Sold-out run: Edinburgh Festival Fringe (2022).
Caliban, a young transsexual recovering from the boozy wedding reception of two lesbian witches, will need more than the magic of pronouns to survive this truly surreal odyssey int…
A stage sequel to our critically acclaimed dance film, Catch the Bird Who Won’t Fly.
To loathe one’s very being and yet to hold it fast, to fondle the snake that devours us until it has eaten our hearts away.
A contemporary adaptation of Voltaire’s Candide, this devised ensemble work depicts the optimist’s journey from innocence to experience.
Purgatorio follows an ensemble of troubled spirits dancing to salvation in Club Purgatorio, a surrealist techno dreamscape.
Paperlight Theatricals makes its grand return to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe! This dark and intriguing show involves a group of teenagers covering up the death of a friend.
Welcome to the Lavender Club, a clandestine cabaret pulsing with physical theatre, lip-synced routines and gut-wrenching confessions.
Two shadows are dancing in a field of flowers next to a battlefield.
Francesca is a 20-year-old woman who is able to time travel to speak to her younger self. A multi-genre devised piece about the different stages of growing up and its consequences.
‘I wanted to fight her corner’.
Strasbourg, 1518.
A chorus of bawdy spirits lead you through this physically dynamic amalgamation of Shakespeare’s finest death scenes.
Chekhov’s Gum is making their Fringe debut with an all-new clown show, Crap Ballet! One’s big, the other’s small – both suited up and ready to strut, stretch, and shimmy for an h…
Through movement and masks, this deeply emotional and non-verbal work follows a pair of elderly artists as a disease forces them to relive and reinvent their love.
In the experience of profound disconnection, when there are no more floors to crash through, the only way out is in.
Physical theatre combines with original music as 7th century Chinese Buddhist monk and scholar Xuanzang embarks on a spiritual quest to India, seeking the answer to the question, �…
Right Here, Right Now.
A Bee Story is a uniquely Australian physical theatre show for children and families incorporating a kaleidoscope of circus, acrobatics, dance and live music.
Immerse yourself in the world of Hong Kong action films, and watch the magic of physical theatre storytelling laced with kung fu.
A two-troll clown show about friendship, scape(goat)ing and being misunderstood.
Millions of years after Othello killed Desdemona, Othello and Iago are living an endless, repetitive life in Hell.
HoneyBEE is a festival-driven show with a banging soundtrack.
Welcome to the kitchen where dreams come to die.
The creators of smash-hit The Man Who return with an explosive new show.
Multi award-winning physical comedy that’ll whisk you off your feet.
Cheap Date bring a crash landing of music, dance, theatre, film and comedy without holding back, in this visual duologue.
Last summer’s sold-out hit returns! Wes Anderson meets Hitchcock meets Spaghetti Western in this multi award-winning, fast-paced, raucous whodunnit.
A great actor recounts an epic journey from the fjords of Iceland to the dust of the Spanish desert.
A play that stimulates the imagination, The Maids is a bold story of domination through domestication.
Virtuosic juggling, innovative lighting and relentless energy collide in this pioneering new show from Throw Catch Collective.
Multi award-winning Ad Infinitum (Odyssey, Translunar Paradise, Ballad of the Burning Star) returns with a breathtaking retelling of the Trojan War.
Join Odin and Loki in their struggle to overcome primeval giants, rival gods and goddesses, and each other’s ambitions in this hard-hitting, dark comic adaption of Norse mythology.
The skill level in this sophisticated, alluring performance by the innovative, female-led Eye Catching Circus is sky-high, but spectacle isn’t the top priority.
Visionary theatre director and designer, Thaddeus McWhinnie Phillips, reimagines his classic work about a Wyoming tap dancer that’s stranded in Cuba.
Cirque, theatre, death and drag come together in this exquisite macabre production.
Last summer’s sold-out hit returns – bigger and better! Wes Anderson meets Hitchcock meets Spaghetti Western in this multi-award winning, fast-paced, raucous whodunnit.
A new Lion Dance circus! Re-creating the Lion Dance and Chinese Opera from the classical form to a contemporary style of performance, this exciting new circus breaks the traditiona…
Ding! The world is ordered, the food is good, everything runs on time.
Trapped in the Peruvian rainforest, having survived a plane crash and a fall of 10,000 feet, Juliane is utterly alone and hopelessly lost.
Inspired by testimonies of Latin American refugees and migrants, internationally acclaimed Rewind remembers those who endured, and those who continue to live under authoritarianism…
Lucifer, fallen angel, begs God’s forgiveness.
The touching, engaging tale of a shattered body trying to gather itself in a time of war.
Enter a space caught in a cross-hairs: halfway between your bedroom floor at 3am and an otherworldly limbo.
Fab-u-lous! A high-energy comedy about a lonely old man and a homeless dog who become friends and enter a ballroom dancing competition.
Witness the highly anticipated international premiere of the multi award-winning Oat Milk and Honey.
Elizabeth Holmes claims her biotechnology will revolutionize medicine – and people believe her.
Beautiful people.
With maps on every phone and immediate access to the finest cartography ever produced, it’s hard to get properly lost in the modern landscape.
When those in power make decisions, it is those without power who pay the bloody price.
The last fairy lurks in a dying forest.
A chance meeting changes Annika’s life forever.
Follow our adventurous, modern-day Alice through the looking glass to a wonderful, upside-down world of kings, queens, knights and other strange and comical characters who challeng…
The verbal battle between Cain and Lucifer.
A solo show about motherhood, the forest and the universe.
The Greeks knew a lot about war and told great tales of heroism, victory and defeat.
The last fairy lurks in a dying forest.
A striking and stylised imagining of Oscar Wilde’s gothic masterpiece: the picture of Dorian Gray transforms into a malevolent horror as its inspiration remains untouched and bea…
Meet the Herviss Family and journey to their world.
What drives a young person who appears outwardly quite happy with his life to one day bring a gun into school? It’s a vital question because it’s a phenomenon that is unhappily bei…
Back by popular demand, Comedy Boxing triumphantly returns to Edinburgh with all-new comedic competitors! Comedians will compete over four hilarious rounds of stand-up, improvisati…
Kat is a woman (has been for quite a while now).
It’s a day like any other.
Three idiots, six left feet, and one splendidly stupid dance spectacular.
A tragicomedy combining clowning and physical theatre, Boat! follows two friends at sea as they navigate companionship, solitude and altering states of reality.
Pangu is a 50-minute physical dance play based on a Chinese mythic story in the Classic of Mountain and Seas.
Three young people tell us they don’t feel.
From the catwalks of Paris to the office boardroom, Australian performer Erin Fowler presents FEMME, a deeply personal five-star, award-winning solo work that explores the stereoty…
A beautiful, profoundly naked performance presented as nature intended.
A young scientist by the name of Frankenstein breathes life into a gruesome body.
POV: you’re a vlogger.
Marrano, a Tale From the Inquisition is a tragedy based on two historical events: the expulsion of the Sephardic Jews at the end of the 15th century and, consequentially, the murde…
What colour is the sound of a cello? How do you show the taste of an apple? A colourful, complex solo performance exploring autobiographical experiences of synaesthesia.
Why does a victim become a predator? In isolation, Ghislaine Maxwell maintains innocence whilst reliving the psychological abuse endured from her father.
Come explore the intricate world of poetry lifted from the page at Wistful! This unique performance art uses the physical body, light and sound to experiment with words.
‘Come on Angel, don’t you ever want to fly?’ 1948.
We solve our greatest problems through dreaming while our deepest fears are revealed in them as well.
Set over one surreal night of dancing and debauchery, Death of a Disco Dancer is a psychedelic, wild black comedy.
Look through the smoke.
‘Unsettling yet captivating’ (Alt A Review).
This solo performance with award-winning dancer Mikolaj Karczewski is based on personal material, made in collaboration with the obstruction master Palle Granhøj.
A Roots Mbili Theatre and Sheffield Theatres co-production.
‘You look 15, but I like that.
What happens in the forest, stays in the forest.
Two twins, one heart.
Inspired by the story of Hong Kong renowned novelist Eileen Chang’s Love in a Fallen City, A Many-Splendoured Thing explores love between a man and a woman in a turbulent era thr…
What would you sacrifice in exchange for riches and fame? Family? Friends? Reputation? Soul? This modern-day, interactive and bizarrely comedic adaptation of the 1590s tragedy, Doc…
Tin cans and string, pizza boxes pilling up, paper aeroplane and love notes.
Curtains drawn, lawns burnt brown; a townscape is melting.
These zebras juggle and flip.
Jason Slavick’s Yellow Bird Chase shows us that the best children’s shows have something for everyone, whether it is the gibberish of the language, the compelling storyline or …
Part sci-fi physical theatre, part acid-fueled mime, part wholesome performance art, Fool Muun Komming! (etc, etc) is the genre-defying solo show from Gaulier graduate and Canadian…
A classic tale of greed and guilt, this visceral and lucid interpretation of Shakespeare’s blood-soaked tragedy is truly Flabbergast.
‘(Le) PAIN brilliantly expresses the pressure of generational expectations and a small-village mindset.
One of the beautiful things about acrobatics is the way human bodies can collaborate in difficult-to-imagine ways.
Winner of Underbelly, New Diorama and Methuen Drama’s hit-making Untapped Award 2022.
Clownfish Theatre has returned to the Edinburgh Fringe with an updated version of their show which saw sell-out audiences in 2019 as well as similar success in Adelaide.
Sam Dugmore (The Latebloomers: Scotland!) is locked and loaded as the greatest action hero of all time, unearthing his ruthless man skills to confront his biggest nemesis.
‘What if it was you, you were the last individual of the species, The Endling?’ Visually beautiful and laugh-out-loud funny, Strange Futures use their ‘powerful physicality’ (Scots…
Wes Anderson meets Hitchcock meets spaghetti western in this multi award-winning, intercontinental, inter-genre, cinematic caper of accusations, accidents and accents.
Lion – The Weird and Magical Abracadabra Circus Show is an hour of pleasure, skills and a bit of thrilling fear led by a one-man circus crew.
