+3 Interview: Basil Brush: Unleashed

“…appearing at Glastonbury and meeting Kylie Minogue behind the pyramid stage …I’ve lent her some of my costumes, we are both the same size.”

WHO: Basil Brush, Writer/ Performer

WHAT: “Showbusiness legend, national treasure, fox. Children of the 2000s, 1970s (and everything in between) this one’s for you. As Basil makes his much-anticipated Fringe debut in a show for the adults! Fresh from appearances on The Last Leg (Channel 4) and Celebrity Juice (ITV2), join Basil as he gives his comedic take on everything from Love Island to Westminster in his trademark anarchic style, with different guests nightly. ‘Hilarious’ (DigitalSpy.com).”

WHERE: Underbelly, Bristo Square – Cowbarn (Venue 302) 

WHEN: 18:45 (60 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This is my very first time to the Edinburgh Fringe as a performer… I didn’t think they would want such an English fox up there, but how wrong was I and now I can’t wait to be part of the biggest festival in the world and in the wonderful city of Edinburgh, do they have the real Edinburgh Woollen Mill up there? Is it different to the one in England…

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

The biggest thing to happen to me since the Festival last year was appearing on ‘The Chase’ …and winning! Also, I do Panto every year at the Theatre-Royal Windsor and met Prince Edward, and I won £10 on the National Lottery ……and appearing at Glastonbury and meeting Kylie Minogue behind the pyramid stage …I’ve lent her some of my costumes, we are both the same size.

Tell us about your show.

We have two shows at the festival, ‘My Basil Brush Family Show’ in the afternoons, obviously for the families and kids …high energy, lots of audience participation, lots of getting grown-ups wet, and maybe cream pies! Then in the evening at 6:45 we have a slightly more grown-up show for the bigger kids up there… for those that grew up with me on CBBC and even those who were around in the 70s, it’s not a blue show but something where we take a look at the world from a talking fox perspective, lots of fun, but more Graham Norton meets ‘Crackerjack’!

I’ve been working with my current mister, Mister Martin for three years and we met in Panto and he wanted to be my sidekick, so he can stand at my side and kick him!

It’s going to premier in Edinburgh but it carries on at the Southbank and a select theatre tour as well! It’s is. Sing produced by SO Comedy, the comedy arm of SO TV, very exciting, Malcolm McKee has written it and he wrote the Shakespeare revue with Director Chris Luscombe for the RSC many years ago …there is additional material from myself and Mr Martin, and comedian Robin Morgan.

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

Once folks have seen my show they should take a look at ‘Dead Ringers’ because that is one of my favourites from the radio, and they should be daring and go see something they have never heard of take a punt ….then, of course, come back and see my show AGAIN …Boom Boom …


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+3 Interview: After You

“Last year I couldn’t be in Edinburgh for the whole festival and I missed it so much – I had to come back this year.”

WHO: Hannah Norris: Performer/Writer/Producer

WHAT: “In 1961, Hannah’s mum, Angela, was in the Australian premiere production of The Sound of Music. The expectations of her generation, including motherhood, stopped her following that career. Now Angela’s retired, Hannah’s decided they’re doing a show together. By looking into Angela’s past, Hannah is weighing up her own life, choices and what the future holds for them both. Hopeful, optimistic and full of love, After You will leave you believing forgotten and hidden dreams can come true. After You premiered at the 2019 Adelaide Fringe. ‘Rare and profoundly powerful experience ***** (TheBarefootReview.com.au). ***** (Scenestr.com.au). ***** (Advertiser, Adelaide).”

WHERE: Assembly Rooms – Front Room (Venue 20) 

WHEN: 13:10 (60 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

It’s not my first time to Edinburgh but it is my first time to Edinburgh with my mum (Angela)!
I grew up in London before moving to Australia at age 12 and while we lived in the UK, I’d never been to Scotland so it was always a place I wanted to go.

Once I started performing and getting involved with the Adelaide Fringe in 2000, the Edinburgh Fringe sounded like the best place on earth. I finally got there in 2009 as a punter (I couldn’t believe how amazing Edinburgh Castle was looming over the streets below like that). In 2013 I worked with Hannah Gadsby as her support/flyerer/assistant/mate and finally, in 2015, I won the Underbelly Edinburgh Award for the dark and disturbing one-woman show ‘CUT’ that I performed in Adelaide and Underbelly brought over and produced two years in a row. I performed CUT nearly 100 times in Edinburgh across those two years.

