‘Doktor Kaboom: Under Pressure!’ (Venue 33, until AUG 25th)

“I really recommend this show and I hope to see it next EdFringe.”

Editorial Rating: 7 Stars (Outstanding)

In the (hopefully) unlikely event that Doktor Kaboom decides he’s not going to come to Edinburgh in August anymore, I would genuinely be left wondering if there would be any point in EdFringe continuing. If only one of the thousands of shows on offer could be beamed out into the universe to tell alien life something about ourselves, I’d want it to be this one. This is a deeply sensitive show for young people about the pressures of the world we let ourselves build for them. It’s also a crazy, madcap science show that has our little ones bouncing in their seats with the unfiltered joy of knowing they were right to be soooooo excited about seeing this again.

We enter to discover a stage covered in scientific apparatus. There’s the table tennis vacuum cannon. There’s a smiling balloon on a Zimmer Frame walker, the latex of which keeps popping from the chill of a nearby beaker of dry ice – much to the comic annoyance of the stagehand. There’s something behind laboratory-grade shatter-proof perspex. And, is that, yes, I think it is the latest edition of the poker table hovercraft peaking from out the back? The demonstrations we are about to witness explain the scientific process. They amplify even the most latent interest in how and why the material world works. They create a soulful bedrock on which parents and carers can build the scaffolds which will support, guide, and nurture the young hearts and minds entrusted to our care.

In her EdFringe notebook, the one with Dame Katherine Grainger DBE on the cover, Daughter 1.0 (10yrs) wrote: “I really enjoyed Doktor Kabom under pressure. I thought how he got the audience to interact was amazing. He was funny and clever and made sure he (and everyone else) was safe. My favourite bit was when he got someone to ride his home-made hovercraft, made out of a plastic garden table-top and a shower curtain with three holes in it. I really recommend this show and I hope to see it next EdFringe.”

There is a moment on stage with one of the young audience members which best explains just how Doktor Kaboom has earned 21 stars from us in just 3 years. It’s got a little too much for the wee volunteer, and she wants out. Doktor Kaboom validates and celebrates her choice to stop. No fuss. No recriminations. No cheap laughs. The whole point of this show is to tell and retell kids that they have agency, they get to make choices about themselves and their space. It’s a powerful lesson not lost amid the mayhem and fun. In the lower half of Auld Father Time’s hourglass, Grandad, the Edinburgh University professor who would certainly open an airlock and vent the Fringe into space if he could, is delighted. He’s never seen liquid Carbon Dioxide before – apparently that is very cool.

Come for the rehearsed spontaneity of a show and persona that keep getting better and better. Stay for the crowd, it’s the best audience in the city. Get your Jeeves-unapproved orange tux jackets on and go see this!


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‘Ginger’s Problem Area’ (Venue 17, until AUG 24th)

“Aunty Ginger is a deadpan whirlwind of good auld-fashioned filth and innuendo – in your endo.”

Editorial Rating: 4 Stars (Nae Bad)

What is there left to say about Aunty Ginger that hasn’t already been splashed across the red tops, scrawled on bathroom walls, or said through tears in a witness impact statement?

Manchester’s leading pansexual Dragony Aunt takes to the stage like a pack of boozehounds takes to a vodka fountain and with all the caution of a cockapoodle on a trampoline. This is a no-holds-barred experience not recommended for the coy or nervous. Aunty Ginger is a deadpan whirlwind of good auld-fashioned filth and innuendo – in your endo.

From a confident blend of audience work and audiovisual, sixty minutes of laugh-out-loud funny entertainment emerge, spotlighting a performer with a rising reputation – or is she just pleased to see me? Ginger is lightning fast. Already naturally well endowed, Ginger’s mind is as quick as her tongue is sharp. She is professionally trained, well-honed by just enough years in drag not to be a drag, and so obviously enjoys doing what she loves being great at. Those rather odd men who love to feel uncomfortable around drag and have got something to prove without having anything to say are swatted away as flies to wanton boys. Ginger is the boss and don’t forget it.

