‘The Ghost of Alexander Blackwood’ (Venue 498, Aug 16-18)

“As Blackwood, Connor Bryson is approachably authoritative. As everyone else, Amy Murray is really rather sensational.”

Editorial Rating: 5 Stars (Outstanding)

How do you do theatre without the spoken voice? It’s such a meta question and the question matters because many great minds cannot interact with others using their own voice or receive the spoken voices of others. One such great mind was possessed of Alexander Blackwood. Blackwood – of the silk traders rather than the publishing family – was an Edinburgh native who took his advocacy global. He was the founder of the world’s first Deaf and Dumb Benevolent Society, now known as Deaf Action and headquartered in Albany Street.

We enter the Blackwood bar via a staircase bedecked and festooned with the history of the organization, its people, and its personalities. It’s an immersive time warp taking us back to March 1805 and the birth of Blackwood who would gradually lose his ability to hear following an attack of scarlet fever aged 7. On the far wall of the bar, seven hand-painted posters chronicle Blackwood’s life and accomplishments. They will come in useful as playwright Nadia Nadarajah has structured this seance to move backwards and forward through time. The effect is slightly discombobulating, a reminder that Blackwood’s lived experience was less than plain sailing. 

What comes across so magnificently in the script are the figures who scaffolded Blackwood and who were in turn scaffolded and supported by him. Albany Street is the home, hub, and centre of one of the most thriving, diverse, life-affirming communities in Scotland’s capital. Nadarajah’s script is a fine wee dram blended of affection, attention, and acclamation for the man in whose shadow so much shines.

As Blackwood, Connor Bryson is approachably authoritative. Here was a great man doing great things for others. Bryson holds the drama together. The timeline bends around him. As everyone else, Amy Murray is really rather sensational. There’s humour, some superb horseplay, plenty of give, and just enough take to make this onstage partnership one of the best double-handers of EdFringe24. The staging is 3 dimensional, up down and all around. The lighting is clever and appropriate amplifying the two-in-one performances that make this production such a credit to its subject and to his living legacy.

If this show leaves a question unanswered it is this: Is it possible (or appropriate) to dramatically examine figures such as Gandhi or the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. without considering their public and private religious life? Blackwood was a man of sincere, abiding, and not untested faith whose CV highlights include becoming a pastor at the world’s first deaf church. The performance is bookended by heavy-duty quotations from scripture, but what did these mean to Blackwood himself? In the longer running times afforded in theatrical life beyond the Fringe, I hope this vital spark will be kindled. Jamie Rea’s production deserves to be staged again and again. Visual applause was invented for successes like this one.

For now, get your tailcoats on and go see this!


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‘The Expulsion of Exulansis’ (Venue 9, Aug 13-17)

“They are talking about mental health and well-being with the authority of those who know of what they speak.”

Editorial Rating: 4 Stars (Outstanding)

The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows lists ‘exulansis’ as “the tendency to give up trying to talk about an experience because people are unable to relate to it – whether through envy or pity or simple foreignness – which allows it to drift away from the rest of your life story, until the memory itself feels out of place, almost mythical, wandering restlessly in the fog, no longer even looking for a place to land.”

Siyani Sheth truly is expelling exulansis proving that in the world of mental health and well-being, the skilled and dexterous pen can be as mighty as the surgeon’s scalpel. Every member of the cast has experienced mental illness personally or through loved ones. They have come together to help share Siyani’s story and amplify the messages contained in her gigantically human-scale drama featuring depression, anxiety, eating disorders and self-harm. There is light at the end of the tunnel, sometimes it takes more than one pair of eyes to see it.

This is a game of two halves. First, there is Siyani persona personalmente, her contemporary self navigating the past and present, trying to imagine a future less burdened by diminished bandwidth, noisy static, and deafening dead air. Second, there is Zahira Kayrooz as her younger self. Kayrooz is one to watch and is extremely watchable as she glides, trips and stumbles on a journey into places no parent would want their child to go. There is acting and there is being. Kayrooz is a being.. be-er… beingor…? She inhabits the role with daring and deliberation. Her choices are bold and courageous. Where the script hangs heavy or where the timeline is slightly unclear is Kayrooz’s gravity which stops it all spinning off into space.