Last year I couldn’t be in Edinburgh for the whole festival and I missed it so much – I had to come back this year. Also, once I visited Edinburgh in December and it was so strange to be there with quieter streets, much less sunlight and no colourful posters on every spare inch of wall surface!

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

Finally writing my first ever full show – and then performing it – and getting amazing, beautiful responses to it. I’ve been working as an actor for nearly 20 years and have wanted to write for almost as long but been too scared. I’ve had a really busy year with lots of travel and incredible experiences, but for me that is truly the biggest thing.

Tell us about your show.

The moment I had the idea to do a show with my mum last August, I knew that if I didn’t do it, I would have regretted it forever. So we just started talking about her life, I asked lots of questions (with secret dramaturgical agendas and secret recording devices) and began stitching together a script and journey for the work. Throughout the process, I consulted with lots of theatre friends on all elements of the production but the content, style, heart and power of the show really did all come from me and my mum. I also taught mum more about acting throughout the months we were developing the work and she is so good! She fools me all the time – natural, consistent and an amazing performer. She’ll make you cry. And laugh. Don’t worry about that.

We premiered at the Adelaide Fringe this year to the most wonderful response from our audiences. And this led us to a short season at Melbourne’s gorgeous Butterfly Club – which was also brilliant. We can’t wait to bring it to Edinburgh!

There are no official plans for future dates but I have some witchcraft to do under the next New Moon and we’ll see if we can manifest some more world touring. I’d love to take the show to Canada because my mum lived there from when she was a few months old until the age of 6 and has never been back… yet. (let the witchcraft commence!)

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

We are on at 1.10pm – so I suggest you have a nice coffee (from Brew Lab or Kilimanjaro – I’m devastated to hear that Filament has closed – their ginger/lemon shots were a lifesaver) and start the day with us before heading off to a day packed full of shows. My list is huge already and I love that once the festival starts there’ll be shows I’ve never heard of that I’ll be telling everyone about – but you’ll have to hold out for those ones.

I can’t wait to see the new shows from Lou Sanders, Richard Gadd, Carl Donnelly (my husband), Scottee and Rosie Jones. You obviously have to go and see “Bryony Kimmings: I’m a Phoenix, Bitch” and Abandoman, Massaoke and Marcel Lucont will never disappoint. I’m super excited about Diane Chorley’s late night show, and feel like I’ll spend many an evening there. Comedian Tim Vine is doing a one-off Elvis show which I am not going to miss. Tara Rankine got an Adelaide Fringe award for her cabaret show “Love is a Work in Progress” and Brittany Plummer is doing her first ever solo show “Chameleon” – a clowning work – that I missed in Adelaide, but won’t miss here.

Also, need to see The Long Pigs and Shit – both involving amazing Australian theatre people. I’ve seen comedians Rhys Nicholson, Daniel Connell, Liza Treyger and Fern Brady – so good, so funny – and you need to if you haven’t yet. I could keep going – check my twitter – think I need to get busy recommending on there!!! Aaaaaarrrghgghhhhhh so much to see!!!!!!!!!


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+3 Interview: Joz Norris Is Dead. Long Live Mr Fruit Salad.

“I went to Morocco with my friend and trekked into the Atlas Mountains and climbed the third-tallest mountain in Africa and it made me burst into tears. Gotta remember to actually live your life, y’know?”

WHO: Joz Norris, Writer/Performer

WHAT: “Joz Norris has retired or possibly died, who cares? All that matters is Mr Fruit Salad, a fictional chimaera he created as a form of self-care, has developed autonomy and is putting on a solo show. Absurdist meditation on anxiety and grief performed by an idiot from Pontefract who doesn’t exist. Sell-out show at VAULT Festival and Leicester Comedy Festival 2019. As seen/heard on BBC3, Channel 4, ITV2, Dave and BBC Radio 4. ‘An absolute idiot… Simple, silly and screamingly funny’ (Fest). ‘A comedy legend’ (ToDoList.org.uk).”