The trouble is that this show, in its current format, can only ever be as good as its audience. Good crowd? Good craic. Surly gobshite crowd? Less fun to be had. The format needs tweaking so that some content can be whipped out and milked without relying so much on the crowd if they turn up flaccid. Still, Ginger is gracefully maturing into an EdFringe stalwart, a reliable source of satisfaction for when you need your funny bone rubbed in just the right way.

Come for the solid standup. Stay for the sparkling wit and repartee. Get your glittery gladrags on and go see this!


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EdFringe Talk: Jack Offerman’s Big Uncut Flick

“I’ve learned the value of being present and engaged in as many rooms, conversations, and spontaneous moments as possible.”

WHO: Melissa Firlit

WHAT: “Buckle up, buttercup! In Jack Offerman’s Big Uncut Flick, a quirky 1970s small-town broadcast unravels into a chaotic collision of campy commercials, outrageous characters and a gripping 1930s noir-style crime story. Enjoy the meltdown.”

WHERE: Downstairs at Assembly Roxy (Venue 139) 

WHEN: 15:50 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This is my fifth time at the Edinburgh Fringe, and every year I’ve worn a different hat. My first visit was as a company manager, young, determined and debaucherous. I soaked up everything this incredible festival and city had to offer. I had no idea what I’d signed up for, but I knew I’d landed somewhere special, where art in every imaginable form bursts to life during that wonderfully wild August stretch.

The second time, I returned as a performer with a dance company, still wide-eyed, still learning. After that, I came back as director and producer for Marrow in 2019 and 2022 – one pre-COVID, one post-COVID – both a crash course in adapting to a constantly shifting landscape. And now, in 2025, I’m back with Jack Offerman’s Big Uncut Flick at the Roxy Downstairs, equipped with lessons from the past and a focus on what truly matters: making meaningful connections, taking the time to see people, and building community.

That’s what makes the Fringe, and any great festival, special: the sense of community. There’s space for everyone here, and the camaraderie is real.

And of course, you have to be a little bit mad, bold, and wildly courageous to produce a show here. It’s no small feat, no matter the scale. But there’s a shared understanding among those who make the leap: the sacrifice, the risk, and the joy are all worth it.

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

In 2023, I returned to Edinburgh as an audience member. What struck me most was how many of the connections I’d made in 2022 were still alive and thriving. Those relationships hadn’t faded. It was a beautiful reminder that the bonds you forge here are part of an ongoing creative family.

As a producer, I’ve learned the value of being present and engaged in as many rooms, conversations, and spontaneous moments as possible. The curated events at Fringe Central have been a gift.

My best advice? Throw caution to the wind. Make that bold introduction. Remember that we’re all artists and are connected in lasting ways.

Tell us about your show.

Jack Offerman’s Big Uncut Flick is theatre of the ridiculous at its most delicious – a 1930s film noir flick, hosted by a 1975 afternoon local TV personality who knows absolutely nothing about movies but everything about hamming it up for the camera (or so he thinks). It’s an ode to theatrical styles, packed with physical comedy, camp, vaudeville, slapstick, and more winks to the audience than you can count. Four actors. Twenty-eight characters. What a delight!

Written by Todd Michael, who also plays an array of characters, the show uses a story-within-a-story device to keep the play fast-paced, buoyant, and full of surprise. Todd has a rare gift for capturing period style while still letting the absurdity run wild.

It’s produced by Resolve Productions, a two-person New York City-based team: Craig Dolezel and myself. We came together working on Misterman by Enda Walsh, needed a company name, spotted one on a bottle of rug cleaner (yes, really), and figured: if it fits, it sticks. Well, it’s stuck for 10 years now. Our mission is to create work that’s playful and gives a platform to voices and stories that don’t always get the mic.

Before landing here at EdFringe, Jack Offerman’s Big Uncut Flick was part of the East to Edinburgh series at 59E59 Theaters in NYC, a program that gives US shows an opportunity to jumpstart their EdFringe runs.

