Highlighting women’s peace activism over the years and combining inspirational storytelling with evocative songs of protest, Morna creates a moving, timely tribute to the struggl…
A new metafictional play exploring themes of isolation, human infallibility, and unfulfilled ambition.
As might be expected in Jane William’s ambitious work, What the Thunder Said, there are some impressive sound effects of the heavens in torment.
There’s a wealth of research that shines through Placeholder, presented by Fronteiras Theatre Lab in association with the Colonial-Era Caribbean Theatre and Opera Network at Dund…
Gender is not-binary.
Seven women debate gender equality, the true worth of women, and the responsibility of men: why have women throughout history been relegated to second-class status by men? Why, kno…
After some years of setbacks, Caroline Burns Cooke took to the stage at Dundee Fringe with her new work, Gruoch: Lady Macbeth, written for her by David Calcutt.
In a remote graveyard in the Argyll Forest in the gathering October dusk, Jen McGregor finds that she is not alone.
Hedonistic queer party-goer Rey is sent on a mission to bury nuclear waste in an underground nightclub.
Poor Archy - trapped in the body of a cockroach - reflects on the insanity and inanity of humanity as he records his memoirs on a newly-discovered typewriter.
Royalty Green is running for Prom Queen.
Humour is a funny thing and while I have a reputation for not doing comedy, many things amuse me and some even make me laugh out loud.
What happens when you move the camera away from the leading players? Everyone‘s an extra in other people’s lives, but a star in their own.
Who says you can’t laugh in the face of death? Come and witness the funeral of a father that will make you both laugh and cry.
Matthew is trapped in his flat, a rotting box where he listens to his neighbours through the walls, festering in his contempt, until one day he hears the sound of panicked whimperi…
Yes, I eat insects and arachnids.
Alan Gottlieb (Chris Brannick) has spent forty years on the back row of the second violins, but changes are afoot that threaten everything that gives meaning to his life.
A contemporary one-act play of post-industrial Dundee - picking up where the historical tale ‘O Halflins an Hecklers an Weavers an Weemin’ left off in 1999.
In a gripping and hilarious show, Yorkshire storyteller Eden Ballantyne takes us back to the original versions of some of the most famous children’s stories and leaves us wonderi…
Come sit down, let the lights go out and let your imagination take over.
The Dundee Fringe provides the perfect context for Maybe This Time, a story of love, frustration and delusion rooted in the city.
There is an enduring theatrical interest in witch trials.