Shinehouse Theatre returns to Summerhall with a beautiful balancing act of social issues and theatrical poetry.
Yummy Mummy (and Headmaster’s wife, just for extra grown-up points) Louise runs the school choir and helps her teenaged daughter with her homework.
Working-class means many things now.
If Samuel Beckett is celebrated for the changing attitudes his work brought to ‘traditional’ theatre, then why do we insist on keeping his work preserved like an artefact, guar…
Physical comedy meets Hollywood.
The Receptionists is a physical comedy show about customer service by two Finnish female clowns.
What happens when you train for something your whole life, only to fail at the crucial moment? This question is the stimulus behind False Start, from acclaimed French-German theatr…
In this high-impact dark comedy half-brothers Odin and Loki must overcome primordial giants, rival Gods and Goddesses, and their own ambitions – in their quest to seize power ove…
New physical drama that weaves together the longings and fears of five characters: a witch, a bitch, a goldfish, a sleepwalker and a salaryman.
Lucifer, fallen angel, begs God’s forgiveness.
Over a third of young people in the UK spend less time outdoors than prisoners.
A dark comedy that portrays all the nuances of trying to maintain a childhood friendship you’ve grown out of.
Three powerhouse comedians (solo stars in their own right) join forces for a stunning hour of stand-up.
A filmed solo performance art piece based on the terrible statistics and devastating psychological effects of sexual violence.
Dandelion, by Creative Electric, takes place in the garden opposite the [email protected] building.
Oddly Ordinary Theatre Company has made a highly successful adaptation of Mark Ravenhill’s Pool (No Water) at theSpace Triplex as part of the contribution by the graduates of Que…
Triple Fringe First and Olivier-winning Fishamble, return to Dance Base for the 10th anniversary of Pat Kinevane’s SILENT, the touching and challenging story of homeless McGoldri…
Winner of LA Times’ Best Production and OC Weekly’s Best Play awards, acclaimed director Annie Loui and CounterBalance Theater present the worldwide premiere of yet another ‘delici…
In a not-so-distant future lingers the bitter aftertaste of a déjà vu, the theatres are empty, meeting places and cultural venues are no longer permitted, physical contact is pro…
The Receptionists is a physical comedy show about customer service by two Finnish female clowns.
This evocative play by Australian playwright Melissa-Kelly Franklin tells the story of a young couple living in a world ravaged by climate change.
What is humanity; what is life? In this world, nothing is certain.
Not a confession, but a way to let our entrails speak… Punk, heavy metal, movement, poetry and video art create an environment that stimulates the senses.
On a roof webbed with fish-bone antenna, a child with a superhero blanket cape was brought to the realm of Wuxia by a leaf.
Lucifer, the fallen angel, begs God’s permission to return to Heaven: ‘You forgave everyone, but me.
At the height of the pandemic, nine friends longing for contact reconnect for a bit of normality in an online New Year’s Eve party.
Darkly-comedic Korean social satire with innovative staging and colourful physicality.
It’s time to walk the plank! With a twinkle in our eye, we pay tribute to men who wear sandals, as we celebrate the right to be yourself.
A glorious May morning in Thomas Hardy’s Wessex.
Known for their exciting ensemble and physical theatre work, students from North London Collegiate School are delighted to return to the Fringe to perform Caryl Churchill’s 2012 ka…
As part of their 2020 UK tour, Threedumb Theatre presents two explosive and comedic short plays written by Steven Berkoff, performed back-to-back by the same one actor.
A bone-jarring, soulful look at the backwards puzzle pieces of the life of a trafficked woman, based on survivor accounts.
An experimental physical staging of Scottish psychiatrist RD Laing’s book of poetry Knots.
A gripping, raw, intense exploration of what it means to be human.
Six generations of women, their lives spanning 100 years from the final months of World War One to the present.
Set in 1950s England and based on the controversial 19th-century play Spring Awakening; A Children’s Tragedy by Franz Wedekind, Awakening is a story about the struggles of the t…
Based on the 19th-century German play Spring Awakening; A Children’s Tragedy by Franz Wedekind, Spring explores the lives of a group of teenagers growing up in a rural Christian …
A clownish maintenance crew finds a magical bird and the mad chase begins.
The magic of David Attenborough live! A blue whale swims through the depths.
A hilarious and ludicrous take on the masterpiece by Leo Tolstoy.
Both humourous and sad, Juliet and Romeo by Lost Dog company, presented by The Place, written with sensitive forensic analysis and directed by Ben Duke, is a subversion of Shakespe…
Argentinian dance music greets us as we enter the space for two-man physical theatre experience Un Poyo Rojo, but the vast majority of the show takes place in silence.
A brilliant Scandi noir of the psyche, spoken in gibberish in a surreal world, Norwegian Jo Strømgren Kompani’s The Hospital, is gripping; moving from bizarre, black humour to d…
This fresh, original piece of writing, set in a modern day witch trial, is a meditation on what it means to be a woman; the challenges we face, and how they break us, bind us and s…
The last days of the the founding father of philosophy, Socrates.
Intense and irreverent, this production strips Julius Caesar to its bare bones to explore the selfish workings of professional politics.
Drawing on Bullen’s experience of post-traumatic stress disorder, this confessional and multidisciplinary work will transport you through an autobiographical experience.
Souvenirs presents the real stories of four young people in London who have been involved in cases of harassment and stalking.
A powerful duet between two exceptional dancers – Joel Brown (Candoco Dance Company) and Eve Mutso (former principal dancer of Scottish Ballet) – as they explore their differen…
You make 35,000 decisions a day.
Combining Temper Theatre’s signature fluid muscular movement, fragmented imagery and soul-shaking soundscapes, Nightshifter attends to a world in desperate need of emergency care.
This dancing poetry is inspired by Tao Te Ching, which says that the largest square has no corners.
What is choice? Is your life predetermined? What is the effect of one bad decision? Elvin Acting Theatre Company’s latest creation explores the complexities of life and its daily…
Blindfolded and restrained behind a wall of screens, a journey through podcasts, audio porn and physical exhaustion awaits.
This mystical dance performance is about the connection between what we see and what we believe.
In a circus after the lights have been turned off, four characters emerge in the darkness slowly revealing their desires, hunger and inner conflicts.
‘Can we just say we’re completely pro sex’ – Pig.
Guan Yu’s patriotism to his country, benevolence to people, wisdom in life, loyalty to friends and bravery in war represent the perfect traditional Chinese virtues of mankind.
Triple Buse is slapstick, light-hearted and bracing in equal measure.
Big Spirit Theatre Company brings you, Downtown Shabby.
Nobody has seen Jorja since her party almost a month ago.
In near-future England, two girls are thrilled to be accepted into the playground, the final stage of their education, but all is not as it seems.
This comic tale examines Phina’s observations on what others have made of her black identity as a model, actress, radio presenter and writer in the fickle media world.
Two transgender performers say ‘up yours!’ to the gender binary and invite you to their radical dance party! Under disco lights, over pulsing music, a queer celebration takes place…
A historical tragedy, a hero failed in battle, his beautiful lover and the handsome warhorse accompanying him towards the end of the inevitable fall of the kingdom, a heartbroken f…
Transfigured is a sounding together of all things, a diapason, a cacophony of understanding.
Deficit, the debut work of new collective Deficit Theatre, is an incredible new piece of devised theatre that exposes the magical realism of our everyday lives.
The beautiful eclecticism of the Basque Country is showcased in this bill of dazzling hip hop and witty, lyrical contemporary dance.
The magic of David Attenborough live on stage! A blue whale swims through the ocean depths.
A show about food.
An unstable space without an exit.
White Crane Productions are the international graduate acting ensemble of Rose Bruford College.
Open lock to the Dead Man’s knock! Fly, bolt and bar and band! Nor move, nor swerve, joint, muscle, or nerve at the spell of the Dead Man’s hand! Newbury Youth Theatre present …
Betty is a bit of a dog in the manger.
Nancy and Alex fell in love when they were teenagers.
The extraordinary story of Captain Ahab’s obsessive vengeance against the mighty leviathan, the great white whale who rid him of his leg.
Shakespeare at his most sexy and salacious! A physically dynamic ensemble perform a musical, lyrical mash-up that explores love, sex and relationships in some of the Bard’s most fa…
A chorus of bawdy spirits lead you through this physically dynamic amalgamation of Shakespeare’s finest death scenes.
Does the past dictate your future? Trapped in memories of childhood trauma, a group of people are desperately trying to break the cycle and take control of their lives.
Following their UK tour, Hot Coals present this four-star rated d/Deaf and hearing inclusive show.
The dream of old age and the fear of reaching it! In a battle against time, the Danish theatre company Don Gnu throw themselves into a physical and blazing acrobatic quest for the …
‘She can remember the voices, the melodies, the harmonies – but it’s not the same.
It’s party time in Thebes! The war is over, the city has a new leader… what could possibly go wrong? Enter Antigone - devoted daughter and passionate extremist – set to spoil…
Take a peek into the amusing world of ants.
If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.
Immortalised as a monster of Ancient Greece, Medea, who helped Jason steal the Golden Fleece from her father, and murdered her own children, finally gives her defence.
Alyona Ageeva’s Physical Theatre PosleSlov return to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe for the third year with a piece that feels very much like a direct sequel to last year’s Sky …
‘Thrilling’ **** (Herald-Tribune).
The Words Are There is a moving and innovative piece of physical theatre that appeals both for its approach to male domestic abuse, and for its style of performance.
Bite-size tasters of the best comedy, music and circus, all prepared for you in our glorious Spiegeltent.
Last Life feels like a social experiment.
Who’s holding the leash now!? In this four-legged frolic inspired by the steamy best-seller, we follow demure Dachsund Anastasia as she falls for the dominant and powerful ex-rac…
Two used actors, recycled utensils, hand-carved Czech puppets, live music and you, the court, bring Shakespeare’s poetic drama of power and abdication to life.
A journey to get there – but if there is a whale blocking the way, the path must change.
For an incomplete play, Georg Büchner’s Woyzeck has nevertheless managed to secure enduring interest.