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

One of the joys of being at EdFringe is getting swept up in the sheer variety of art. You can go from belly laughs to heartbreak to a full-on dance party and all in the span of a single day. We’re thrilled to share a few of our must-sees so far, in no particular order:

Smile: The Story of Charlie Chaplin – Physical comedy at its finest, with audience engagement, humor, and a surprising amount of heart.

Delusional: I Killed a Man – Stunning, vulnerable, and gripping, a powerful piece of theatre.
Ten Thousand Hours – Captivating, playful, and wildly inventive.

Dangerous Goods – Passionate, awe-inspiring, with a message that sticks.

Frisky’s – An incredible singer with a stunning voice, high energy, and fun audience collaboration.

Ohio – One for the books; trust us on this one.

Club NVRLND – Pure dance party joy.

Van Gogh Shogh – Unhinged, asymmetrical, and utterly loveable.

Best Man Show – Bizarre, silly, heartbreaking, fun, and completely relatable.


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EdFringe Talk: Everest Mallory 24 (With Stanley)

“Obviously, it’s great to go and watch the established acts. But the really special experiences are when you come across an extraordinary performer in one of the small, intimate spaces.”

WHO: Andy Dickinson

WHAT: “A comic storytelling show, based on the 1924 British Mount Everest expedition. It follows Mallory on the SS California to India, on a train across to Darjeeling, and on ponies across Tibet. In tow is Stanley from the Mad Hatter’s town of Stockport, Manchester. All of this is new to Stanley, who has barely been up Helvellyn in the Lake District! Once reaching Mount Everest, they must tackle it with feet, ropes, and possibly some oxygen. Knowing his own limitations, Stanley absolutely does not make a summit attempt, alongside Mallory and Irvine…”

WHERE: The Vault at Paradise in The Vault (Venue 29) 

WHEN: 19:15 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

No, this is my fifth Edinburgh Fringe, and my third as a solo performer!

As a producer, there is no better place to get a show on its feet. With over 3000 other shows on, you know that you have to bring your very best work. Moreover, there is the concentration of reviewers, agents, and producers. If you do do the right show, at the right time, things can really take off for you. So far, we have had 2 quite big successes – Shackleton and his Stowaway, which went on to play a Sold Out run in Park 90, London, and Tam O’Shanter, Tales and Whisky, which Sold Out for 2 performances in the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, for Burns Night 2023.

As a festival goer, there is endless variety, and genuinely something for everyone. Obviously, it’s great to go and watch the established acts. But the really special experiences are when you come across an extraordinary performer in one of the small, intimate spaces. To be a spectator there is a true privilege.

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

Since 2024, I believe I have developed quite a lot as a solo performer. Till now, I have been performing with a hand mic and stand, in what was effectively a mix of theatre, storytelling, and stand up comedy. For 2025, I have dropped the hand mic and stand. This has been liberating! Storytelling is, of course, words embodied, and I am no longer constricted by the mic. Also, by roaming the whole stage, I can create whole scenes, far more effectively. You may even come to believe that we are approaching Everest, AND then climbing up it, in my current show.

Also, I have learnt to pace myself. 3 weeks, with 20 shows, is quite a serious commitment. Obviously, my principle focus has to be my own show. But it’s worth trying to fit in some other shows every few days, to connect with other artists, and also to give yourself a proper breather!

I also learnt how to categories my show, more carefully, so that audiences will find it easier to get to me – Theatre, Storytelling, Comedy!

Tell us about your show.

For 2025 my show is ‘Everest Mallory 24 (With Stanley)’, which I wrote myself. It is based on the very famous British Mount Everest Expedition of 1924. This is the most famous of all the British Everest expeditions. However I tell it in a new way, with a new character!

The character is Stanley, who comes from the mad hatter’s town of Stockport. He has been ‘up Kinder once. Not quite to the top.’ So yes, he’s not the best person to be tagging along on such an expedition. Mallory certainly doesn’t make him feel welcome! Stanley is, in effect, an everyman. He reacts to the increasing dangers and jeopardy in a way that most of us would. He’s ‘probably’ not going to be making an attempt on the actual summit . . .