WHERE: Heroes @ The Hive – The Bunka (Venue 313) 

WHEN: 16:40 (60 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This will be my 8th consecutive Fringe, and my 6th full solo show. I went up in 2012 with a short character show just to try and find my feet within the context of the Fringe and get my bearings with what it is, and I immediately found it infinitely more rewarding than the comedy experience I’d had up until that point. I loved having a space where you were in total control of the context and the tone of what you were doing and so on, it felt far more creatively exciting than trying to express yourself in 10-minute chunks on circuit gigs.

I did a couple of shows where I was very much in the process of figuring out what I wanted to do in 2013 and 2014, then in 2015 I started working with Heroes of Fringe and that, along with a few other changes in my life, shifted my perspective massively. Since then I’ve felt much more satisfied with the shows I’ve made, most of which have tended to be built around a single absurd image (me “growing” out of a box, me tangled up inside a giant web) and then explored whatever big, amorphous ideas I’ve been thinking about that year via some jumbled-up nonsense. Last year I took a year off from making a solo show and played the title role in a play at Assembly instead, but am returning to making my own show this year because I’ve got two years’ worth of unexplored thoughts to sift through and make something of.

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

Career-wise, it’s probably a sort of sitcom-pilot/comedy taster thing that I shot with my good friend and frequent collaborator Ed Aczel at the end of last year. For me, the ultimate goal from getting involved in comedy was that I one day wanted to make my own TV series, because I grew up in absolute awe of shows like Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace, Peep Show, The Mighty Boosh, Marion & Geoff, and so on. So alongside all the live comedy stuff and the festival shows and the gigs, I spend a lot of time developing ideas and scripts for potential TV projects, all of which involves a lot of meetings and a lot of waiting and, ultimately, a lot of luck as to whether you just happen to have the right idea at the right time.

In November Tiger Aspect sponsored a shoot for me and Ed to film a sort-of pilot script we’d written together, about two idiot criminals trying to steal a vending machine, and now we’re trying to pitch it to telly people and see if anyone will bite. Outside of work, I think the most uniquely exciting thing I’ve done this year is go on a proper holiday. I went to Morocco with my friend and trekked into the Atlas Mountains and climbed the third-tallest mountain in Africa and it made me burst into tears. Gotta remember to actually live your life, y’know?

Tell us about your show.

I started writing this show last year, because even though I wasn’t making a full solo show in 2018, writing a live show is still my main creative outlet every year and I wanted a place to put all the ideas I was coming up with so I could revisit them this year and see if I could turn them into something more complete. I’d created an imaginary alter-ego for myself called Mr Fruit Salad, which was just me in a fake beard and sunglasses and a hat pretending I didn’t exist, and would occasionally do gigs as him instead of me because I went through a period of not enjoying performing, and I felt I needed to hide my face in order to remind myself of how to enjoy it.

Eventually, I found something really interesting in that – the idea of having to hide yourself and in some way distance yourself in order to actually be present with people, the idea of having to sort of split your personality somehow in order to feel confident enough to get out of your head and build connections, it all seemed to be exploring some quite basic human ideas, but all via this very visually stupid, cartoon-like gimmick, and I felt like there was a show in that. I did a couple of work-in-progress performances at the Fringe last year, then in 2019 teamed up with my amazing director, Alex Hardy, and with my incredible co-star Ben Target, both of whom have brought such insight and heart and depth to the show. So far this year it’s played sell-out performances at VAULT Festival, Leicester Comedy Festival and Bath Comedy Festival, and seems on track to be the show I’ll look back on and be proudest of. Can’t wait to show it to Edinburgh.

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

Oh, far too many. If you go on my Twitter I’ve been recommending a show a day for the last 70 days or something, so there’s loads of amazing things there. But I suppose some of the shows I’m most excited about are shows from John Kearns, Lucy Pearman, Paul Currie and Roisin & Chiara. John is my favourite comedian in the world and makes shows that remind me how deeply comedy can make you feel, and how much it can open up things inside you that you didn’t know were there. Lucy’s ideas are so big and bold and stupid, and she makes me laugh more than anybody else I know, I think. Paul’s show last year was my absolute favourite – he’s incredible at big, dumb, anarchic nonsense and then had an ending that was so earnest and kind and beautiful that it made me sob. And Roisin & Chiara are my favourite act I’ve discovered in the last year, they’re unbelievably inventive and talented and silly and channel something really magical, I think.