Triple Fringe First, Olivier, and Herald Angel award winners Fishamble and Pat Kinevane present Before, a new play with much music, set in Clery’s of Dublin on the very day this …
A triple bill of Scotland’s most exciting choreographers, designed to unravel expectations.
How do we face dying if we know we have a terminal illness? And also how do we live in the face of death, imminent or not? Losing several friends in the same year, Kally Lloyd-Jo…
The teatime show by mime and clowning comedy duo Zeroko from Tokyo. The heart-warming performance represents the breathing sigh of after-teatime relief.
‘This place is a human rat trap.
What happens after you die? Angels? A black hole? Perhaps.
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature has, for many years, produced and maintained a “Red List” of species which are either already extinct or in danger of bei…
The Bubble Show For Adults Only starts innocently enough.
A delight, witty but profound exploration of the power relationship between choreographer and dancers, From the Top, choreographed by Hong Kong-based Victor Fung, is a send-up of a…
Henrik Ibsen’s classic tale of Peer Gynt and his journey through life as he struggles and experiences everything to find himself: trolls, power, love, death and a bargain with a Bu…
‘One morning as Greta Samsa was waking from anxious dreams she discovered that in bed she had changed.
Hilarious yet uncomfortable, The Sensemaker shows a woman battling with an answering machine.
There’s Something Missing, is a two-person physical (and sometimes funny) contemporary piece of confessional theatre that discusses identity.
Zuma Puma is an accomplished clown, who uses her skill to draw an audience in to a compelling narrative about what it is to experience shame as a woman.
Some love it, others loathe it, but we can’t avoid it – it’s everywhere! A laugh-out-loud look at our undying obsession with football, celebrating everything from weird match day…
Millennial-female-clown rabbit Diane wants to find love but she’s having some serious problems with her contraception.
Six lives uprooted by war.
The true story of a 21-year-old girl in an Australian plane crash during her study abroad year.
If you were born to be different, how do you identify yourself in this world? Chaos, with no facial features, struggles to answer these questions through the wavering, the uncertai…
Life and death, love and loss, birth and miscarriage are all explored in this visual cycle of life.
Following a sold out run at the Edinburgh Fringe 2018, Curious Pheasant Theatre present Romeo and Juliet.
Searching through the Fringe guide for a show worth seeing is a job that could perhaps be likened to archaeology – you spend hours carefully probing, sorting the dross from the d…
Right now, there are between 60,000 and 80,000 people held in solitary confinement within United States prisons – many of whom have served months or even years in extreme isolati…
Join us for a wild ride, with rhythm, body percussion, singing, stomping, clowning and the spirit of Scotland! ‘The Latebloomers are an extremely talented and professional act who …
Best Comedy winner, Brighton Fringe 2016 (Zach & Viggo).
Selfless to a fault, Garry Starr is ready to share the lessons he’s learned about the actors’ craft, the art of pretending.
Two circus sea lions: one is desperate to escape, the other gets off on her daily rub downs from Trevor the trainer.
The high-voltage rhythm sisters of Mugenkyo rock the Bijou, flexing their muscles on huge taiko drums, with stamina, skill and precision.
Most of you are probably reading this review on a portable device right now.
As recently as the early 20th century it was not uncommon for women to be medically diagnosed with “hysteria”.
In this uniquely Korean retelling of Shakespeare’s story, an ambitious actor dreaming of greatness is captivated by the role of Macbeth.
New Zealand’s favourite surreal sketch circus troupe bring their smash hit to Edinburgh.
It’s fifty years since the Stonewall riots sparked off the movement that became known as gay liberation.
Does a body make us human? Does it have a soul? What hides beneath nudity? What is nudity itself? Nudity is extreme openness and vulnerability and, at the same time, an incomprehen…
Horror meets hilarity! Spine-tingling original theatre that is hilariously dark and frighteningly funny.
Assembly’s Gala celebrates the opening of our 2019 programme of over 200 shows.
A visually stunning theatrical odyssey exploring space, time and our human condition, from internationally acclaimed theatre artist, Thaddeus Phillips.
Physical theatre.
Taking on the voices of a group of monumental and important women throughout history, MARA embodies them physically and vocally with stunningly committed and skillful character wor…
Welcome to The Chicken Appreciation Society and welcome to the mind of meat processor, Comrade Egg.
Witch is an old word.
Death on the depressing dancefloor that is the job and house hunting game – certainly not the most ideal outcome for a 21 year old just trying to live.
It’s a secret epidemic, one that affects every new generation of young people.
Hootingly funny and devilishly clever, Fishbowl is a masterpiece of physical comedy.
A high energy, jovial start introduces us to a young couple getting down to some sexy time.
A tale of love, loss and exploration, this is an intrepid exploration of physical theatre and storytelling.
If you saw a live news report of an alien invasion on a network you trusted, would you believe it? Rhum & Clay’s production of The War of the Worlds poses that exact question…
Drawing from circus, stand-up and live art, Contra is a solo-cabaret of contradictions.
We find ourselves between a neighbourly feud in a block of flats in Seoul.
George arrives in the city with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
Eight ordinary people stand before eight spectators.
Leaping barriers of age, sexuality and gender, Gloria prepares to dance the can-can one last time.
I wasn’t really sure what this show was supposed to be going into it, and now that I’ve seen it, I’m not sure if I have any better an idea.
A dimly lit stage, five women and their leader, to whom they will give everything until there is nothing left to give: this is the basic set-up for Reetta Honkakoski Company’s ca…
The Afflicted, a startling theatre-dance piece produced by Groupwork and performed at the Summerhall Demonstration Room, is a brilliant re-definition of the docu-drama format.
Taiwan’s Chang brothers (co-creators of Bon 4 Bon, a five-star hit at the 2018 Fringe) bounce back with a dance that reveals fresh facets of their fraternal relationships and the r…
The show is called Only Bones, which is confusing given that its performer, Thomas Monckton, doesn’t seem to have any.
In Confessions of a Cockney Temple Dancer, Shane Shambhu (Complicité Associate) offers a funny, honest and engaging bilingual solo with an acclaimed team of collaborators.
Artists of pantomime and clownery Mikhail Kukota and Igor Chekhov are graduates of the Russian State Institute of Performing Arts.
Leigh Bowery was born in Sunshine, Australia (west of Melbourne) in March 1961.
The widely acclaimed ex-Young Pleasance physical theatre ensemble Spies Like Us returned to the Festival Fringe this year with not only one show but two brilliant shows in an adapt…
Physical theatre and contemporary dance collide in this all-female youth theatre production that begs the question: what would you do for fame? When a poor young girl is offered a …
Body Shop is a multiplayer, multi-layered human body action game, a future-forward competition where women are assembled according to the stories of their bodies.
Whoever you are, you’ll only know first love once.
Our Theatre’s Paradiso is ostensibly a puppetry show about three men of different nationalities, reflecting on the last days of their lives before moving onto paradise.
Is porn misogynistic or female empowerment in action? Why don’t we talk about porn? What impact does porn have on teenagers, adults and children? Is porn ultimately a good thing …
To be well or not to be well, that is the question.
Pechorin is a superfluous man.
When a whale beaches on the London Underground, all hell breaks loose and communication abruptly ceases.
3am Waitress by UK company Rogueplay is billed as "merging physical theatre with dance and aerial circus", but may be better described as a duo acro-dance piece since the…
Plucked is a barnyard fable declaring the high ground on animal cruelty, a sermon on cycles of violence from bird to child to wife.
Wonder: a feeling of surprise mingled with admiration, caused by something beautiful, unexpected, unfamiliar or inexplicable.
Set in a not-so-distant world where individuality is condemned and where life is constantly broadcast, this new play will explore our strange desire to constantly display ourselves…
Trapped in a TV box world, Po is on a quest to retrieve his one and only worldly possession, his optimistic hat.
‘Arabella, I would love to show you this world of mine.
When was the last time you messaged a friend, updated your story or video called family? We live in a world of instant communication but how often do we assess the presence of tech…
Three colourful clowns discover the beauty and joy found in the changing of the seasons. Join Button, Buckle and Bow on their wonderful adventure.
Mister Ellody has quietly kept his accordion shop going on the High Street for generations.
Some plays lend themselves to radical reinterpretations and stagings while others need handling with more care.
The story of Romeo and Juliet receives medical treatment in Cepacia from Durham School and Shadow Dreams.
Follow Doaa who dreams of a better life amongst a backdrop of war, terror and enduring love.
Join us in the depths of the Indian Jungle for an imaginative adventure, with a family-friendly adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s classic story The Jungle Book.
You may think you’ve seen The Bacchae – but have you seen Dionysius wreaking havoc upon his namesake play in an attempt to modernise it? This is the premise of Mermaids: The U…
A vicar, a business man and an actress go into a lift.
Vox: A Fairy Tale for a New Age is a new work inspired by real-life occurrences in the life of Rowlett High School students.
The Time Traveller dedicates his life to creating a time machine in an attempt to alter the moment of his greatest loss.
A mythical merman tribe in ancient Hong Kong, the Lu-tings, is oppressed by another dominant culture.
University is the best time of your life, isn’t it? So what do you do when every day is a struggle? In Seven Ways to Calm the Fuck Down, directed by Ruth Berry, 3BUGS Fringe Thea…
This award-winning show combines humour, audience interaction and dance to highlight the objectification of women in the media.
Koreanised adaptation of Shakespeare’s classic.
The National Theatre of China have brought their visually stunning production of Life On The Silk Road to Zoo Southside.
Combining dance, text and improvisation, Mirage is a kinaesthetic exploration of reality and empathy.
Eighteen talented actors bring you a spectacular reinvention of Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland.
Desire is the place of not yet having.
One of the hardest calls for a reviewer to make is where to draw the line between production and play.
Zugunruhe (zoo-gun-rue): an ornithology term for ‘migratory restlessness in birds’.
The world is full of wonderfully different people – dramatic, dreamy, daring and disturbing! Join our medley of characters on an energetic journey through their dreams, hopes and…
Heather and Harry is a romantic yarn detailing the story of Heather, an angel cast out of heaven by her misogynist rapping boyfriend Zeus, of Greek mythology fame.