Amanda Coetzer as the super-helpful teacher and as the super-unhelpful psychiatrist delivers a double whammy of light and dark. A good character actor can make you absolutely love or resolutely loathe the onstage creature they inhabit. It is a great artistic achievement to do both in the same hour of Fringe stage traffic. Similarly, Sofía De Yermo as the friend on the outside as well as the friend from the inside presents two very different personalities vital to the fizz and pop of this often funny piece.⁠ Matthew Warburton and James Anite deliver a more mixed bag of personalities not all of which achieve the proud heights of Warburton and Kayrooz’s most memorable scene together.

Dan! Why are you using surnames for the actors but the writer’s first name? Because there is another Sheth on stage and he is doing something ultra-extraordinary. ⁠Mitesh Sheth is playing himself, his daughter’s father, the link between the play’s two halves of now and then. ⁠Mitesh might not have been at the eye of the storm as Siyani was, but he had a view and a role as close as makes no odds. The power of this piece, the importance of this peace is as living testimony that survival is possible and that hope is not a myth.

We saw a baby giraffe learning to walk. Soon this piece will learn to stride. This herd of graceful, diverse, and farseeing talent deserves a special place in the wild landscape of EdFringe24. This is a company doing something very special indeed. They are talking about mental health and well-being with the authority of those who know of what they speak. As importantly (actually… no this is a theatre festival) MORE importantly they know HOW to say what needs to be said so that it can be heard loud and proud by all.

Get your ties up at the back coats on and go see this!


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‘Do This One Thing for Me’ (Venue 49, Aug 9-11, 13-18, 20-26)

“What we have here is a perfect combination of all the great elements necessary for a truly benchmark #EdFringe production against which all others will be measured.”

Editorial Rating: 5 Stars (Outstanding)

When we think of Greece we think of Santorini skylines, wrecked Clyde-built ships on stunning beaches, picturesque olive groves tinkling to the sound of goatbells. If you’d only watched the not-all-bad 2001 silver-screen adaptation of de Bernières’ overnight classic ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’ you’d be forgiven for not knowing that the second half of the novel is a heartbreaking chronicle of Greece’s post-war civil war, one of too many chapters in which human folly and violent fragility are let slip in the cradle of Europe and paradiso descends into inferno.

As an Axis-occupied nation during the war, Greece suffered all the horrors and torments of industrial genocide. Over 80% of Greece’s prewar Jewish population was murdered. Of the 43,000 Jews in Salonika, Greece’s largest prewar Jewish community, over 40,000 perished. The numbers are similarly stark and savage in the hill town where Beni Elias and his family lived.

While attending high school in Long Beach, New York, Beni’s daughter, Jane, was assigned a 10-page, typed essay on World War II. That assignment blossomed into a nascent exploration of Beni’s journey through the war, an exploration that is currently taking #EdFringe24 by storm and with good reason. There are many great and necessary stories told in Scotland’s capital during any given August. There are many great storytellers blending their professional talent and personal insight. What we have here is a perfect combination of all the great elements necessary for a truly benchmark #EdFringe production against which all others will be measured.

Beni’s wartime story is uncomprehendable. The scale of his suffering, agonies, and terror. The continuous loss of friends and family sans dignity, sans pity, sans space to grieve in. The banality of evil. The ordinariness of suffering. The ultimate impossibility of recovering what was taken. This is a portrait of a patriarch and it is the landscape of a relationship between a regular little girl, a not atypical young woman, and her much-loved, much-admired father. Beni would have been a big figure to coexist with on whatever path life had taken him on. As a Survivor, he is lovingly painted as humanity’s human – a towering presence yes, and a toweringly infuriating figure to live with on those rare(ish) days which (occasionally) happen between us Babas and our κοριτσάκια when wires or opinions get crossed.

In this astonishingly candid, incredibly relatable tale of family drama and global catastrophe, Jane Elias has gifted something wonderful to the world. This is a script that will live forever as a testament to memories which must never be forgotten. Here is a portrait of a parent that does honour to those who went before as well as to those who were stolen before their time. Here is the best play, the best production of #EdFringe24. Here is something unmissable.

Get your coats on and go see this!


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EdFringe Talk: Knowledge from the Future

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“We’re thrilled to introduce Taiwan’s culture through this play.”