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+3 Interview: The Grandmothers Grimm

“I first came to Edinburgh and the Fringe in 2011 as a performer and ended up falling in love with the city and moving here the next year.”

WHO: Emily Ingram, Director/Playwright

WHAT: “Cannibalism, werewolf trials, deceit, and murder: Marie Hassenpflug and the Brothers Grimm are trying to edit the darkness out of old stories. But as they do so, the voices of the women who created these tales are lost… What will be saved and what will be forgotten? The Grandmothers Grimm explores women’s role in the creation of the Brothers Grimm’s famous anthology. Discover a night of folk and fairy tales as you’ve never heard them before. Following performances in Buxton and London, Some Kind of Theatre are proud to bring The Grandmothers Grimm home to the Edinburgh.”

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

WHEN: 21:15 (60 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

We’re actually here all year: Some Kind of Theatre have been making shows in Edinburgh since 2015 and this is our fourth Fringe.

I first came to Edinburgh and the Fringe in 2011 as a performer and ended up falling in love with the city and moving here the next year. Since then, I’ve taken part in every Fringe either as a performer, stage manager, director, producer, or hander-out-of-flyers for friends’ shows.

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

I adapted and staged the world premiere of a book that had been lost for 90 years!

In the 1920s, Vita Sackville-West wrote a brand new, miniature book called ‘A Note Of Explanation’ for the Queen Anne Dolls House and it got put on a tiny shelf in the dolls house without anyone realising “oh, this is a brand new story by a rather famous author!” and no one discovered it until the dolls house was renovated in 2017.

‘A Note Of Explanation’ – which is about the adventures of a cheeky sprite who’s been involved in all of the events in fairy tale history – was officially published and I read it and went “oh, this is SO perfect for Some Kind of Theatre – we have to stage it”, so got in touch with the Royal Collection Trust and Vita Sackville-West’s estate, got their blessing to adapt it, and away we went. It was one of our most ambitious shows so far (and our first children’s show!): we were using giant puppets, huge pantomime costumes, and shadow puppets and there was a wonderful, magical atmosphere that our three brilliant performers -Justin Skelton, Imogen Reiter, and Gillian Goupillot – managed to create. We’ve had a brilliant response to the show and have plans to take it on tour in December this year.

Tell us about your show.

Continuing slightly with the fairy tale theme, our Fringe 2019 show is ‘The Grandmothers Grimm’: an exploration of the dark origins of the Brothers Grimms fairy tales and the women who created them.

The show in set on a winter’s evening in the Brothers Grimm’s study, where they and a house guest – Marie Hassenpflug – are poring over transcripts of old folk tales told to the Brothers by women that they know. The Brothers and Marie start trying to remove the horror from these stories and re-tell them to make them more suitable for children, but Marie notices that the Brothers are erasing the female characters and the original authors. The show looks at why these women and female characters have been forgotten and tries to champion women who have been left out of history.

‘The Grandmothers Grimm’ started life as a short play at the Edinburgh Horror Festival in 2017. I’d been approached about putting a play on at the festival and decided to do something about the scary, early versions of classic fairy tales. While I was researching the play, I found out a lot about how the Brothers Grimm’s famous fairy tale collection was put together and how so many women have gone unacknowledged for their contributions to it, and I got pretty angry about that and the play morphed accordingly! I reworked it after the Horror Festival and it went from a fairly easy-going piece telling gory versions of fairy tales to this tirade against the way women and their artistic and literary work have been treated by history.

‘The Grandmothers Grimm’ is being performed throughout the Fringe: we’re spending the 3rd-17th (not 11th) at Paradise Green, where we performed ‘Twelfth Night’ last Fringe. Then, we’re taking the show on tour to living rooms, offices, care homes, and schools as part of our Theatre On The Sofa project. Theatre On The Sofa (and its sister project Shakespeare On The Sofa) started as an accessible theatre scheme, bringing shows into the homes of folk who can’t access theatre easily in traditional venues. But we’ve had a lot of demand from other theatre-goers and now absolutely anyone based between EH1-EH20 can book the show, and we’ll bring it right to you in your living room. It’s sort of like Netflix and on-demand TV, but a bit more immediate!