Q: What happens when you move a 12-year-old from Basingstoke to Zambia? A: She swims.
The portrayal of a young woman’s search for love and her sometimes crippling fear of being alone.
Mick dives into the absurdity of being an onstage performer and gives the audience a chance to sit in the director’s seat. Be prepared to laugh, cry and experience unbridled joy!
Goldoni’s boisterous 18th-century Italian comedy collides with 21st-century American pop culture.
Join Meg and her band of misfits on a voyage through time and space.
Prune the bouffon is the shrivelled and bitter product of a break-up, birthed from the pain of Serena Flynn’s ex cheating on her with webcam girls.
A new adaptation of Homer’s classic presented in iambic pentameter using physical theatre and shadowplay.
Have you ever felt that life was more a grocery list than a box of chocolates? Social media feeds are filled with people ticking events off the list, yet you feel you that you’ve…
It’s Not Over Yet… choreographed and performed by Emma Jayne Park (aka Cultured Mongrel) is a heart-stopping autobiographical show about cancer.
A sexier, more violent Waiting for Godot, Definition of Man is a physicalised post-apocalyptic decreation myth that won Best in Dance and Physical Theatre and Ripest Show at the 20…
Having absolutely loved Posolev’s other work at the 2018 Fringe, (Some)Body, I’m a little nervous at the start that this may not be of equal standard.
Inspired by the George MacDonald fairy tale, The Day Boy And The Night Girl.
As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect.
With roots in Grotowski’s theatrical style and the laboratory theatre of 1970s Poland, Company of Wolves are known for their striking, collaborative work that fuses dance, physic…
Popular or unknown, apps are part of our daily lives.
Following multiple sell-out shows for both companies at the Fringe, Theatre Re and Fourth Monkey are joining forces for 2018 and return to the festival with an exciting, ensemble-l…
Celebrating the enthusiasm and fresh talent of new dancers from across Scotland.
Last year, I was lucky enough to catch Alyona Ageeva’s Physical Theatre PosleSlov perform to a small audience and immediately became a fan.
Metamorphoses is a lyrical journey through Ovid’s classic tales, told through the fresh eyes of Mary Zimmerman.
A high octane, 80s inspired, dark comedy sketch show! Imagine if Dynasty and Desperate Housewives met on RuPaul’s Drag Race, in the 80s! Set in the power-dressed world of Cassandra…
We all remember the feeling of temptation to open the box that we’re not supposed to open as a small child.
A six-foot woman and a sex doll take on femininity.
‘Today is the day I make a decision.
Bite-size tasters of the best comedy, music and circus, all prepared for you in our glorious Spiegeltent.
Upon retirement, Corporal Liam Drury returns to be confronted with sudden and debilitating flashbacks to his time in combat.
In a light and playful form, the duet Anchor depicts the dilemma between love and desire.
Four Go Wild in Wellies is a playful look at how friendships are built, broken and mended – a whimsical adventure featuring tents that have a life of their own, bobble hats and o…
A reimagining of Hans Christian Andersen’s tale, the ‘superbly talented’ (List) Young Pleasance bring the glitz, glamour, and seedy underworld of interwar Berlin to life with chara…
This is one woman’s tale of the many heartbreaks in her life and the lessons she learned from each that allowed her to be able to love herself instead of seeking it in others.
‘The children grabbed him (the father) and put him on the table.
Accessible yet still in-depth, funny and disturbingly ironic.
Internationally renowned visual theatre artist returns with a dark, comedic, highly physical production incorporating illusions and masterful non-verbal storytelling.
Set in a near-future Britain where healthcare is privatised, a young couple’s relationship is quietly pulled apart by an aggressive lack of sleep.
Long-form improv comedy all the way from California.
Leaving the theatre with no idea what you have just seen but having enjoyed it immensely is perhaps an appropriate response to a production of Antonin Artaud’s To Have Done With …
A dynamic new play combining new writing and physical theatre, Loop is a journey through 50 years of life, love and music, a story of people evolving with the music they listen to.
Every now and then a sparkling gem comes bubbling to the surface of the Fringe.
A fusion of narrative, aerial arts, multimedia and live accordion music.
Infamous comedy duo Ursus and Nadeschkin have been dubbed the ‘Swiss-German Marx Brothers’ by Village Voice NYC.
Go and see this show right now.
Join the invincible Captain Cauliflower and his faithful companion Marvin on an unforgettable adventure, filled with extreme silliness and unquestionable danger.
Many people firmly believe that the circus discipline of Tightwire must in fact be an illusion or a magic trick.
UK’s original touring Taiko Tribe returns to the Fringe with a brand-new show of skill, stamina and red-hot rhythms to stir your soul! As Mugenkyo approach their 25th year as Eur…
Blood, sweat, and.
Flattered addresses, honestly and frankly, the issue of public harassment towards women.
Kinkens is old Scots for the evasive answers to the questions of overly curious children.
What if Lady Macbeth was the reincarnation of the mysterious White Fox? YVUA Arts present their award-winning About Lady White Fox with the Nine Tales.
Dream Logos is the divine logic of dreams in the backdrop of the known universe in projected image, dance, aerial, and theatre.
A one-man medley of action, comedy, characters and a car chase: Lewis Doherty presents WOLF.
Backup, a mix of puppetry and gestural object theatre, is a half hour of pure delight.
Many productions at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this year discuss female freedom of choice, but few do so as creatively as The Squirrel Plays.
For anyone who thinks they don't make physical comedians like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton any more, here's a word from the wise—which, in this context, essentially …
‘There may be many spooky stage productions around.
Multi award-winning creators of Anton’s Uncles, Track 3, Big Shot and Hot Cat, Theatre Movement Bazaar assembles its ultra-modern troubadours for the company’s latest adventure, …
Kickstart your festival with Assembly’s renowned opening night gala.
Feed is a thought-provoking and memorable piece by Theatre Témoin that explores the insidious relationship between the Internet and capitalism.
Let’s talk about drugs.
A man enters and, La Cage Aux Folles style, he sits at a mirror that isn’t there and paints his face in lurid make-up.
Theatre is often defined as a means of offering a voice to those who cannot speak for themselves.
Propeller is a play which relates a small town’s struggle to reinstate a railway line, in order to make a much wider statement on the merits and masquerade of social action.
Start each day with a warm-up! Professional practitioners will lead morning movement warm-ups in the Upper Church space at Summerhall for Fringe performers from all venues.
Once Upon a Daydream, produced by Sun Son Theatre, bursts with life and colour.
Following the ‘audacious’ (**** (Scotsman)) and critically acclaimed Follow Suit, Silent Faces return to the Fringe with more physical political fooling in the heart-warming A …
This is one of two offerings at the Fringe this year from Iulia Benze and Kurt Murray, featuring high energy physical movement, bubble art and audience interaction.
‘A striking dream world.
Thom Monckton of Finland’s Circo Aereo returns to Edinburgh with a hugely entertaining hour of silliness.
Every child goes inside their own bubble! Milkshake’s bubble flower cannot survive a cold winter without bubbles so she must get help from Dr Bubble – and quick! Smoke bubbles,…
If silent Hollywood star Buster Keaton is remembered for anything, it's his emotionless, mask-like expression; so the initial shock here is that this Buster speaks and smiles.
Tobacco Road is, more than anything, a lot of fun to watch and a strong example of the power of devised theatre and the ensemble.
George Buchner’s great working class tragedy Woyzeck has long cast a shadow over European theatre.
Chase Scenes is exactly what it says it is: 60 scenes in which performers create a variety of famous and original chase scenes, filmed lived onstage and projected onto screens at t…
What appears to be light and entertaining, can be dark and lonely behind the curtains.
2017 hit returns! A magical rollercoaster noir mystery tour through Japanese children’s folklore.
The Sauna is a story of an old woman.
How do you find a new ‘once upon a time’ after the ‘happy ever after’ never turned up? Victoria is on a quest to discover how you make a new life when you can’t have the …
Gamarjobat shows that comedy is truly without language barriers.
A magical rollercoaster noir mystery tour through Japanese children’s folklore.
‘Stop me if you’ve heard this one before.
It’s Mia’s birthday! How exciting! She will be surrounded by friends and will play all day long.
Keira Martin’s Here Comes Trouble contains some impressively executed Irish dancing to music which is a meld of Irish melodies and Jamaican beats in a memorable piece about ident…
People say your whole life flashes in front of your eyes before you die but what happens when you have dementia? Where does the brain go before we die? Dark Matter is a devised and…
‘Bottles’ is a stirring piece of theatre exploring the ups and downs of a night on the town through the eyes of a group of young women.
‘What’s it going to be then, eh?’ Little Alex is charming, clever and sophisticated.
The students of Wellington College are performing the renowned adaptation of Franz Kafka by Steven Berkoff, The Trial.
Slap and Tickle, ‘a machine gun of visual joy’ (WritingAboutDance.
Two young women, living similar lives, doing similar things: applying for jobs at cafes, buying alcohol, going to parties.
As the Sirocco winds bring cholera to the Lido and alleyways of Venice, Dr Aschenbach watches Tadzio swimming in the lagoon.
Peter Gill”s Certain Young Men was first performed at the Almeida Theatre in 1999.
Men have all the power.
Travel back to the 1920s to examine the beautiful art of failing.
One man’s quest to return to the woman he loves: beating gods and monsters, battling nymphs and sirens, through the underworld and across the Aegean Sea.
A stunning amalgamation of Wrong Tree’s work to date: the Professor’s grandfather is missing – working in his old greenhouse, her quest takes her to explore South America.
When Nathaniel, a student, is visited by a mysterious dread figure from the past and falls in love with a woman who isn’t all she seems, nobody can prevent his life from spiralling…
#JeSuis is an edgy new choreographic work by renowned British dancer Aakash Odedra.