WHO: Maria Pei / Jen Ting

WHAT: “Knowledge from the Future chronicles Jen’s odyssey through modern life’s complexities. Discovering latent fortune-telling talents amidst information overload, she navigates scepticism and intrigue. Jen’s quest for comprehension forces her to confront doubts and external pressures, challenging her rationality against mystical forces. Through encounters with sceptics and mentors, Jen learns to reconcile her mindset, unearthing insights about fate and wisdom. Ultimately, she realizes that true knowledge transcends belief, achievable only through genuine experience. This narrative invites reflection on truth, destiny and the perpetual journey of self-discovery in an evolving world, weaving together belief, scepticism and personal transformation.”

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

WHEN: 14:20 (50 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

YES! This is our first Fringe and our first production!

Edfringe is the perfect place to share our original story, based on true events from Taiwan, and spread love to people around the world. It’s a fast-paced, safe, and open-minded festival where global artists and diverse cultures come together in appreciation.

We’re thrilled to introduce Taiwan’s culture through this play, which is about identity, self-awareness, and self-love. We all need more love, understanding, and acceptance.

Being part of this festival allows us to learn from experienced artists and gives us the courage to keep creating.

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

This one-woman show is about self-identity, self-awareness, self-love, and self-healing. Maria Pei, the producer and writer, started writing scripts in 2023 to share messages she wanted to convey, hoping to heal others who have gone through similar experiences. But the biggest revelation for her was that “Completing this play also healed me. It became the best closure I could give myself.”

Jen Ting, the producer and performer, has been an actress for ten years and finally completed her solo performance this year, thanks to Maria’s script. As sisters, the greatest lesson we’ve learned over the past year is that working together with family and sharing each other’s stories is both precious and empowering. This experience has inspired us to continue telling more stories together.

Tell us about your show.

“Knowledge From The Future”

The show tells the story of the protagonist, Gwen, a young Taiwanese woman in her 30s, who returns to Taiwan after experiencing trauma while working abroad. Once again, she faces the challenge of leaving Taiwan to pursue further studies. In her struggle to avoid and accept the reality of her situation, she discovers she has psychic abilities. Will this newfound ability help her confront her trauma, or will she continue to avoid it? she embarks on a transformative journey of personal growth and healing.

The story is inspired by true events, set against the backdrop of the 2019 Hong Kong protests and her return to Taiwan in 2021. It weaves together elements of Taiwanese folk belief and the spiritual influence on the people.

We hope that this creation, based on true events and stories, will provide healing for those with similar experiences and help audiences unfamiliar with Taiwan to better understand its culture and background story.

Produced by Maria Pei and Jen Ting, written by Maria Pei, and performed by Jen Ting, with contributions from our friends: Director Brad Lewis Cannon , Sound Designer Eye Suriyanon, and Lighting Designer Tom Showell, who have all collaborated with us on this project.

We are an independent production team, “A Dream Come True.” The theme of Taiwanese folk belief in our play perfectly aligns with who we are, a pair of superstitious sisters! We make wishes every day. This is our first presentation, and we plan to perform in London and other countries in the near future to share Taiwanese culture with more people. We would also love to bring this play back to our hometown, Taiwan!

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

We highly recommend all the performances from Taiwan! Taiwanese productions are truly amazing. The four shows brought by Taiwan Season—Lost Connection, Little Drop of Rain, I Am The Boss, and Palingenesis—have all received high praise. Additionally, How To Become a Taiwanese: A Musical and Diary of a Magician World Tour are also Taiwanese productions, and we’ve made plans to support them as well.

As lovers of one-woman shows, we’re also excited to see Sell Me: I Am From North Korea and Gracie the Jellyfish. We highly recommend these to everyone!


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EdFringe Talk: 1954: Ella, Etta, Eartha

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“2024 marks an eight year gap since I’ve been able to get here and I am absolutely delighted to be back.”