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

I really recommend ‘The Green Knight’ by Debbie Cannon. It’s a beautiful show, and I love the simple but creative way Debbie uses props in her performance. Go see it, folks!

I’m also really excited to see Keane & Doyle’s two-person production of ‘2Elfth Night’ at Paradise Green. Having produced on Some Kind of Theatre’s take of ‘Twelfth Night’ in 2018 and watched the show develop, I’m exciting to see another company’s adaptation of the play.


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+3 Interview: Ali and Alpo

“We’ve been visiting South Korea and Hungary for the first time this year.”

WHO: Sari Lakso, Producer

WHAT: “A beautiful wordless dialogue between Iraqi traditional music and Finnish contemporary dance. The original aim of the work by oud lute virtuoso Ali Alawad and choreographer Alpo Aaltokoski was to contemplate the similarities and differences between two mutually alien cultures. But the rejection of Alawad’s asylum application dramatically affected the final form of the work. To avoid forced repatriation, Alawad fled Finland two weeks before the premiere. Nevertheless, Alawad still took part in the performance via video projection. The piece touchingly brings out the human experience and the consequences of increasingly restrictive asylum policies.”

WHERE: Summerhall – Old Lab (Venue 26) 

WHEN: 13:05 (40 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

Yes, for the company this is the first time. We are very much excited!

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

Well, we’ve been visiting South Korea and Hungary for the first time this year. But like I said, this is the first time for us in Edinburgh.

Tell us about your show.

The story behind the show is quite peculiar; a planned duet turned into a solo work, sort of. It all started 2016 when Alpo and Ali met the first time. It was Alpo’s 30th anniversary as an artist where Ali was playing. He had arrived in Finland in 2015 as an asylum seeker. They started to collaborate and investigate the differences between two different cultures. Two weeks before the planned premiere, the rejection of Alawad’s asylum application dramatically affected the genesis of the work, and its final form. In order to avoid forced repatriation he fled Finland in March 2017 – two weeks before the premiere. Nevertheless, show was staged according to Alawad’s wishes, since he still took part in the performance via a video projection. Production is produced by Alpo Aaltokoski Company which was founded in 1995 as part of Nomadi collective. Ali and Alpo has been performed around Finland after its premiere, in Hungary and Russia (2019) and pitched in Dusseldorf Tanzmesse (2018).

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

We highly recommend the other projects part of the From Start to Finnish programme, and other Finnish productions as part of EdFringe. Un Poyo Rojo is must see and very curious to see Jo Strömgren’s Hospital.


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+3 Interview: Elliot Bibby – Magic in a Jiffy

“I’d recommend seeing as many shows as possible. Take a punt on an unknown show, you might really enjoy it.”

WHO: Elliot Bibby, Performer

WHAT: “Join Scottish Magician of the Year 2018 in this fast-moving show full of laughs and surprises. As you know, shopping online isn’t always as straightforward as it seems. With Slick tricks and a quick wit, Elliot will make your drunken late night eBaying look like the antiques roadshow rejects. His inimitable skill and seamless delivery promises to reveal the magic in the everyday. Post and packaging inc. Current International Brotherhood of Magicians British Ring Close-Up Magic Champion and nominated for the 2018 Fringe World Comedy Award in Australia. ‘Highly Recommended’ ***** (EdinburghSpotlight.com).”

WHERE: The Voodoo Rooms – The Ballroom (Venue 68) 

WHEN: 18:30 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This will be my 6th year performing at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. I originally moved to Edinburgh to go to University and study study Sports Engineering.

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

I won the International Brotherhood of Magicians British Ring Close-Up Competition, down in Southport.

After the success of last years show, I took it out to Australia, and also back home to the Glasgow International Comedy Festival.

Tell us about your show.

I primarily write the show, with the help from a few others that include creatives and and magicians. The show is produced by the brilliant ‘Blonde Ambition’ and the venue, the Voodoo Rooms.

I’m excited to hopefully take this show out on tour towards the end of this year/start of 2020.