A spectacular show featuring one of the best mime and impersonator artistes in Europe! Be prepared to be stunned by the quickest change artist and mime comedy entertainer Martin Ke…
A double-bill of extraordinary power and originality, Hope Hunt & The Ascension into Lazarus performed by Belfast-based Oona Doherty, gets beneath the hard exterior of disaffected …
A show about the evocative powers of art must be particularly effective in practicing what it preaches.
A wordless blend of mime, clowning, dance and acrobatics, Two Little Boxes is a brand-new piece by Reallynice, exploring the construction of masculinities in young men.
Alyona Ageeva’s PosleSlov Physical Theatre Company presents the UK premier of this contemporary physical theatre performance.
Can Hamlet please come into the diary room? You’ve had regular Big Brother.
We are often barely conscious of dressing and undressing in our daily routine.
Woyzeck ekes out a living on a meagre wage, earning pennies by eating peas for a dodgy clinical trial, while his wife cheats on him and everyone finds him pathetic.
Inspired on Zeami’s Aya No Tsuzumi, Busu and the Damask Drum was originally adapted by Yukio Mishima for the modern stage.
Reeling follows our plucky protagonist, Little Fellow, as he heads to the big city to make something of himself, and winds up in a motion picture studio where he is mistaken for th…
Have you ever been shat on by the blue bird? The great rebirth of public shaming continues to evolve.
Me, Myself and I’ is a fun, high energy, physical theatre piece containing small nuggets of inspiration relating to how we find, and nurture our confidence.
Once upon a time, two fair maidens dragged fairy tales kicking and screaming into the 21st century in this sharp and original review of all things “happily ever after”.
One Hundred Miles is a physical theatre performance structured around the experiences of a woman traveling through India in a bid to discover a different culture and way of life.
In Seagulls, visuals are everything.
Nominated for best play by the Anti-Trafficking Foundation in 2016.
‘And in the end, we were all just humans, drunk on the idea that love, only love, could heal our brokenness’.
Everyone has secrets.
Atwood’s retelling of The Odyssey from Penelope’s perspective is a totally appropriate text for this energetic and innovative all-female cast.
This August, Durham-based Wrong Tree Theatre are bringing three shows to Edinburgh; currently on offer is Souvenirs, a light-hearted adventure that draws on the heavy use of props,…
“None of these words are our own.
Thought-provoking but with a humorous tone, this spoken word and physical theatre piece explores what it means to be a girl growing up today and the choices offered to young women.
Imagine that you have only one hour to choose one single memory from your life – and everything else will be erased forever.
Agnes’s life is turned upside down when she stumbles upon her late sister’s Dungeons and Dragons notebook.
This is a collaboration of stunt and colour: the first of its kind in the world.
Doors creak and dust falls; the Curse of Cranholme Abbey has awoken once more.
Bite-size tasters of the best comedy, music and circus, all prepared for you in our glorious Spiegeltent.
Adapted and performed by Jennifer Jewell, Goblin Market is a solo performance, with Jewell taking on the roles of two young sisters and the goblins they encounter.
Cognitions was confessional, poetic physical theatre.
038 is the telephone code for Hualien, a small city on the east coast of Taiwan and it is the first few numbers the many emigrants to the bigger cities must dial to phone home.
The Crossing Place – Romantika has an absurdly joyous opening, which is unexpected considering that the show is marketed as a study of loneliness, anxiety and desire.
The North is as hostile, unforgiving and beautiful as the land to which it dedicates its hour-long runtime.
Rebellious, experienced, lyrical and courageous – this amazing multi-generational programme celebrates dancers from 12-85 years of life, dreams, hopes and fears featuring new wor…
‘Mirror, mirror, on the wall – does this selfie make my nose look big?’ Your favourite fairy tales in disguise, this once upon a time is happening now.
If you want a bit of light relief from Fringe shows taking themselves too seriously, come to this hilarious, technically mind-blowing piece which calls itself physical theatre but …
Both faithful and frantic, young company Flying Pig Theatre have produced a very satisfying version of Euripides’ Bacchae with a deft touch.
Stampin’, stompen’ coming through the trees, shuffling through the swamp grass, blowing in the breeze.
With one of the longest titles you’ll come across it feels as though this show will have a lot to unpack.
Sam is scared of the dark.
French theatre group Le Festin de Saturne deliver a wild and engaging clown show, War Pig, following the adventures of young Private Juan and Captain Fidel Castra off to war.
Harry awakes one morning in the worst possible way – with a head-shattering hangover.
Every day the same ceremony is held: a hotel room, a man, a woman.
Animikii Theatre’s Origins is an intriguing piece of physical theatre that isn’t afraid to be subtle with it’s plot.
Rock’n’roll in all its facets.
Inspired by a Kafka story, writer Josh Luxenberg and Brooklyn-based Sinking Ship have created a weird and wonderful piece of theatre in A Hunger Artist (Kafka Adaptation).
Gossip, blather, misinformation and rumours are a cross-cultural phenomenon of humanity.
What Lies Beneath is a semi-absurdist exploration into male grief, observing how it plays out in our minds and affects those close to us.
Hyperthymesia is a mixture of physical theatre and emotional monologues that certainly wasn’t a show that had the audience jumping onto their feet in appreciation.
Bone Woman is a quiet, strange and beautiful production.
This is one of Granny’s stories.
With humble beginnings as an idle farm lad, the eponymous hero of Henrik Ibsen’s Peer Gynt is chastised by his mother for wasting his time on earth dreaming of greatness - to whi…
Josh finds the outside world a fascinating and frightening place.
Temper Theatre once again return to Edinburgh to gift audiences with a performance well worth three times the ticket price.
A chorus of bawdy spirits lead you through this physically dynamic amalgamation of Shakespeare’s finest death scenes, which fuse together familiar characters and scenes to create a…
‘Being called a Greek feels like being bound with a dog collar.
What’s more important when telling a compelling story of human emotion, feeling or narrative? The answer to this is largely dependent on the viewer’s personal preferences as to…
Strange physical theatre with soul-lined theatrics and odd feats.
There is something remarkably welcoming about being handed a free pint with a smile as you walk into a show.
Gracefool Collective’s This Really Is Too Much blends dance, spoken word and physical comedy in a devised expressionistic theatre piece; revealing the absurd realities of life fr…
Fauna is a bold, mesmerising exploration of primal behaviour brought to us by the wonderful Fauna Circus.
Lobsters love large claws and peacocks prefer big tails – but what sets our hearts racing? An enticing piece of dance theatre that puts love under the microscope, challenging our…
Oyster Boy is a comic telling of the fictional relationship between two young lovers on Coney Island and their subsequent journey into marriage.
If you are looking for a show that demonstrates exceptional acting and physical theatre skills Tobacco is where you will find it.
The show tells the tale of a young girl named Rose who mysteriously goes missing in the tiny town of Grigglewood.
The traditional Korean tale of Princess Bari comes to life in this touching and inspiring production.
Hear me roar! In a world full of sound and fury, and bells and whistles, one woman is ready to listen.
Mouthpiece is one of the shows at CanadaHub at King’s Hall, a venue in association with Summerhall.
China Goes Pop is an action-packed hour for all the family to enjoy; full of acrobatics held together by a simple love story between two of the performers.
Kokdu: Soul Mate is physical theatre with charm, humour and a supernatural frisson inspired by Korean shamanistic rites and belief in the Kokdu, a spirit guide who accompanies the …
In a big, busy city there’s loads of space.
Fringe 2011’s Best Newcomer nominee Paul Valenti is back, this time on a semi-silent casual quest for universal truth.
Cockadoodlemoo is a brand new moo-sical for all the family! Join a prize-winning cow, sassy fox, playful dog and forgetful sheep who each have a lot to learn about friendship, lone…
Family physical theatre.
Meet Helga, cabaret diva extraordinaire! At least, she used to be… Through mime, clowning and circus, this poignant physical comedy reflects on how it feels when our bodies don�…
C Theatre’s production of Robin’s Hood is a silly pantomime style show featuring the classic characters.
Theatre Ad Infinitum have been a Fringe favourite for years; creating thought provoking and beautiful shows to touch both your heart and your mind.
The heart-warming tale of Ingo the dog and his journey of bravery, hope and finding courage where you thought you had none.
Incognito Theatre’s adaptation of All Quiet on the Western Front is a solid, if predictable, production which ticks all of the necessary First World War boxes.
The idea is a brilliant one: reducing an epic to the size of a man.
Spies Like Us Theatre’s adaptation of Graham Greene’s classic novel is, quite simply, a joy.
Testosterone is a touching, funny and incredibly brave piece of theatre from Rhum and Clay Company and Kit Redstone.
It’s 54 years since the last conscripted British citizens returned to civilian life after completing their National Service.
Told through contemporary and ancient physical storytelling techniques, the National Theatre of China’s Luocha Land is a visual treat.
There’s certainly a lot going on in Alpha: physical theatre, beat poetry and live music combine as the company confides their desires and secrets with their audience.
Amira is obsessed with space and dreams of becoming an astronaut.
A whimsical story of a pianist and his puppet, it’ll have you falling off your seat in laughter! Packed full of gags, hilarious moments and surprises, the White Face Crew combine p…
Set in a stark environment of desks and bare lightbulbs, Silent Faces’ Follow Suit is a cutting parody of life in the corporate sector.
Korean performance company GGIRIPROJECT aims to create the perfect collaboration between music and martial arts, a pursuit that has resulted in the catchily-titled Monkey Dance: Th…
Winner: Best Comedy Perth Fringe World 2017.
Assembly’s renowned opening night gala returns to launch our biggest programme yet, with highlights from across our 200 strong season, all rolled into one spectacular package.
Slut tells a story which is sadly the experience of many women; girls who have the benefit of naivety during their younger years, which is then destroyed when they face the reality…
Medea on Media is not your average spin on an Ancient Greek classic; Seongbukdong Beedoolkee’s production is fearless, irreverent, unsettling and, most surprisingly, a lot of fun…
There’s something charming about a fairy tale told in a fundamentally unique manner.
Staging Wittgenstein is a difficult production to categorise.
A short play for two humans and two robots.
The Cricket is an original story inspired by Pusongling’s famous work, Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio.
All Genius All Idiot is a quirky and outrageous piece that explores the animalistic side of human nature using contemporary circus, performance art and live music.