WHO: Melissa Western

WHAT: “It’s the year 1954. Ella Fitzgerald, Etta James and Eartha Kitt are all at the dizzy heights of their careers. With swinging jazz, powerful soul and cheeky kitsch, these women broke new ground for all who followed. Award-winning singer/actor Melissa Western and her musicians pay tribute to this magnificent era in music and inspiring trio of pioneering singers. 50s style abounds. ‘Western is a force of nature… Great storyteller, feisty, highly enjoyable’ ***** (BroadwayBaby.com). ‘Absolutely brilliant… Her aptitude for music is vast and versatile’ ***** (ThreeWeeks). ‘Western’s gorgeous singing voice serves her well’ (TheAustralian.com.au).”

WHERE: Paradise in Augustines – The Studio (Venue 152) 

WHEN: 18:35 (45 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

No, I first came in 2007 with a one-woman show. I’d visited (from Australia) the year before to get a sense of the festival and was blown away and knew I needed to be part of this wild ride. My first festival was exhilarating, enchanting, exhausting and extreme! I fell deeply in love with the city of Edinburgh and the sense of “coming home” to my performing arts family. I came out of that year with an official Sell Out status, some amazing reviews and onward UK touring – it was a dream. Since then I’ve been back regularly – stopping only to have kids and do Covid! This year is the eighth time I’ve brought a show to the Fringe.

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

I was booked to come to the Fringe in 2020 but then this little thing called Covid stopped the world and most certainly decimated any travel from Australia to the UK. 2024 marks an eight year gap since I’ve been able to get here and I am absolutely delighted to be back. We are on our way to having another sell out season and so far have 2 x 5 star reviews. I feel like the universe is telling me I made the right decision to come back!

Tell us about your show.

1954: Ella, Etta, Eartha is my love letter to three women who smashed barriers of race and gender, changing the world with music as their ammunition. The show is full of jazz, blues, cheeky kitsch and early rock n roll focussing on the year 1954 as Ella Fitzgerald, Eartha Kitt and Etta James are all at the dizzying heights of their careers. They all had to combat sanctioned racism throughout their careers and in 1954 at the very beginning of the civil rights movement in America it was singers, actors and entertainers who could push through the barriers. This show has toured Australia for the past two years and I’m really hoping to get some UK festival bookings after the Fringe.

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

One of my favourite things about coming to Edinburgh in August is that I get to catch up with some many wonderful performing arts friends from around the world.

I’m from Brisbane, Australia so my first shout outs are to my fellow BrisVegas friends. My astonishing friend Leah Shelton is absolutely smashing it with her show Batshit and just won a Fringe First award. Another Brisbane team, Swamplesque just increased their capacity from 500+ to 800+ per night and the crowds are loving it – as they should because it is ridiculously good fun! By far my favourite improv show at the Fringe is Showstopper, I can’t get enough of those outrageously talented folks. My final shout out is to Tim Benzie who I performed with a lifetime ago when at university – he now lives in London and his solve along Murder She Wrote is an absolute hoot!


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EdFringe Talk: Napoleon’s 100 Days

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“Like many artists, I live and breathe for doing my own shows.”

WHO: Andy D

WHAT: “Andy D tells the story of Little Boney’s second coming. Not recorded by history, he’s accompanied by his Mancunian friend and a dog called Fido. Napoleon once famously stated ‘I am the revolution’. And he was. Once. However, in 1814 he gets banished to the little island of Elba by European powers. There, not surprisingly, he gets howling at the moon bored. So he escapes, with a force of just over 1000 men! Along the Route Napoleon he is advised by his Mancunian friend. And protected by Fido. All three of whom will end up at Waterloo.”

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

WHEN: 19:45 (60 min)

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Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

Originally, I’m from Manchester but have been based in Edinburgh since 2017. Since then I have done 4 Edinburgh Fringes. In 2018 we Sold Out with ‘Shackleton and his Stowaway’, which I both wrote and produced. This went on to play 4 weeks in Park Theatre London, which goes to show that Ed Fringe really can be a great platform. In 2022 it was ‘Tam O’Shanter, Tales & Whisky’, which went on to play The Gaiety, Brunton, and the Trav in Scotland. So once again, as long as the show comes together, it can have a future life!

Like many artists, I live and breathe for doing my own shows. But in 2019 and 2021 I just attended the Fringe as a spectator. Sometimes I can barely believe my luck having the world’s biggest Arts Festival, just a 20 minute bus ride away! Looking at shows as an outsider, but with a producer’s and a writer’s eye, can give you a really good feel for where you fit into the whole eco-system.