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

I’d recommend seeing as many shows as possible. Take a punt on an unknown show, you might really enjoy it. Also grab the opportunity to see unusual shows that you wouldn’t normally get the chance to see.

The shows I’d highly recommend seeing are:

– Chris Dugdale: Down to One
– Aaron Crow: Fearless
– Tom Crosbie: Nerd World Problems
– Kevin Quantum: Neon Future
– Troy Hawke: Tiles of the Unexpected!
– Stephen Buchanan: Baby Dove


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+3 Interview: Being Frank

“I wrote Being Frank over the course of the last year…”

WHO: Ian Tucker-Bell, Author

WHAT: “Frank’s son Alex is facing a mental health crisis, and Frank hasn’t a clue what to do about it or how to get Alex to talk about it. He’s got problems of his own, and what’s happening to Alex is opening up wounds he thought long forgotten. Weaving real-life stories into a fictional narrative, Being Frank uses humour, music, movement and a good deal of honesty to explore men’s relationships with each other, with mental health and with flat-pack furniture.”

WHERE: theSpace on North Bridge – Argyll Theatre (Venue 36) 

WHEN: Varies (50 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This will be our third time at Edinburgh. We came up for the first time two years ago with the play “From Today Everything Changes” which was well received. Last year we returned with that play again plus my then latest play “Trans Pennine” which again, was very well received by audiences over the course fo the two weeks we were there.

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

I’ve had a busy year directing Things I Know To Be True at the Oast Theatre in Tonbridge. That was a huge undertaking, particularly working with the physical theatre aspect so much a feature of Frantic Assembly’s work, and composing the original music used in our production. It was totally new for our audience, and despite anxieties about how it would be received it could not have been received better.

Tell us about your show.

I wrote Being Frank over the course of the last year, and it was developed in workshop with my colleagues at The Orange Works. We’ve been together for about three years now, born out of a love of taking original work to Edinburgh, and tackling issues important to myself – often LGBT issues, but this time my battles with Mental Health over the last few years. It will preview at Tonbridge Old Fire Station at the end of July, but Edinburgh will be its official premiere, and afterwards, we will be heading to the Faversham Fringe…. and wherever else we can!

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

I recommend “TEACH” by Bread and Butter Productions – he is one exceptional writer and performer, and I’m really looking forward to seeing this production after the sublime “Canoe” he performed last year.


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+3 Interview: Bullarena

“After Edinburgh, we will be looking at the possibility of touring the production around the U.K.

WHO: Holly Burgess Smith, Rebecca/ Rosien

WHAT: “Inspired by a true story, Bullarena is a tale of identity and how we choose to follow the truth behind ours. In the masculine-charged arena of bull riding, a sport where women are forbidden from competing, Cassidy has had enough. Never one for conforming to what society expects, Cassidy decides to challenge the perception of femininity and attempts to compete as an equal. Sometimes simply being told you can’t is enough to make you face your fears and prove that you can.”

WHERE: Greenside @ Nicolson Square – Emerald Theatre (Venue 209) 

WHEN: 21:40 (50 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

Yes, this is rough stock productions debut production. Myself alongside fellow college Brandi McClaine have co-produced and devised this production.

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

We first performed Bullarena at East 15 Acting school and then at the Camden Fringe for 2 nights, Edinburgh festival is without a doubt the biggest thing to have happened to rough stock productions! And we couldn’t be more excited!

Tell us about your show.

Rough stock productions comprises of a group of global actors who all met at East 15 Acting school.

Our show is inspired by true events; rough stocks co-producer and actor Brandi McClaine, disguised herself as a man, at age thirteen, so she could compete in the rodeo bull riding contest, a sport which was forbidden to women, after hearing this we were insistent this was our story!

The production of Bullarena was completely divided by the company; we first performed at East 15 and then took the production to the Camden fringe. After Edinburgh, we will be looking at the possibility of touring the production around the U.K.

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

I would highly recommend the production “In Her Corner” directed by Niloo Far-Kahn. A struggle between a woman, her family, and community violence and her new love for boxing!


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+3 Interview: The 2 Mouthed Men Show

“Our first Edinburgh Fringe was last year when we performed on the 8th floor of a hotel and halfway through our run the elevator broke so we had to get the stairs.”