Whalebone is about bodies: who takes up space, how much, and why.
Derevo are a legend.
A psychic journey, through physical theatre and music, Sun Son Theatre’s Heart of Darkness explores the damage inflicted on a woman by arranged marriage.
Award-winning and inclusive Youth Theatre Company Brightonshed in collaboration with Theatreshed bring their interpretation of ‘Alice in Wonderland’ to Brighton Fringe.
Inspired by the events of Sophocles’ Antigone, Greek theatre veterans Actors of Dionysus chose to examine the actions of two women who are unable to explain the whereabouts of …
A woman single-mindedly pursues her physical image at the expense of her inner self.
Two striking and contrasting puppetry shows form a double bill that explores the journey of dementia patients at the end of their life.
‘Sink’ is based on the human need for control.
Barrera is what a clown AA meeting would look like.
The disparity between the promotional material put out by theatre groups and the reality of what they present to audiences is often quite staggering.
Award-winning Dutch performer Hiske Eriks presents a physical workshop in which we will search for a believable character by making small transformations.
Starting from a physical quest, we will search for intentions and ways to communicate with your audience non-verbally.
In this exhilarating, disturbing exploration of the human mind, there is a cornucopia of theatrical styles, from the visually spectacular, breathtaking use of puppetry, to the slic…
Deeply meaningful and uncomfortably honest at times, purged presents Alex (Orla Sanders) and his desire and failure to verbally explain his mental health problems to the audience…
This cosy story follows the adventures of Ingo, a dog on a mission to make his owners proud.
‘Late to the Party’ is an autobiographical romp on a mid-life diagnosis of ADHD and Dyslexia in two women.
Starring Ethiopian jugglers Bibi and Bichu, the inimitable Konjowoch Troupe, ‘Circus Abyssinia’ is circus at its most enchanting and surreal: as seen through the eyes of a child.
GIANT follows the never-ending, whirlwind of generations in protagonist, Tommy’s family.
To tell stories in unexpected ways; that is the promise that Wildkind Theatre makes in their tagline.
Theatre Inc.
A story about a meeting between two hobos.
This fast-paced, sharp writing from Louis Viljoen focuses on a man’s (Rob Van Vuuren) rapid descent into madness.
On an epic adventure to halt ageing in its tracks, writers and performers Abigail Dooley and Emma Edwards swim the sea of apology, march the bridge of tears and conquer the dark de…
We wear the consequences of our decisions like a bad shirt.
Tap into health! A rare, unmissable opportunity to dance with one of the world’s most engaging performers.
A newly-devised piece exploring issues of mental health.
“But.
Three performers from the UK, Italy and Spain that belong to the so called Generation Y, are confronted onstage with a simple but controversial question: what do you want for your …
A comedy about a tragedy.
I love edgy cabaret - give me songs about Chemsex (thanks Bourgeois and Maurice), or anti-drag (thanks David Hoyle) or blood, sweat and other bodily fluids (thanks Christeene) an…
The award-winning team that brought you ‘A Puppet Named Desire’ and ‘Puppetgeist’ return with mayhem, masks, and sock monsters.
An evening of new and exciting work from students nearing the end of their acting training at Strode’s College.
Indie theatre legends David Woods and Jon Haynes of ‘Ridiculusmus’ as two crustaceous elders putting off death in a snail paced farce.
“It wasn’t a particularly spectacular night, as she sat stargazing in her room .
Cheekykita’s dream.
Mozzz! A week in the life of an undercover mosquito.
Apparently, one of the men involved in the Great Train Robbery of 1963 resides in Hove - but this story isn’t about him, instead it’s about the women behind the heist, the ones…
The bizarre tale of the boy Eli Hum, born with a baffling condition: his tummy can only digest honey.
“There’s some pain you can’t grit your teeth through”, is something said by the sole performer in Scorched as he reflects on his time during WWII.
Brighton Death Forum present Gimcrack Productions’ ‘Moribund’, a piece of contemporary performance addressing our relationship with death, both light-hearted and poignant.
A double-bill of intimately presented contemporary dance, story and film, exploring the perception and experience of shared memory.
‘Balancing Acts’ invites you to share in intimate stories of struggle, strength and resistance.
To start with the positives, this was a very enthusiastic show.
Seven brave and bold artists constructing the next big thing in theatre.
Three groups of shipwreck survivors venture into unknown territory and find themselves being closely monitored, manipulated and enchanted by a wizard and his sidekick.
The Forecast is an engaging and informative piece of political theatre.
Inspired by Tim Burton’s poem, The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy, Haste Theatre transport us to Coney Island where Mr Gelati (Valeria Compagnoni) and the future Mrs Gelati (Lexi…
If you’re a budding ecologist who also has a love of physical theatre, Terabac is the show for you.
Dan Lees and Neil Frost as two quintessentially English gentlemen from a bygone era, struggling to hold onto their whimsical world of cricket, tea and secret arms deals.
A new inclusive urban sports show including parkour runners, skateboarders, BMX riders, acrobats and dancers.
Powerful tragicomic drama with masks.
Soviet Russia, 1937.
Amid the abundance of hard hitting and harrowing new work presented at the Fringe, one could be forgiven for wondering why we’re all taking ourselves so seriously.
This is Richard II as you’ve never seen him before, in a purple shell-suit wielding power over his puppet kingdom with subjects that range from beautiful two foot high hand carve…
Winner: Best Comedy, Brighton Fringe 2016.
A woman lays an egg a day and faces a tumultuous decision: will she raise her egg, or eat it? In this hysterical (in every sense of that word) show, Natalie Palamides takes a relat…
‘The Idiot’s Guide to the World’ is a clown show that explores a variety of physical comedy genres.
The culmination of a week-long workshop, EurekaEnsemble, to challenge and develop performers interested in more physical ways of working.
Warning: This show contains ninjas, not magic.
A woman comes face to face with her overwhelming need for revolution.
Everyman recounts the story of its eponymous hero as she is told, as punishment for her hedonistic and selfish lifestyle, that she is going to die.
Beautiful, funny and completely moving, Really Good Stories’ production of The Silence at the Song’s End is one of the best pieces of theatre you’ll see this Fringe.
Welcome to Ginger Creek, where curious characters and perplexing events are the norm.
Euripides’ classical tragedy, of one woman’s quest for revenge and the terrible lengths she is willing to go to inflict pain on her wayward husband, has been performed thousand…
An appeal to those in power, uniquely created and performed by a group of unaccompanied, young refugee men from Eritrea, Afghanistan, Somalia and Albania.
Join us for Nightmare, a piece of new writing by Sophie Paterson where the boundaries between subconscious and reality have been destroyed.
Theatre and physical theatre about the contemporary condition of women and farmed animals, created following Carol Adams’ lecture The sexual Politics of Meat.
Drawing from the likes of renowned theatre company DV8, All Might Seem Good mixes verbatim accounts of fate with physical theatre: mixing the highly natural with the highly stylise…
The Living Room takes us home, to a place in which we welcome another.
The Living Room takes us home, to a place in which we welcome another.
Prospero Theatre have decided it’s their turn to roll out a dark retelling of a well-known fairy tale, showcasing a unique-ish take on Little Red Riding Hood, with their producti…
Everyone’s favourite and most ethnically diverse supergroup return.
Quirky, vibrant and oozing with dark imagination, Dreaming of Leaves is a daring and thought-provoking piece of theatre.
A Working Title is about the belated coming-of-age and struggles of millennials as they confront a world of expectations and disappointments.
Moody Old Man Theatre Company specialise in making theatre that is inspired by music.
ImmerCity’s stripped back and stylised telling of the ever popular Scottish play is an at times disorienting, nightmarish and incredibly compelling piece of theatre that will giv…
John Godber’s great play about life in a rundown secondary school where both the teachers and the students have just about given up.
Wrong Tree’s Rumpelstiltskin is a musical retelling of the classic fairy tale of the farmer’s daughter and the mysterious imp.
Texas, early evening, the 1980s.
Suppose, just suppose, that your mind and body lived separately from each other.
A fresh look at the love poems of Sam Shepard using dance, aerial, physical theatre and live video.
Hey! Ever wondered what happens to TV reality stars when they stop being famous? On the slippery slide from celebrity to no-mark they have some wonderful adventures.
Molière’s classic comedy is reinvented as a piece of high energy physical storytelling, in a new adaptation by Oliver Pengelly and Dawn Wylie.
Start a revolution, or head to the beach? A dilemma that arises for Frederica and Paola as they ride two bicycles welded to each other.
It’s often hard to find anything particularly original about an original adaptation of any of Shakespeare’s great plays these days, but The Taming of the Shrew done in traditiona…
It’s always disappointing to see an interesting concept marred by poor execution.
When reading the marketing blurb for Luna Park, I must confess I wasn’t entirely sure what to expect.
Macbeth: Without Words is an abstract and aesthetically pleasing piece, rich in tension.
A breathlessly physical exploration of how it feels to be alone.
Entrails is a contemporary dance theatre piece that presents an urgent, dark and absurd look at our human bodies.
Youth reigns in Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses, a lavish retelling of Ovid’s tales, brought to stunning visual life.
The Therapist is about a woman called Michelle Dowell.
Can the moon really mend a damaged sole? Is there a pair for everyone? Join Luna in this quirky visual piece, inspired by Tim Burton’s poetry, on a journey to find the perfect so…
Ambitious in its intentions, At War With Love uses a selection of thirty-two of William Shakespeare’s sonnets to form a narrative set against the backdrop of the First World War.
Transforum Theatre’s adaptation of Alice in Wonderland sets the Lewis Carroll classic in a mental hospital.
“Who’s afraid of the big, bad wolf?”Such is the musical refrain setting the playful, yet pervasively sinister, tone which permeates this piece from the outset.
Did the world come about just so? Have forces of science and evolution been the only things at work? How did the world come to be filled with so many strange wonders? A new reworki…
Catherine Waller’s ‘body morphs almost supernaturally into distinct personalities.