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

2023 was my first year as a solo performer. It went pretty well and we had good audiences. The show was ‘Mark Twain’s Stolen White Elephant’. But as they say in Spain I was really getting my ‘tablas’ last year – getting stage experience. This year I feel far happier at playing on the stage, as opposed to just keeping the train on the tracks!

Napoleon’s 100 Days is a piece of comic storytelling, that does have some dark moments in it. I think this is another evolution for me, from last year’s absurdist piece.

Tell us about your show.

My show is Napoleon’s 100 Days. It’s actually a lockdown project. I love history and I read a lot back in 2020/21. Initially, I was going to write a show about the Duke of Wellington, but I find Napoleon a far more fascinating character. Having said that, it is a story still told from a kind of British perspective: Stanley, Napoleon’s sidekick, is from my home town of Stockport! The show is pretty comic, and throughout Stanley pokes some fun at ‘Little Boney’s’ megalomaniac/populist tendencies.

Napoleon was undoubtedly the biggest historical figure of the 19th century, and hugely divisive. In France, he remains so to this day. He was a populist and a master manipulator of the media. Undoubtedly, certain parallels can be drawn about his lust for power at any cost, and some modern day political figures.

In my show Stanley (and Fido) are often satirising him, hopefully pretty effectively!

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

Various history shows, as there are so many great historical stories: Boiler Room Six A Titanic Story – everyone knows The Story of the Titanic, but there are so many individual stories to tell. Tom Foreman has found a new angle with this one, it is the equivalent of the band playing on, but with the heroics going on in the foremost boiler room.

Chopped Liver and Onions – lots of parallels with the modern age with this one too, with its political themes of immigration, equal rights, and far-right demagoguery. About the life of the Unionist Sara Wesker. Pivotally, it builds up towards the Battle of Cable Street, which is when London as a city effectively rejected fascism.

The Last Bantam – Michael Hughes is a superb storyteller, and once again we have a unique angle on a famous historical event, World War I. The bantams were battalions of men, between 5ft and 5ft 3 inches in height. They were particularly effective at working in confined spaces underground. Hughes plays an Irish Bantam, which also adds the dimension of the Easter Rising of 1916. Several well-researched stories!


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EdFringe Talk: Long Distance

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“I’m constantly in awe of the perseverance and creativity of the artists I meet here.”

WHO: Eli Zuzovsky

WHAT: “Two young queers meet. They fall in love, have sex, fight, make up, and break up – and all through texts. These texts, like poetry, chart their unforgettable relationship. Long Distance dives into the empty space between us and our desperate attempts to fill it up. A funny, heart-breaking new play about intimacy, technology and the daily work of love.”

WHERE: ZOO Playground – Playground 1 (Venue 186) 

WHEN: 14:00 (60 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

I’ve been to Edinburgh twice as a punter, but this is my first time coming to the Fringe with a show of my own. The levels of talent and passion that I see here every single day absolutely blow my mind. I thought that having a show at the festival would undo some of the magic of this place, but so far it’s only intensified it, if anything. Even just walking around the city is deeply energising and inspiring (especially if the sun happens to be out). Putting on a show here is no small feat, to say the least, and I’m constantly in awe of the perseverance and creativity of the artists I meet here.

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

Working on Long Distance has completely changed the way I think about writing and directing. Above all, it’s taught me a huge lesson on the importance of simplicity. The play has significantly changed since I wrote the first draft; I’ve had to kill too many darlings. Every day in the rehearsal room, Jonathan, Lewis and I asked ourselves: ‘Does this feel real? Does this feel true to the characters we’ve created and their unique relationship?’

We’ve stripped away bits of flowery language, jokes that only half-worked and moments that didn’t serve the play’s emotional arc, including ones we loved. The original idea was to do the whole play on treadmills, which we were all very excited about. However, after a few rehearsals, we gave up on the treadmills. We realised that they distracted us from the goal we set for ourselves when we embarked on this journey: to create a portrait of an unforgettable relationship that is propelled by honesty and empathy.

Tell us about your show.

Our show, which I wrote, directed and produced, is called Long Distance. It stars two amazing recent graduates of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), Jonathan Rubin and Lewis Merrylees (a Glaswegian!). The three of us had mutual friends, but we didn’t really know each other before we started working on the play. We did a quick reading of one scene together, which felt like love at first sight.