Stanley is something of an alter ego for me. I am also from Stockport. I am also a fan of the early Himalayan adventures. I also have been known to go up Kinder, Helvellyn, Ben Nevis. I’m not as bad as Stanley is at it, though! At the same time, I would never be going beyond Base Camp at Everest.

We did some previews of the show at Leicester Comedy Festival, Brighton Fringe, and Keswick Mountain Festival. Not surprisingly, they were familiar with the story down in Keswick. Fortunately, the history has all been solidly researched!

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

Tomatoes Tried to Kill Me but Banjos Saved My life, which I think is worth attending just for the title. Not quite a banjolele, but I do play the Ukulele myself. Its’ theme is one that is close to the heart of all artists, in respect of art being the flame that keeps us all ever marching on.

A Mad Mad Wonderland. Jason Woods has a marvellous flair for bringing numerous characters to life, from Lewis Carroll’s works. Not only bringing them to life, but giving them his own spin, particularly with a range of celebrity voices. Unbelievably, James is actually doing 2 shows at this year’s Fringe!

I’ve also seen Make it Happen but that comes to an end on 9th Aug. And National Theatre of Scotland don’t exactly need a plug from me! Other shows on my list are The Truman Capote Talk Show, Air Heart, and Amazons.


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‘Wodehouse in Wonderland’ (Venue 17, until AUG 24th)

“There is a dramatic pivot in this piece delivered with such sudden, callous, earth-shatteringly precise cruelty that afterwards, for the first time ever, I find myself waiting by the stagedoor determined to shake the hand of the horribly talented actor who has just sucker punched us all in the gut.”

Editorial Rating: 5 Stars (Outstanding)

We enter to find ourselves in the study of one of the most celebrated writers of English since Chaucer’s pilgrims first set out to Canterbury. The seemingly uncomplicated genius of Pelham Grenville Wodehouse (1881 – 1975) conjoured into being such immortals as Jeeves and Wooster, Ukridge, Mr Mulliner, as well as some of the most popular, zeitgeisty smash hits of the interwar years. Gershwin, Porter, Kern and Novello all knew him as an equal. He was big in America at a time when America itself was getting big.

Stage left there’s a home bar. Scotch and soda, martinis and the requisite stemware. In the centre, behind the writing desk, a picture window looks out over the Suffolk County landscape – Suffolk County, Long Island, not the East of England for reasons which will become obvious as the plot thickens. A red leather chesterfield armchair completes the scene. It’s the familiar haunt of someone whose literary oeuvre and immortal reputation became established in his own lifetime in the way that an auld oak tree or a gothic catheral might seem established only after the passage of centuries.

Robert Daws completely captures the chronological vertigo of this seemingly very ordinary Englishman towards the close of an extraordinary life. Daws is one of those faces familiar off the telly from ‘Midsummer Murders’, ‘Roger Roger’, ‘Robin of Sherwood’, and of course Fry and Laurie’s masterpiece ‘Jeeves and Wooster’ series. Daws is delivering one of the finnest bits of character work to be seen this EdFringe – this is the other show that us mega Pip Utton fans MUST SEE this year.

With a glove-like fitting, Daws inhabits the persona, personality, and personal space of Wodehouse, a familiar figure yet also an ultra private individual, a charmingly befuddled auld stick in the mud who came to public notice during the roaring exuberance of the 1920s. Wodehouse scaled the highest heights of celebratory fame and success. He became a legend in his own lifetime only to suffer one of those excrutiating moments of irrefutable British tabloid unfairness to rank alongside Michael Foot’s donkey jacket or Prince Harry’s entire adult life. The folk who love to loathe Wodehouse will never let us forget his ill-advised broadcasts from internment during WWII but this was not the only dark cloud that lour’d upon our Wodehouse. There is a dramatic pivot in this piece delivered with such sudden, callous, earth-shatteringly precise cruelty that afterwards, for the first time ever, I find myself waiting by the stagedoor determined to shake the hand of the horribly talented actor who has just sucker punched us all in the gut.

