous and open, and staying in the game.
– Without fear there can be no courage!
– Never be shy asking for advice. People love to help where they can, especially if you start with a manageable request…

Tell us about your show.

I first wrote and staged ‘Window Seat’ as a university production last spring, at the Burton Taylor studio in Oxford. We were on for 5 nights and were delighted by our audiences. Shout out to the amazing cast at the time: Avanthika Balaji and Marianne Nossair (who is currently at EdFringe starring in ‘Placeholder’ @roselaneproductions and ‘Bucket List’ @showdonttellproductions).

I wanted to tell the story again, to adapt and re-write it, this time casting an age-appropriate duo. The scenario still interested me – mum and daughter at a cross-roads in their lives, forced to sit next to each other – as did the tongue-in-cheek, ever-revolving and highly “fem” mode that ‘Window Seat’ tunes into.

I joined with Nick Yale just before Christmas, co-producer and a student here in Edinburgh, to form Swoop Productions. We held open auditions, and eventually found the wonderful Maud and Helen. The ball was rolling, fund-raising under way, and as rehearsals kicked off, my brilliant peers Hortense Duchemin and Comfort Maseko completed the team as co-producers/marketers.

We would love to bring ‘Window Seat’ to a theatre after the Fringe, to follow on from all the creative fermentation and insights gained here at the festival. It’s a simple (and highly portable) show: two airplane seats will do. The festival has brought us confidence in ourselves and in our audience. Thank you, Edinburgh!

What should your audience see at the festivals after they’ve seen your show?

Where to start!

Playfight – fast-paced and extraordinarily performed by three very talented women. Too absorbed to realise you are crying and then lights are up!

A Silent Scandal – emerging from Trinity College Dublin. Very well-written and Eoghan Quinn masterfully portrays a very conflicted headmaster.

Free Footlights – hilarious, dark, imaginative sketches devised by the young comedians themselves. Especially love Frankie Browne’s!

Dick. – Not afraid to tackle tricky issues and very well acted. We especially enjoyed the story about the sandwich.

Umbilical Brothers – Cerebral, whacky and mesmerising

With All My Fondest Love – a young man’s beautiful exploration into his grandfather’s life

Suitcase Show by Trick of The Light Theatre – timeless multi-media story telling about journeying

Mythos: Ragnarök – Epic norse mythology told through WWE wrestling

Carter Morgan: The Death of Cool – I haven’t yet made it to Carter’s show yet, but after standing next to each other in a queue for several hours, I say GO!

Same goes for Intelligent Bisexual Woman – some wicked comedy coming out of NYC atm!


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EdFringe Talk: In This Body of Flame

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“Performing at an open access performing arts festival is a unique experience because it gives emerging artists the ability to perform and allows them to connect with audiences around the world.”

WHO: Madelynne Kestner

WHAT: “‘Oh good God prepare me!’ were the last words Samuel Pepys dedicated to his companion of ten years, to whom he gave his life and sight: his diary. The stage is the precinct of his mind and all he witnessed, intimately retelling a decade that shaped London. From the Plague to the Fire, and the people that wandered the pages of his journal: fact, memory and fiction dance swiftly, ignited by the light of a candle. The stage is desolate, every word is a step, entrancing you into the consciousness behind the flame.”

WHERE: Paradise in The Vault – The Vault (Venue 117) 

WHEN: 18:10 (45 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

Yes, this is my first time at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. The Fringe is unique because it gives a platform to new performs and writers. Performing at an open access performing arts festival is a unique experience because it gives emerging artists the ability to perform and allows them to connect with audiences around the world.

What are the big things you’ve learned since 2023 and have you absorbed any of the lessons yet?

I personally was not apart of the Fringe last year. However, 2023 was a big year for my writing. I am developing my playwriting skills since I primarily focus on screenwriting. In the last year, I began working on smaller stage scenes and developed my writing into this play. A large lesson I learned is the difference between film and theatre. I am very excited to bring our show to a live audience.

Tell us about your show.

In This Body of Flame is an experimental historical drama about Samuel Pepys, his diary and the people from his life. I wrote and co-directed this play alongside Sofia Sculati taking inspiration from his diary entries. Our idea for this show was to meld history with drama. We wanted to showcase how all elements of theatre can create an immersive experience, we focused a lot on sound and how that helps performers and audiences to navigate shows. The University of Stirling Drama Society is a student led theatre group that performs multiple shows year round. As a committee, we decided it was time to take our work to a larger audience and premier our new show. We do not currently have plans to take a further step with this show, however, we are thrilled to see its audience reception and continue from there.

What should your audience see at the festivals after they’ve seen your show?

I think that audience members should go and see plays by other student societies as I believe it’s really important to give a platform to emerging young artists who are trying to step into theatre professionally and supporting them at The Edinburgh Fringe can open so many opportunities to new writing and new performers. A few of our members went to see The University of Edinburgh’s play ‘Slash’ at Bedlam Theatre and we really enjoyed the powerful and professional performances that each of the students gave. It was funny yet dramatic and had us excited waiting for the twist! We are also excited to see PASS (Edinburgh College’s) take on Steph Del Rosso’s play ‘The Gradient’ We wish the best of luck to all the other university societies!


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EdFringe Talk: Shower Chair

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“The Edfringe inspires creativity, serves as a stage for performance, and unites a community of artists.”

WHO: Ben Fallaci

WHAT: “Writer and comedian Ben Fallaci strips down and gets vulnerable while recounting how he lands broken and stuck in a geriatric shower chair. With irreverence and self-deprecation, Fallaci adds humour to a tale about a toxic friendship, slippery events, and a broken ankle. Where better to come clean than in the shower?”