Long Distance follows two young queers who fall in love, have sex, fight, make up, and break up – and all through texting. Their texts, dramatised like poetry, paint a portrait of a tumultuous relationship. The play dives into the empty space between us and our desperate attempts to fill it up. It’s about the daily work of love, technological despair, and the long distance that exists in every relationship these days.

We had two sold-out previews at the Camden People’s Theatre in London in July, and we’re hoping to tour the show as much as possible after the Fringe.

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

We were fortunate enough to have developed the play through Soho Theatre Labs, which I highly recommend to anyone taking a show to the Fringe. We’ve already seen many of our friends’ shows and they’re all astonishing. To name a few: Gaby Foley’s Flicker, Temi Wilkey’s Main Character Energy, Sarah Cameron-West’s KAREN, Alexis Sakellaris’s A STAN IS BORN! Lil Wenker’s BANGTAIL, John and Christian’s Battle Counters!, Mirren Wilson’s PALS, Claire Parry’s Boorish Trumpson, and Tiggy Bayley’s Squidge. We’re so proud of them all—they’re amazing.


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EdFringe Talk: The Three Strangers

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“I love being here for the Fringe, it’s a wonderful atmosphere and the audiences are knowledgeable and supportive at the same time.”

WHO: Adrian Palmer

WHAT: “A fusion of storytelling and a one-person show, keeping as close as possible to the original text. Adrian Palmer performs his own adaptation of this mysterious but inspiring story. On a stormy night, three travellers arrive at an isolated cottage. Why is the first abroad so late? What’s the trade of the second that leaves a mark on his customers? And why is the third so terrified? A unique performance of a classic piece of literature from the incomparable Thomas Hardy. ‘An expressively superb Adrian Palmer, held the audience spellbound’ (Southern Daily Echo).”

WHERE: Paradise in Augustines – The Snug (Venue 152) 

WHEN: 12:45 (55 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

No I’ve been here before as a performer in other people’s shows. I first came in 1980 in a production of The Caretaker by Harold Pinter and then again in 2016 in The Trial by Franz Kafka. I love being here for the Fringe, it’s a wonderful atmosphere and the audiences are knowledgeable and supportive at the same time. There’s a great buzz among the creatives too. It’s competitive of course but there is a genuine interest in sharing work and ideas that you don’t get anywhere else.

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

I wasn’t here in 2023 but the main change for me came during lockdown when I no longer had any work as an actor and so spent my time reading stories online to friends, family and then wider groups – book clubs, charities and clubs. This gave me the confidence to adapt and perform my own work and the work of other writers who I admire. Of whom Thomas Hardy is one of my favourites.

Tell us about your show.

I adapted the show from the short story by Thomas Hardy – The Three Strangers. It’s a great story. The first time I read it I was overwhelmed by the skill of the telling, the forcefulness of the story and the twist at the end. I read it in a prepared version a few times and decided that along with Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by R L Stevenson, I would bring it to Edinburgh to see if audiences here would appreciate it as much as I did. I’m glad to say that they definitely seem to. I have been very pleased with the reaction I have had from the performances in Paradise at Augustines here and the very supportive comments I have had from audience reviewers.

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

I like flyering here. It’s a great way to meet your audience face to face. You get some rejections but many times people are interested in what you are doing and only too willing to stop and chat. I also stop and talk with other performers who are selling their wares and generally we swap flyers. I sort out the ones I am interested in and will try and see as many as possible in the course of the three weeks of the festival.

Three shows I have particularly enjoyed so far are –

Sherlock Holmes: The Last Act
A Balloon Will Pop
Zelda and Hadley: Together at Last


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EdFringe Talk: Sardines

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“You may have spotted us sprinting up and down the Mile dressed as giant fish.”

WHO: Joe Makarov

WHAT: “Have you ever wondered what would happen if your favourite poets from the 1800s got stuck in an inflatable life raft in the middle of the ocean with no nautical know-how and a fractured friendship? Join William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge in this absurdist comedy, one man in the midst of a mid-life crisis, the other obsessed with opium induced poetry, all the while battling a stagehand who threatens to deflate the show. Throw in a pirate, an albatross and positive reviews from Theatre Royal Bath’s Elevate Festival, and you have all the ingredients for a grand misadventure.”