Here is a masterful performance to rank alongside Christopher Lee’s Saruman and for precisely the same reason. Lee was famously the only member of the LOTR cast to have actually met Tolkein. Similar magic has rubbed off on Robert Daws who has known, worked and collaborated with some of the very greatest Wodehousians – Carmichael, Fry, Laurie, Spall, Horden, Jarvis, and Mangan. Daws received the personal blessing and benediction for this production from Sir Edward Cazalet, the son of Wodehouse’s beloved daughter Leonora. Daws is himself of course the definitive Hildebrand “Tuppy” Glossop resoncibile for some of the most joyously side splitting moments of the 90s TV series. My only criticism of this show is that there isn’t a tie-in album of the seven or so Broadway songs written by Wodehouse which Daws merrily belts out with the calm, luxurious, powerful assurance of a 1932 Lagonda 3-litre Weymann.

Come for the candid yet reverential insight into a true great of English letters. Stay for simply one of the best solo performances you’ll see at this or any Fringe. Get your a trifle too exotic Sir white mess jackets on and go see this!


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EdFringe Talk: GENDAI

“As a performer, it’s both exciting and humbling to be part of such a huge mix of talent from around the world.”

WHO: Gendai

WHAT: “A Japanese laser show combining custom-made paper costumes, expressive body performance and original music featuring traditional Japanese instruments. Movements are sharp, precise and unpredictably playful – designed to surprise and engage. Laser light becomes a visual masterpiece: meticulously designed, immersive and breathtakingly beautiful. This performance invites audiences to feel, see and experience a world where energy flows through light, sound and movement. In a space where tradition and innovation meet, rhythm, texture and emotion – born from the body – carry the audience on an unexpected journey beyond the visual.”

WHERE: Temple at WU (Venue 396) 

WHEN: VARIES (15 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

Yes – this is my first time performing in Edinburgh, and it’s been incredible to experience the scale and energy of the Fringe. What’s special about EdFringe is the way the whole city becomes a stage, and how audiences arrive ready to discover something new. As a performer, it’s both exciting and humbling to be part of such a huge mix of talent from around the world.

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

We want the audience to feel a deep emotional connection—through awe, serenity, and wonder. The performance is designed to be immersive and meditative, offering moments of stillness and intensity that reflect the contrasts found in Japanese culture.

Tell us about your show.

I personally programmed the laser sequences to sync with my dance. One of the biggest challenges was blending automated light patterns with the human body’s texture and movement. The soundtrack is also self-produced, incorporating subtle elements of Japanese sound culture throughout.

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

After our show, I’d love for you to experience The Proust Effect by Eden Choi—a mesmerizing close-up magic performance with a global twist. He invites the audience to a journey around the world through sleight-of-hand, seamlessly blending humor, warm connection, and astonishing finesse.
His tricks are performed just a few feet away, making every moment feel intimate and magical. According to reviews, “His sleight-of-hand is so smooth, so astonishingly clean… Tricks that should be impossible unfold right in front of your eyes.”


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‘Not Another Quiz Night’ (Venue 8, until AUG 23rd)

“This show is rowdy like an invasion of Mongolian horsearchers is rowdy.”

Editorial Rating: 5 Stars (Outstanding)

On balance, and after careful consideration, I can confidently say this is the best show I have seen at any EdFringe. A good review is a balance of the informative, the objective, and the subjective. For your information, this show is a Daliesque acid trip of a pub quiz with all the traditional elements done massive and then some. Objectively, the crowd is huge, mad for it, loving it, and kept thoroughly entertained throughout 90 minutes of brilliantly bonkers boisterousosity. Subjectively, how could I not love a show featuring popadom frisbee (Queensbury Rules)? There’s celebrity appearances, fat cupid, Liam and/or Noel Gallagher, as well as the single greatest Alan Rickman impersonation this side of Hogwarts.