WHO: Harry Neal: Producer/General Manager/Graphic Designer/Marketing Manager/Press Manager/Just about everything

WHAT: “Beatboxing. Sketch Comedy. At the same time. They may not be the best beatboxers. They may not be the best sketch comedy duo. But they’re definitely the only two people stupid enough to combine the two. Join Daniel Stanger-Cornwell and James Hawley as they take you on a musical odyssey unlike any other. 2 Mouthed Men is a brand-new music-comedy act taking the UK by storm. Utilising beatboxing, rap, poetry, guitar, bass and looping, The 2 Mouthed Men Show promises to be a night to remember.”

WHERE: Just the Tonic at The Charteris Centre – Just the Sanctum (Venue 393) 

WHEN: 19:20 (50 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

No it is not! Our first Edinburgh Fringe was last year when we performed on the 8th floor of a hotel and halfway through our run the elevator broke so we had to get the stairs.

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

The biggest thing was probably performing at The Other Palace in London. It was our biggest yet and the energy was incredible. We also learnt so much from that about how to make our show the best it can be for the Fringe.

Tell us about your show.

Beatboxing. Sketch Comedy. At the same time.

Pretty much what it says on the tin. 2 Mouthed Men is made up of James Hawley and Daniel Stanger-Cornwell, who combine beatboxing and sketch comedy for a musical comedy odyssey unlike any other.

The show is written and performed by James and Daniel while is produced by myself. We all met at University in Exeter and the idea was the brainchild of James during a lecture one day. Daniel took some swaying to the idea but eventually cake around to it. Our first show was a few months later and was a massive hit. That’s when we decided to try and take the show to the fringe.

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

We love comedians like Grant Buse who is another great musical comedian. His show at last year’s fringe ‘The Birds and the Beats’ was extraordinary and we can’t wait for his show this year.


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+3 Interview: Charlie Vero-Martin: Scrapbook

“It’s been a bit of a crazy year for my family.”

WHO: Charlie Vero-Martin, Writer/Performer

WHAT: “Charlie returns with more historical comedy, characters and stand-up. Napoleon and Amelia Earhart are back by popular demand but watch out for Jane Austen. Pasting together experiences old and new, expect trips down dodgy memory lanes, opinionated puppets, spontaneous discoveries and a showstopping finale! Like her previous two Edinburgh shows, this promises to be exceedingly charming, a little bit weird and very funny. ‘Talented in every style she pursues… a real renaissance woman’ **** (BroadwayBaby.com). ‘Deserves a wider audience’ **** (DarkChat.moonfruit.com). ‘Charming, hilarious and beautiful. An absolute must-see’ **** (Edinburgh Festivals Magazine).”

WHERE: Gilded Balloon at Old Tolbooth Market – Bothy (Venue 98) 

WHEN: 12:45 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

It’s not! As I’m originally from Edinburgh, I’ve been part of the Fringe or International Festival in one way or another since I was about 6.

This is my third year however as a solo performer, which is still really exciting. My first show was all characters but last year there was a bit more of me in it and this year it’s about 50/50. Prior to being a solo act, I usually would be here as part of a bigger improv comedy groups such as Glitch – The Improvised Puppet Show or Blind Mirth.

What’s the biggest thing to have happened to you since Festivals ’18?

I guess it’s getting engaged! It’s been a bit of a crazy year for my family. My sister also had a baby so I’m an aunty now too! All of these big life events have had quite an impact on me and have inspired a lot of my show.

Tell us about your show.

The show is written, produced, (funded) and performed by me. All of my shows have a historical theme and this time I’m looking at history and memory: how are people remembered and how do we want to be remembered? It sounds quite deep but it’s a very silly show! I play Napoleon as an agony aunt, Amelia Earhart as a motivational speaker and a very frustrated Jane Austen. There are puppets, stories and a big dance finale! This a fun, uplifting hour where you might also learn something. And it’s guaranteed to be the only show on the Fringe about spolia*!

*Spolia – a term used in ancient and art history to describe repurposing old material. See, you’re learning already!

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

Straight after my show, in the same venue, is Maddie Campion so stick around for her! James Bran, who will be helping me out on tech, is also back doing stand-up and Gabby Best is doing her first hour!


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