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

WHEN: 20:30 (55 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

Oh yes! This is our first visit to the Fringe, and for some of us, our first time in Scotland. We followed the sound of bagpipes as we swam upstream from Bristol and we are delighted to find such an incredible city filled with like minded creatives!

Something fishy is happening at the festival this year – it’s us! We are a relatively new company, having only established a couple of years ago and we were drawn to the festival due to the vast range of shows available to watch! We wanted to join in the medley and launch the Blank Slate Ensemble headfirst into the festival like launching a seal out of a cannon. You may have spotted us sprinting up and down the Mile dressed as giant fish.

As we reach the end of our first week of the Fringe, we realise how much of a special place this really is, and how art is well and truly alive here. We are honoured to be here and are relishing seeing so many brilliant artists at work!

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

1) A punctured life raft doesn’t float, and you shouldn’t try to swim to Edinburgh.
2) Share the love, even in the ocean.
3) It’s important to wash your costumes often, especially when crammed in like…Sardines!
4) Fish are friends, not food!

Tell us about your show.

Join Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth as they attempt to sail to German in an inflatable life raft. This previously unknown story (that we promise is almost 5% true) explores their ridiculous adventure as they battle storms, sharks, pirates and an ominous albatross. On top of all that, they have to combat a useless stagehand who is at risk of sinking the whole production.

This new writing has been written and developed by the Blank Slate Ensemble and has arrived in Edinburgh after a mini tour of the South West including Theatre Royal Bath’s Elevate Festival. Described as ‘joyously silly’ and ‘a surrealist treat of a play’ we aim to take you on a journey across the North Sea and welcome you to embrace the chaos with us.

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

Our Certified Fish® recommendations are Turbo Town, an absurd one woman show that had us in stitches start to finish, Triggerfish, the best ensemble piece we’ve seen at the Fringe, plus they’re also set at sea, Murder She Didn’t Write, brilliant improv done at its best, and finally The Antics Joke Show, a sketch show like no other, has to be seen!


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EdFringe Talk: Binocchio the Bisexual Liar

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“I actually attend and lead worship at Augustine United Church who host Paradise Green. So I’ve preached when the sanctuary is set up for a show. It feels almost like I’m performing when I do a service so I got the bug!”

WHO: Binocchio (real name Carol Joyner)

WHAT: “Lock up your garden chairs, dismantle your altar tables, nothing is safe around Binocchio the bisexual Christian! She’ll sleep with anything with legs – after Bible Study, naturally. Fresh from the mammogram cubicle in Tesco car park, Binocchio brings you 45 minutes of stand-up (she can’t be trusted with a chair), featuring subjects as diverse as fertility signalling, German toilets, Low Emission Zones and Elderflower Shloer. Don’t miss this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to encounter this rarest of creatures, the bisexual Christian!”

WHERE: Paradise in Augustines – The Snug (Venue 152) 

WHEN: 18:55 (45 min)

MORE: Click Here!


Is this your first time to Edinburgh?

This is my maiden Fringe. I actually attend and lead worship at Augustine United Church who host Paradise Green. So I’ve preached when the sanctuary is set up for a show. It feels almost like I’m performing when I do a service so I got the bug! I got chatting to the PG crew about my stand up and one thing led to another and here I am, complete with guitar and several pairs of spare trousers! I’m local so over been to several Fringe shows over the years. But this year is mad. I fully expect there to be pavement crush fatalities.

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

I’m new this year but I’ve already learnt that it’s highly inadvisable to rock up as a solo performer and producer without at least two committed sidekicks to help with social media and flyering. I got overwhelmed and exhausted on Day 1 and had to take a step back and put my mental health and family first – or there would be no show for my punters and my wife would be filing for divorce!

Tell us about your show.

I write and produce all of my observational stand up comedy and original songs. I trialled it at several LGBTQ/Christian open mic events earlier this year to positive acclaim. I’m currently looking at doing a show DARN SARF where I have many contacts, since I lived in Hampshire for over 30 years.

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

Go and see my fellow bi female comic, Anti-Heroine. And do go and see Around the World in 80 Days. Laurence Waring is a very talented man!


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