Our host, Jake Bhardwaj, is a one-man Disaster Area – the plutonium rock band from ‘Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy’ said to be the loudest rock band in the Galaxy, and also the loudest noise of any kind at all. Bhardwaj’s stagecraft is exceptional. Watching him is like having a front row seat at a supernova or seeing Usain Bolt run an egg spoon race against a kangaroo. Supported by a host of chaotic, colourful misfits, what Bhardwaj conjures into existence is definitely maybe the purest of pure doses of explosively lowbrow highbrow comedy delivered directly into the bloodstream. This show is rowdy like an invasion of Mongolian horsearchers is rowdy.

If you’re afraid of audience participation, look away now. There’s Biggest Crisp, Baywatch Beach Parade, and a piss-your-pants-laughing plethora of properly funny parts for everyone, front seats and back. There is also the pub quiz itself, which is a solid mix of pop culture and no-holds-barred tricky brain teasers. From the concept, through planning, and into delivery, this is a phenomenal EdFringe success story that needs to be added to every August calendar and spreadsheet. Come for the greatest and best bar trivia night in the known universe, stay for a brilliant piece of live theatre, get your coats on and go see this!

 


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‘1457, The Boy at Rest’ (Venue 17, until AUG 24th)

“This was my first experience of Korean national theatre and I am left wanting more! More! MORE”

Editorial Rating: 5 Stars (Outstanding)

The story of the 15th-century Korean boy King Danjong has been told and retold down the ages. A child, too young to govern. An uncle, too ambitious not to seize the throne. A devoted wife, doomed to a lifetime of regret.

We enter to find that some of the most elegant and effective set dressings anywhere this EdFringe have transformed one of the University’s more functional lecture spaces into a sensual backdrop perfectly attuned to the pansori-style session of storytelling about to unfold. Contemporary pansori has been described as the sound of han – the sound of that uniquely Korean form of grief and sorrow. The genius of this production lies in what has been built on that melancholy foundation. Here is a production that is vibrant, laugh-out-loud funny, as well as poignant and thought-provoking. Three goblins (dokkaebi) act as our chorus, framing the narrative with puckish light-heartedness and head-shaking regret at what fools these mortals be.

Thanks to an ultra-contemporary byeokgeori / backdrop displaying colour-coded subtitles, nothing is lost in translation. Sitting in the back row of the theatre, I found the blending of live performance and visual tech aides fairly seamless, although those up front in the spit zone might feel differently. Pansori’s focus on emotional depth, singable narrative arcs, and traditional drum-based accompaniment were delivered by the bucketload by a company of stellar performers who hit all the high notes while also being accessible and (most importantly) really chuffing entertaining. The dokkaebi stole the show with their mix of clown and frown but there were also flashes of pure brilliance from across the company.

This was my first experience of Korean national theatre and I am left wanting more! More! MORE! Drawing on 5,000 years of history, troubled by outsiders, this production is a perfect showcase of national feeling, talent, and identity. Come for the spectacle, stay for the masterclass in professional stagecraft, get your durumagi on and go see this!


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EdFringe Talk: Accidental Baby

“It’s not just improv—it’s invitation.”

WHO: Alexander Cabana and Radostina Peteva

WHAT: “Get ready for laughs you didn’t plan for… The improv comedy show nobody meant to happen, but now you can’t live without! A night of off-the-cuff chaos where scenes are born on the spot, characters spiral out of control, and the only thing you can expect… is the unexpected. Accidental Baby delivers wild, unscripted fun that’ll leave you asking: “Wait… was that planned?” (It wasn’t.). Fuelled by audience suggestions and questionable wisdom, Accidental Baby is like couples therapy… if your therapists were hilarious, unlicensed and possibly drunk. Warning, you may leave pregnant.”