Fortitude Dance company’s attempt to stage a ‘physical theatre’ version of Shakespeare’s bloody Scottish tragedy in the club scene of 1980’s Manchester is certainly a nov…
When a child’s choice is to be a suicide bomber or an invader’s informant, his Afghan mother sends him away to save him.
Here we go again.
In an explosion of energy, raw intensity and emotion, RashDash theatre company shatters preconceptions of the patriarchy.
There’s a lot going on in Discretion Guaranteed at Paradise in the Vault.
Do Not Open explores the chaos from within Pandora’s box and asks the question – was it really all that bad? Come on – wasn’t some of it kind of fun? This devised piece plays f…
Grapple Theatre have been inspired by Kneehigh; think Into the Woods meets Brothers Grimm, a combination of live music, physical theatre and puppetry.
You are the neander-fools and I am fire.
Plain as Paper is an energetic physical theatre show centred around where our imaginations can take us using only paper—though what is going on there and why is not always plain.
On average, 12 men take their own life every single day.
Are monsters born or are they created? A mute prisoner sits on death row in a maximum security prison.
Of all the forms of theatre regularly utilised in our part of the world, physical theatre remains the most beleaguered.
Drawing from Biblical allusions, Fourth Monkey’s The Ark, as part of their Genesis and Revelation programme, centres on people attempting to play God with the lives of modern-day…
**** (Stage).
The Enchanted is a show all about disconnection, both in its subject matter and the way that it’s performed.
Top ratings aren’t always just about putting on a remarkable production, although 5 Out of 10 Men is that.
Scenes from an Urban Gothic by Theatre Imaginers will certainly appeal to those who have come to the Fringe in search of something different.
Epic adventure! Spills and thrills! Complicated love! Heart strings! Song and dance! Twin sisters’ world of safety and routine is blown open when one twin follows her heart into …
The Genesis + Revelation cycle by Fourth Monkey promises “traditional Bible stories with a contemporary twist”.
Come and join us for a wonderful adventure in Neverland and see how Peter, Wendy, John and Michael battle the pirates, mermaids and native Indians with help from the Lost Boys and …
Celebrated Scottish choreographer Jack Webb has brought his latest, typically idiosyncratic work, The End, for performance at this year’s Festival Fringe as part of the extensive…
A vast and desolate world.
A sumptuous new show about one man’s search for identity, belonging and soft furnishings.
‘Bringing a thrillingly muscular energy.
The difficult relationship between political and personal affairs are addressed in the devastating drama Generation Zero.
Steam lives up to its name, delivering a staggeringly intense hour of physical theatre.
Hot Coals Theatre have put together a slick physical comedy, full of beat-perfect gags leaving you laughing out loud at the flick of an eyebrow, whilst some of the more grotesqu…
The setting is intimate, and encroaching on the personal space of a frail man, in a battered armchair listening to the television (news of the Gulf War is on – the year is 1991) …
The world of social media is beguiling, engrossing, enriching and deeply disturbing, as was Alice’s famous adventure.
‘He had two things in life: a smile and a suit.
Em and Um: a married couple losing their identity in a plastic, robotic, grotesque world.
The Australian outback, a French sheep and a lonely convict on the run.
The Six-Sided Man is a tense and funny drama, based on Luke Rhinehart’s cult novel The Dice Man, which has toured the world for the last 30 years.
In a desolate space, probably in the middle of nowhere, stands a group of curious looking people.
Inferno is the first and, arguably, best part of Dante’s Divine Comedy.
As Underbelly at George Square grows arms and legs, an expansion into the Meadows was inevitable.
Using poetry, physical theatre, music and a limited amount of props, The Fast Food Collective’s new show is a thrilling romp through a night on the town.
What is love? In an immersive clown show with an interesting lyrical vein, Sean Kempton (of Cirque du Soleil) attempts to find out.
Dan Lees, ‘comedy genius’ (FringeReview.
Patrick and Adele dream of having children of their own, yet their biological clock is ticking and here comes her solution: she picks up a homeless boy in Lidl (of all places) a…
The Cutlery Crew wants everyone to have fun, feel uplifted and bang stuff joyfully.
The funny, fearless international sell-out mask production from the UK’s leading full mask company, Vamos Theatre.
In this poignantly silly adventure tale for families, Sylvie is sent to the backyard to hang up the laundry.
Russian Company Derevo’s Once takes place early in the morning by Fringe standards and many of the audience members at the George Square Theatre might have been wondering whether…
A beautiful flower is born with the help of something dirty, trivial and unexpected.
Push to Shove Theatre Company have devised a simplified version of Dracula giving it the justice it deserves without taking anything away from Bram Stoker’s original concept.
The Bubble Show your mother warned you about is here! Clothes and bubbles will fly in this cabaret styled story filled with beautiful bubble creations, stripping, slapping, stick f…
Utterly stupid and equally brilliant, A Plague of Idiots is the ultimate feast of physical comedy for your inner child.
Set in 2057, a time not too far away from our own, The Mission charts the selection and preparation for an unprecedented space exploration by an unremarkable and apparently run-of-…
As a boy, Jack lived in a world of monsters and invisible guardians, as he fought to protect the people he loved.
This show is unlike much else at Fringe this year.
Tommy, 22, lives with three generations of his family.
Ribbet Ribbet Croak is a gentle and successful piece of theatre for younger children, as well as being very suitable for PMLD and ASD family groups.
Why do we forget our dreams? Why can’t we control them? And how can dreams impact on our day-to-day lives? Touching Sky Young Company explore a society where dreams are an unpreced…
Most Fringe shows think they can squeeze two hours into fifty minutes.
There comes a time in most good plays when you realise you’ve become completely lost in a moment due to its sheer brilliance.
Thriller meets fairy tale.
What do you do when your mother is murdered for protesting corporate and governmental corruption? In the case of Milagros, you fight for the justice your mother was denied and see…
Follow Alice on an adventure into the magical world beyond the mirror.
Trundling into view as part of C Theatre’s 25th anniversary is The Snow Queen.
In the small world of 30 Inches Aquarium, simple but amazing things are happening.
‘What does it mean to be a human?’Voiced explicitly at one moment during this equal parts captivating, inviting and horrifying production, the question of the very nature of hu…
The scene is Notre Dame.
A ludicrous and inventive interpretation of the Brontë myth, taking the real and imaginary worlds of the Yorkshire siblings as inspiration.
Darkly comic, ensemble theatre at its finest.
Actor Manuel Lavandera, Director Britt Forsberg.
In loving memory of Mr Jordan, a darling husband, brother, lover, dickhead, mumbler and ghost.
Clowning, slapstick and magical, non-verbal storytelling create a feast of laughter as two storytellers go head to head.
This show started beautifully and retained its magic right until the very end.
Tonight We Strut is a fantastical hour of slapstick mayhem in the guise of a TV chat show.
Cathedral is a midnight mass - an ode to memory and the sense of loss which carefully evokes a frozen, car-crash, state of mind.
Two pieces of new British writing that have been produced by Bred in the Bone Theatre.
A 60-minute, non-stop highly-interactive and energetic show, jam-packed with singing, dancing, spectacular acrobatics and music, featuring original tracks from the hit TV show.
Choreographer Ellie Aldegheri presents Lunas Dance Project in ‘Poetic Ramblings of Existential Delight’, inspired by Carl Jung’s ‘Memories, Dreams, Reflections’ alongside feeling…
Ahmed, a poor orphan, escapes his war torn homeland and joins the circus.
Taught by established professional performers and University of Brighton staff, this five day course provides intensive training in physical skills and creative approaches for devi…
Clown, dance and sketch collide as multi-award-winning Australian comedian, Tessa Waters, unleashes her new hour of stupidity.
Join Doris La Trine and Lotta Quizeen on their first day out of rehab.
‘Boipuso and the Grumpy Green Giant’, a folk tale from Botswana and other stories with puppets and percussion.
From the creators of Boris & Sergey comes a one-man show featuring puppetry, physical comedy, and mime.
It’s 1966.
The multi-award-winning, critically acclaimed total-sell-out returns.
Opening in 1943 Rome, Gran Consiglio is set with The Grand Council of Fascism meeting to discuss the deposition of Benito Mussolini.
A riotously funny show revealing just what happens when a glamorous French actress and her hapless assistant stage their version of Hollywood blockbuster ‘Gladiator’.
A thought-provoking, one-woman show exploring the themes of feminism, love, media, society and nature vs nurture.
If like me you find an Irish accent a wondrous tool capable, in a single crank, of spinning the very stars in the gutter, and if, like me also, you enjoy nothing better than a bi…
For a topic that has become slightly worn in recent years and can easily slip into cliché, this was a very commendable take, using the extremely difficult device of verbatim perfo…
Club Cairo offers an exotic array of entertainment from Arabia.
A promenade performance by in situ: Following the sell-out success of Canterbury Tales in 2015, in situ:’s storytellers return with another medieval masterpiece – Boccaccio’s m…
Gaël Le Cornec (Argus Angel award-winner with Frida Kahlo) returns to Brighton with a new play on immigration based on refugees’ stories.
Debuting in Brighton following a critically acclaimed run at the 2015 Edinburgh Fringe, ‘Madame Señorita: ¿Who are Tú?’ is a total riot of a show, lead by an idiot.
‘Honey’ is an original piece of theatre with a set of three bee hives that transform to tell the story.
A one-woman show questioning how socio-political conditions shape us as individuals, while attempting to give a perspective on how our realities differ greatly depending on where w…
Bane tells the story of hitman Bruce Bane, ‘a hired hand who gets the job done’.
‘Bane 2’ follows hitman Bruce Bane as he fends off toxic monsters, old foes and inner demons.
The Moscow State Circus returns to the UK with its latest, greatest production ‘The Flower with Seven Colours’.
Michael and Maria are an elderly couple, who receive the news that one has a terminal illness.
With elements that could have made it great, Hardly Still Walking, Not Yet Flying was sadly let down by others that weren’t quite up to par.
“Politics doesn’t have to be dull.
As a follow-up to the highly successful ‘I Love Luci’, The Other Realm Theatre Company return with ‘Which is Witch?’.