WHERE: Greenside @ George Street – Lime Studio (Venue 236) 

WHEN: 20:50 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

Edinburgh is where I started performing. During a semester abroad at the University, I performed with a sketch group (The EdRevue) and started stand up comedy. My first ever open mic was at the Wee Pub in Grassmarket. Five years later, I’d return to Edinburgh and pass the Wee Pub flyering for my one-man show Shower Chair during the 2023 EdFringe. Debuting my one man show at the festival, inspired my move to London and my decision to return to the festival this year for the entire run. The Edfringe inspires creativity, serves as a stage for performance, and unites a community of artists.

What are the big things you’ve learned since 2023 and have you absorbed any of the lessons yet?

The biggest lesson from performing in 2023/ 2024 is to have fun. After an entire day of flyering and networking about your show, the only thing left to do is to perform it. The Fringe is such a unique opportunity to workshop, experiment, and play with your performance each night.You have to let go and have fun to stay in the moment. Finding routine in performance is rare, so I try to appreciate it as much as possible while here.

Tell us about your show.

I wrote Shower Chair during a 3 month long dog sitting gig in Los Angeles. I work best with collaborators, so I invited my director and personal friend, Fiona Kelly to come on board. Together, we turned a family home into the ultimate rehearsal space complete with a mic stand in the living room, various rewrites in the home office, and choreography sessions in the backyard. In addition to my director, Shower Chair was sculpted by countless conversations over coffee in the kitchen with patient East Side comics, who listened to hours of rambling that eventually were whittled down to a crisp 60 minute monologue.

After previewing Shower Chair at the Broadwater Theatre in Los Angeles, it debuted at the 2023 Edinburgh Fringe Festival where it played 14 performances. Shower Chair reached diverse audiences in Edinburgh and it was met with emotional responses. Last year at the festival, I connected with Zoe Novello and Sophie Visscher-Lubinizki (Speakerphone Productions) who came on board as creative producers, and have helped to shape and develop the show – assisting the team in growing it from a humble stand up comedy set to a full theatrical experience.

The show continues to grow as a consequence of including more creative thinkers. Shower Chair is a queer production. Directed, produced, and choreographed by queer theater makers, it is a true product of queer collaboration and storytelling.

What should your audience see at the festivals after they’ve seen your show?

After Shower Chair, check out Elen Mcneil’s History of a Heartbreak – a show that heals raw emotions like a warm cup of Yorkshire tea. Serena Freda’s one woman show NO NO NO GOD PLEASE NO is another piece of creative storytelling that explores the psychology of hurt and healing.


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EdFringe Talk: Rollercoaster

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“A great festival is one where you’re going to be constantly surprised.”

WHO: Wes Peden

WHAT: “Ultra-modern pop-punk juggling! Surrounded by a huge inflatable blue structure and accompanied by electro beats composed of distorted rollercoaster sounds, Peden shares his cutting-edge tricks inspired by corkscrews, adrenaline and high-tech seatbelts. The show features a four-meter transparent tube making balls spiral around Wes’ body, contemporary spinning-plate rituals, epic three-ball disco juggling and invisible seatbelts providing the safety to perform some of the most difficult juggling ever done on stage!”

WHERE: Assembly Roxy – Central (Venue 139) 

WHEN: 17:00 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

Last time I performed in Edinburgh was with the trio juggling show Water on Mars back in 2016. We had an incredible time! The shows had some of the most enthusiastic audiences we have ever performed for. The Fringe audience is really special. It feels like everyone there is curious and excited to experience something new. Luckily for me, tha’s exactly the type of person who’s likely to appreciate contemporary juggling inspired by rollercoasters!

A great festival is one where you’re going to be constantly surprised. Where you’ll see art forms you’ve never heard of and have real-life experiences that tickle your brain so much that you forget about your email inbox.

What are the big things you’ve learned since 2023 and have you absorbed any of the lessons yet?

I moved to France from Sweden in 2023 and since then I have learned that French people sometimes make a sandwich with baguette and a piece of chocolate bar. I’m happy to say that I have absorbed this lesson many times.

Tell us about your show.

Rollercoaster was written by Wes Peden, who is also the guy pushing the lettered buttons on his computer to write this. I have been juggling since I was 5 years old and have been part of the creation of over a dozen juggling shows including 4 solo shows. This show is by far my best solo work and I’m excited to share it with the Edinburgh crowd!

I’m very lucky to be working with the legendary company Gandini Juggling who are touring Rollercoaster and bringing it to Edinburgh this year. This will be the Scottish premiere of the show. I’ve performed the show 100 times around Europe and the US just to prepare for the Fringe. This is not a drill!

After Edinburgh we’ll tour in Switzerland, Ireland, France, Mexico, Italy, Spain, Portugal, and hopefully Japan. There are some really good rollercoasters there I’d like to check out.

What should your audience see at the festivals after they’ve seen your show?

Only Bones v1.9 by Matt Pasquet – Kallo Collective

Matt is an incredibly talented handstand artist and mover. The combination of his boundless
creativity, attention to detail, and humor creates a truly unique universe on stage. I highly
recommend checking out  ‘Only Bones’

Julieta by Gabriela Muñoz

Gabriela is a world-renowned clown, celebrated for her powerful, delicate, and hilarious stage
presence. The generosity and honesty in her performances consistently move me to tears. Make
sure you check the dates for her show as she'll only be at the festival for a week and I'm sure the tickets will go fast!


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