WHERE: Snug at Paradise in Augustines (Venue 152) 

WHEN: 21:45 (55 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

If, by some cosmic sleight, Edinburgh Fringe were to vanish during August, the planet’s artistic pulse would stutter. Such is the density of genius, the saturation of talent that flows through its cobblestone veins during festival season.

Accidental Baby made its debut in 2024 with a sold-out one-week run… largely because they only booked it for one week. This year, emboldened by actual audience enthusiasm, we’ve doubled down with a two-week slot. If the crowds come back again, there’s talk of doing a full run in 2026—though no promises; it depends on stamina, funding, and how many pints of beer we can consume without emotional collapse.

Back in the saddle are we, Radostina Peteva—equal parts comedic genius and chaos wrangler—and stand up comedian and improvisor extraordinaire Alexander Cabana, who’s also back with a new hour of his solo stand-up show “Vulnerable White Passing Male”.

Being both producer and performer is like being your own overworked wedding planner and also the bride with spinach in her teeth—simultaneously architect of the ceremony and flailing center of attention. With Accidental Baby, we are two brides with lipstick on their teeth, begging for the audiences to point it out, because that means they are alive!

When audiences are responsive, adventurous, and slightly buzzed, everything feels electric. A festival thrives when people show up curious, not just because it’s raining.

Their whole show is a dare wrapped in a wink: “Notice us. Notice everything. Even the smudge.”

In their world, the laughter comes not from perfection, but from the shared delight of catching the imperfection together. It’s not just improv—it’s invitation. They aren’t aiming to fool you with polish; they’re begging you to join them in the mess!

So if you are gloriously unhinged, Accidental Baby is your spiritual home. Go. Sit in the front. Laugh too loud. Seriously—Accidental Baby is the show where your emotional baggage gets a standing ovation. Do Not Miss It!

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

We discovered that connection matters far more than perfection—if the audience laughs with us when we drop a prop, we call it a win—and that a show’s story is its currency, sharpened until we can pitch it between traffic light changes. We learned to embrace serendipity, because the person you chat to in the chip queue might become your next booking.

We learned that radical self-reliance isn’t optional—you’re not just the performer, you’re the producer, the usher, the tech guy, the marketer, accountant, and occasionally the person fixing the stage after the last act. Adaptability became our second nature; one night we are in a theatre with perfect lighting, the next we’re competing with a smoothie blender, broken AC system and fan noise.

Other acts turned out to be allies, or rather therapists. We are in this grinder together, and remember that every day is a great day to have a great day!

We’ve absorbed these lessons the same way you absorb Fringe rain—at first you think you can dodge it, then you accept you’re drenched, and eventually you start wondering if you’ve developed gills.

Tell us about your show.

We are married. The show isn’t written. It’s a fully improvised long form comedic performance based on audience interaction. The questions we ask and stories we tell come from the conversations we have in real time.

Our show is about relationships—think of it as unqualified therapy with a very qualified sense of humour. We are two people with just enough relationship experience to be dangerous, and a willingness to hand out advice like free biscuits. We’ve learned a ton about what makes a healthy relationship (mostly from doing the opposite first), and we’re both endlessly curious about the weird, wonderful ways people approach sex, love, and partnership. For us, every audience is a fresh case study—equal parts sociology, comedy, and emotional group hug—where the advice might be heartfelt, might be unhinged, but will definitely be entertaining.

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

We saw RED LIKE FRUIT, a show every person should see whether you are dating, married or forever a rolling stone. It’s about relationship trauma and memory. Moscovitch’s writing is bold and unapologetic. https://www.edfringe.com/tickets/whats-on/red-like-fruit

https://www.instagram.com/2btheatre/

On a lighter note, we saw Breaking The Musical and snickered and giggled for one hour about the breakdancing Australian genius at the Paris Olympics! If you have a silly  and a gossip bone in your body, go see that show! https://www.edfringe.com/tickets/whats-on/breaking-the-musical

https://www.instagram.com/stephbroadbridge/?hl=en

If you want to see something different and wild, and funny but profound, go see 1Shoulder Pad: Galaxy Train, Japanese Musical Theatre. Wow these guys are fun! Great comedic timing and absurdity! https://www.edfringe.com/tickets/whats-on/1shoulder-pad-galaxy-train-japanese-musical-theatre

https://www.instagram.com/shika564dayo/


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EdFringe Talk: Ascension

“The fringe is exhilarating but exhausting, and that you absolutely MUST have a good rest after it.”