The story of Macbeth’s tragic demise has been told many times by hundreds, if not thousands, of theatre makers.
Although you may well have some early misgivings, Helen is a show to persevere with.
A family clown theatre show.
Sit back, relax and enjoy Aqua TV, brought to you by the synchronised swimmers of Brighton.
Ben Watson’s meet and greet as we entered the theatre made his audience immediately warm to him.
If you’ve ever struggled to catch a flight while clumsily carrying too many suitcases and bags, there’s lots to smile at here.
Dan Lees, “Comedy genius” (Fringe Review) and Neil Frost (Prague Fringe award nominee) present two quintessentially English gentlemen from a bygone era, struggling to hold on to th…
What do you get when an impressionable young writer moves into a London squat with a couple of crack addict ballerinas and a pack of rats? Swan Bake! This mash-up of song, dance…
A kaleidoscope of mundanity and the surreal, ‘Birthday in Suburbia’ invites its audience to follow the descent of an average man into an extraordinary, ridiculous personal crisis.
A series of curses.
Puppetry, poetry, dance and live music are interwoven in this splendid succession of stories from five zany friends.
A bar stool.
The Hiccup Project were the darlings of the 2015 Brighton Fringe with their show May-We-Go-Round, winning awards and accolades in abundance and that holy grail of all Fringe art…
Georgie’s 40th birthday, her friends spy something strange lodged in her ear.
An expert juggler, an acrobat and dancer, a musician and inventor, and a brave warrioress present an archive of 23 thoughts about conflict, collected over a single year.
Life-sized animal puppets with fully articulated limbs come to life in front of your eyes in a cacophony of singing, dancing and plenty of audience participation.
With a name like Confessions Of A Red-Headed Coffeeshop Girl you might expect a raw, bittersweet expose of the disappointments of a young dreamer, crushed by the tsunami of Post-Re…
A madcap frenzy of physical comedy with a political bite.
Join Sevanti and the Unity team for the beautiful, meditative fusion of yoga and contemporary dance, including Unity Partner Yoga™.
A vibrant re-imagining of Burnett’s classic story with an inclusive cast of young actors, bringing the garden to life through music, dance and umbrellas.
Join Sevanti for a ‘Yogida’ workshop, based on the choreography of her ‘Moving Into Stillness’ performance.
Join David, Keith, Hans and Romano on a quest to tell their individual stories and impose their so-called cultural offerings onto an audience.
The Marked follows Jack’s crusade against the haunting demons that follow his life living rough on the streets of London.
The misery of two men working for the municipality, in a town that is still using the bucket toilet system.
I love ghost stories but I have never heard one quite like this.
Fresh off a sold-out tour between New York and Los Angeles and an extended run at the Edinburgh Fringe, these Gaulier-graduates bring their high energy and low intelligence to Brig…
Fancy more Fringe? Join us for the best in laid-back, late-night entertainment at The Warren.
Newly single and HIV positive Pete listens to the consolations of his best friend Vanessa on his voicemail.
This is a show that asks big questions.
Bodies are awkward, difficult things.
Geometric City – The world sneezed and everything fell to pieces, revealing an exciting, mysterious and undiscovered landscape.
A breakthrough Chinese classic that combines the elements of sword-play, martial arts, opera and contemporary dance that tells of the undying love and devotion between Xiang Yu (Ki…
Full of sex and fury, a funny, affectionate and sharp exposé of life in London’s East End.
The wordless, 2014 sell-out hit returns for one week only.
NakedFeet Theatre’s Dust Never Settles in Torchlight is a short and sweet reimagining of a selection of Greek myths.
During its lifespan the average £10 note passes through 594 transactions.
I Am is the sequel to LCP Dance Theatre’s Am I.
Islands is a bit madcap.
You have a plan, and then you don’t.
A new musical from award-winning director Zhao Miao.
A slow burn performance, which builds to a surprisingly hard hitting climax, using a dance and self-aware comedy.
The Sea Child, adapted by Carolyn Sloan from her novel of the same name, is a tender and evocative play.
No two people – or monsters – are exactly the same! Come along and meet some scratchy, shimmering creatures and multi-coloured mini monsters, playing and interacting with one a…
In our fast-paced and demanding consumer culture, a production that takes time to examine and appreciate the joys and sorrows found in everyday life can be a real gem.
A stunningly original Korean update of the classic play.
Corium, the new show from Accidentally On Purpose Productions, tries to be exciting and contemporary by stylistically borrowing from Frantic Assembly but sadly doesn’t find its o…
‘O, that way madness lies.
A technical marvel, Perceptual Landscape is an alarming watch.
Award-winning choreographer Tamsin Fitzgerald and Eddie Kay for Frantic Assembly present Dreaming in Code, an explosive, visceral, brand new double bill performed by one of the UK�…
In sixteenth-century Germany it was not regarded as irreverant to perform comic puppet shows featuring characters and scenes from the legend of Faust.
Monochrome make-up, over-sized cigars and manic choral singing are only a few features you’ll find in the stylised theatre of the Dead Iconics.
Babolin – ‘breathtaking’ (TotalTheatre.
Mark Ravenhill’s play uses the metaphor of two brothers – twins – to represent the former partitioning of Germany into East and West during the time of the Berlin wall.
A durational performance from the critically acclaimed, award-winning Creative Electric.
In ecology, an ‘edge effect’ is a contact point between two habitats, characterised by an increase in biodiversity.
Frantic passions are unleashed when divine and human worlds meet.
Before the lights go down and the show begins, a voiceover warns us to expect ‘scenes of extreme horror’ as this retelling of Edgar Allan Poe’s gothic tale begins.
I was slightly apprehensive when going to review Tribe, having seen a lot of pretentious, uninspiring, or just simply bad physical theatre and dance pieces this Fringe.
Hell is an office and the Devil wants out, but in order to get a job transfer he needs to find a suitable replacement: cue Georgina, young aspiring lawyer with a thirst for power.
Welcome to the Edinburgh Spiritual Emergency Support Group.
This is a mesmerising, funny and well-crafted example of modern choreography, which explores what you can achieve when you are put under restrictions.
From Shakespeare to Sarah Kane, retellings of classical myths have proved ample sources for new, distinct creations.
One life.
If ever there were a production which vociferously defends the ability of young people to make theatre with the impact of a professional standard (whatever that actually means) thi…
In Poker Night Blues, Williams’ masterpiece A Streetcar Named Desire is undone – dismantled and distilled to its essential elements.
Antiwords is a piece inspired by Václav Havel’s play Audience, featuring an awkward dialogue between a dissident playwright and a drunken brew master.
Be transported by this enormously spirited and fast-moving production to the mischievous world of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
The relationship between parent and child is one of the most important in society and in the lives of most people.
Todd and Kali are a young couple.
Fusion Theatre return to Greenside with a Poe-faced and incoherent piece of physical theatre that often makes even less sense than its overwrought title.
This dark comedy uses physical theatre to modernise the themes and settings of this famous Shakespearean play.
Come and join Mr Cooper Sullivan as he tells the tale of how he became embroiled in a murder which takes him on a wild adventure that will have you giggling the whole way though.
Robertson returns after last year’s solo hit, Bond! Following performances in the USA, Europe and Australia, this unique, darkly comic show creates an urban cinematic world where…
Marie moves from a little village to a big city and it isn’t how she expected.
Using the Japanese dance form butoh and an adapted text, Yokko brings the spirit of Medea alive.
A haunting and powerful adaptation of Madame Butterfly, Ramesh Meyyappen’s silent movement piece about love, lust and loss is hauntingly powerful and will stay with you long a…
Ten high school seniors find themselves in a strange room, in the middle of nowhere, lit only by a dim overhead lamp.
You queue with the other girls outside, hoping for your big break.
Fourth Monkey are back with another stellar ensemble piece, providing late night gothic horror - even more frightening, as it is based on a real-life horror story.
You think you know the story of Hansel and Gretel, but can you fully comprehend the suffering that they endured? Poverty, starvation, abandonment, incarceration, murder and insanit…
“My conscience hath a thousand several tongues, and every tongue brings in a several tale”.
An unconventional experiment of light, sound and physical theatre.
The Hogwallops is a joyful show for all the family that combines astounding acrobatics, physical humour and a heartfelt story meaning there is something for everyone.
The door is locked.
A belated denouement to his lauded 2005 work The Factory, award-winning performer Al Seed returns to the subject of war with striking psychological rigour.
American company The Pack bring their space-age feminist performance piece to the Fringe, but it seemed like getting their heads around it was a little out of the audience’s gras…
Ockham’s Razor present Arc and Every Action.
Three poles, three performers and a whole lot of juice.
“I don’t fall in love, I tumble”Tumbling After is a modern day love story and commentary on the ways we stumble in and out of relationships.
‘You don’t need onions! Don’t be silly.
Back due to popular demand, multi award-winning comedian Javier Jarquin returns to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe with Card Ninja, a riotous and dazzling display of comedy and card …
A charming, witty and engaging show, Writing is an exploration of just that - the process of writing, as seen from a child’s perspective.
A bare stage, obscured by low lighting and backed by an eerie sinister soundtrack set the tone for this gripping retelling of the classic children’s fairy-tale, but this telling …
Rapunzel is part of Fourth Monkey’s 2015 fairytale season and features their signature physical ensemble work.
Parlour Games is a playful piece of physical theatre inspired by silent films and gothic novels.
Don’t wear make up to this show.
The Dream Sequentialists is a show about dream goblins.
Unpacking stories of great and small adventures, brave departures, wrenching farewells and the things that travelers choose to carry.
The Great War: while millions of men struggle and fight in the mud and hell of the trenches, one woman’s story begs to be told.
This evocative dance performance is as notable for the process by which it was made as it is for the quality of the final product.
Nothing can take a turn for the worse as quickly as a perfect day.
Performed by a superb cast, this is a painful and tragic exploration of Alan Turing’s life and the many attempts to break him as a person.
Edgar Allen Poe’s seminal poem, which charts the gradual descent into madness of a heartbroken lover compounded by the incessant repetitions of a talking bird, gives its name and…