Tag Archives: Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Unfolding Theatre: Best in the World ¦ Photo: Reid Ingram Weir

Unfolding Theatre: Best in the World

August 11th, 2012 by

Take a moment to recall a point in your life when you did exactly the right thing at the right time. Unfolding Theatre Company ask this of their audience in their subtly powerful one-man production Best in the World. It is an inspirational hour that explores what it is like to be the best at something, […]

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Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio: Detention

Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio: Detention

August 11th, 2012 by

Hong Kong company Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio’s Detention is a non-verbal physical theatre piece and acrobatic comedy combining clowning, martial arts and percussion. The scene for the show is a high school class room, its blackboard chalked with the words ‘be a good student’. Enter, one a at a time, three mischievous, highly active teenage boys. They […]

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Molly Naylor and the Middle Ones: My Robot Heart

Molly Naylor and the Middle Ones: My Robot Heart

August 10th, 2012 by

Devised by performer Molly Naylor, supported by real-life band The Middle Ones, and inspired by Japanese experiments with robots, My Robot Heart is a simple storytelling play. Beautifully engaging, it looks at love through three interlocking stories centred upon an impending wedding, with all of the characters multi-roled by Naylor herself with the help of a few […]

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Tortoise in a Nutshell: Grit

Tortoise in a Nutshell: Grit

August 9th, 2012 by

It is often said that there is not enough puppetry for adults in theatre, and it can certainly be difficult to find performances that use the full potential of puppetry for tackling serious themes. Thankfully there is hope at Bedlam Theatre, where Edinburgh-based company Tortoise in a Nutshell are making full use of this often […]

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Donna Rutherford: Kin

Donna Rutherford: Kin

August 9th, 2012 by

Donna Rutherford, caught between memories of the past and projections of an uncertain future, dives into a subject that most people simply try to ignore: the inevitability of becoming old, the rapid passing of time, like the sand in an hourglass; and the shift in the parent/time relationship – specifically, that moment when the natural […]

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