WHO: Dan Hazelwood

WHAT: “After a successful run at the Edinburgh Fringe 2024 and sold-out performances at Greenwich Theatre, Ascension returns for Edinburgh Fringe 2025. Ascension is based on the 300-year-old diary of Dutch sailor Leendert Hasenbosch, who was marooned on Ascension Island in 1725 for the crime of sodomy. Isolated and surrounded only by barren rock and endless ocean, he fought to survive. He was, however, pursued ashore by his personal demons. This bold and inventive adaptation reclaims his story for the 21st century, exploring queer identity, the weaponisation of religion and the resilience to love ourselves in a sometimes unforgiving world.”

WHERE: Theatre at Bedlam Theatre (Venue 49) 

WHEN: 14:00 (55 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

I first came to Edinburgh Fringe for a few days after graduating from drama school in 2017, renting a beanbag on the living room floor of another artist’s airbnb for £10 a night. I saw shows from morning until night, eventually giving up late every night – keen to see more but knowing that even if it was a 5 star show I would be too tired and too grumpy to enjoy it. I had no money at the time so hitch-hiked home to Birmingham, stopping overnight in Yorkshire where I was dropped off at my friend’s front door by a neighbour she had never met. I also got to ride in a lorry for the first time which was fun.

I’ve been hooked ever since. Being a punter vs being a performer are different flavours of chaos, but equally addictive.

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

I’ve learned that the fringe is exhilarating but exhausting, and that you absolutely MUST have a good rest after it. I’ve completely ignored my own advice and I’m straight back into work with no hope of rest until October. Maybe next year I’ll heed my own words?

Last year, I obsessed over ticket sales last year, constantly refreshing in hopes of seeing one more ticket sold. It’s a nice adrenaline boost when it does happen, but this year I have set times when I check sales and leave it alone the rest of the time. It’s better for the brain. Paint drying, kettle boiling, etc, etc.

Tell us about your show.

Ascension is based on the real life diaries of an 18th century Dutch castaway on Ascension Island, or should I say the translations of his long lost diary. This makes the question of who wrote Ascension a bit of a complicated one to answer. Leendert (or Lee as I like to call him) wrote the original diary, then multiple translators wrote their translations, and I have adapted all of the above. There is a lot of my original writing in the play, some of which is based on my own life (Lee’s first kiss is based on my own) but the script also contains a lot of diary extracts. It’s probably more accurate to say I’m a curator of the play as a whole, and the writer of a good chunk of it.

I’m producing it myself, and I’m very lucky to be joined by very talented creatives in every area of the production who I trust entirely. They have made the show very special and much easier for me!

We premiered at Edinburgh Fringe 2024, and following our 2025 stint here, we’ll be doing a performance in London for the 300 year anniversary of Lee’s death. Following that, I’m hoping to tour it around the UK and maybe even further afield!

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

For lovingly crafted idiocy, you’ve got to check out The Fit Prince (full title on the link below!) at Pleasance Courtyard by Awkward Productions, the hottest power couple of EdFringe! If you’ve ever seen a hallmark Christmas movie, you’ll love this:
https://www.edfringe.com/tickets/whats-on/the-fit-prince-who-gets-switched-on-the-square-in-the-frosty-castle-the-night-before-insert-public-holiday-here

You also must see “I Was Dancing in the Lesbian Bar” by Holly Redford Jones. Very funny, great music, and beautifully moving. It’s the only lesbian bar in Edinburgh, open for one hour a day at Underbelly Cowgate: https://www.edfringe.com/tickets/whats-on/i-was-dancing-in-the-lesbian-bar


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