
Coming of age on the Mile: Childhood, identity and nostalgia at the Edinburgh Fringe
Pop idols, Girl Guides, drag princesses and Diana tributes - at this year's Edinburgh Fringe, nostalgia isn't just trending, it's transforming. Across theatre, comedy, clown, and cabaret, artists are cracking open their pasts - from teenage bedrooms and school toilets to 90s Dublin and queer club nights - to explore what it really means to grow up. Shell ZOO Southside (Studio), 15:05 Part queer sex-ed session, part drag-clown ritual, Shell is unlike anything else at the Fringe this year. Created by Ana Evans and Linnea Scott, the show follows Andy, a jock-turned-sex-ed-activist, and Peanut, a mysterious being of pure desire. Through irreverent comedy and audience interaction, the show asks what we really know about our bodies — and what we've never dared to ask. Surreal, spiritual and deeply silly in the best possible way. Cara and Kelly are Best Friends Forever For Life Pleasance Courtyard (Bunker 3), 15:20 Selfies, sleepovers and slowly rising tension - Mojola Akinyemi's razor-sharp two-hander captures the perilous intensity of teenage friendship. Set in 2013 and told from the point of view of two girls on the brink, it examines how privilege, silence, and cultural shifts play out in school corridors and shared secrets. A bold, uncomfortable exploration of the radicalisation we don't talk about - and how ideology can form long before we know what to call it. Don't Tell Dad About Diana Underbelly Cowgate (Belly Dancer), 12:50 It's 1997, and in the shadow of the Princess of Wales' death, two Irish teens prepare a drag tribute to their fallen icon. Set against a backdrop of Boyzone CDs and nationalist parents, this camp, chaotic and unexpectedly moving comedy explores friendship, grief, and the early stirrings of queer identity. Created by Hannah Power and Conor Murray, this is a story of chosen family, late-night lip-syncs, and the danger of secrets that shine too brightly to stay hidden. A STAN IS BORN! Gilded Balloon Patter House (Blether), 15:00 A love letter to diva devotion and queer self-discovery, Alexis Sakellaris returns to the Fringe with a solo musical comedy that's equal parts vocal fireworks and emotional resonance. With ten original songs and a keyboard always within reach, this show takes audiences from suburban bedrooms to European train stations - all set to the inner monologue of a child who grew up worshipping Beyoncé, Céline, and Mariah. A glittery, glorious, and deeply heartfelt reminder of how our icons shape who we become. Eat The Rich (but maybe not me mates x) Pleasance Courtyard (Bunker 1), 14:15 Jade Franks cleans toilets by day and navigates Oxbridge by night - and her autobiographical solo show is as sharp as it is scathing. With biting wit and warm storytelling, she dismantles the myth of meritocracy and the social acrobatics required to survive elite spaces as a working-class outsider. A powerful and personal show about code-switching, shame, and the politics of fitting in - or choosing not to. The Strongest Girl in the World Gilded Balloon Patter House (The Snug), 14:20 Truly Siskind-Weiss blends summer camp singalongs, storytelling, and memory theatre in this poignant solo show about a girl navigating grief after her father's death. With warmth, wit and a patch-covered sash of Girl Guide metaphors, she explores how we grow up in the shadow of loss — and what it means to stay strong, even when you don't want to. Funny, fierce, and unexpectedly tender. FISH Greenside (Jade Studio), 19:35 Funmi Adejobi's absurd, tender solo performance follows a fish who wants to become human - only to find the surface world even stranger than the sea. With elements of clown, storytelling and physical theatre, FISH dives into climate dread, capitalism, and what it means to feel out of place in your own body. A surreal, smart and deeply humane show about transformation and the cost of survival. FLUSH Pleasance Courtyard (Upstairs), 12:15 Set entirely in the women's toilet of a Shoreditch club, FLUSH is a sharply written, emotionally charged look at vulnerability, trauma and fleeting solidarity between strangers. Written and performed by April Hope Miller, this show peels back the nightlife facade to reveal quiet moments of connection, sisterhood, and survival. A powerful partnership with Ask For Angela gives this already vital show a real-world urgency. With the cast informing the process of creation this show is not to be missed. At the 2025 Fringe, the past isn't something to escape — it's something to confront, celebrate, mourn, remix and reimagine. These shows make space for the awkward teenage selves we carry with us, and the cultural myths we've wrapped around them. They prove that growing up doesn't always mean letting go — sometimes, it means returning, rethinking, and singing it all at the top of your lungs. For tickets and the full programme, visit edfringe.com.
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STV News
an hour ago
- STV News
Thousands of artists descend on capital as Edinburgh Fringe gets under way
The 2025 Edinburgh Festival Fringe begins on Friday, bringing thousands of performances and international artists to Scotland's capital. Running until Monday, August 25, this year's programme features 54,474 performances from 3,853 shows, with 3,352 of those included in the printed guide. Since the programme launch on June 3, an additional 501 shows have registered and are now available to browse on and via the official Fringe app. Artists from 63 countries are set to appear at venues across the city, including 1,118 shows from Scotland and 829 from Edinburgh itself. The Fringe Street Events programme also got under way on Friday morning – running daily from 11am until August 24. Tony Lankester, chief executive of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, is attending his first Fringe in the role. He said: 'It's taken a lot of people a lot of work to get us to this moment, so I'd like to thank everyone who has a hand in making it happen. 'I encourage any and all prospective audience members to go out, enjoy the festival and dare to discover the amazing work on offer.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
SNP leader suggests Edinburgh Fringe comedy venue was right to cancel Jewish comedians
John Swinney has suggested an Edinburgh Fringe comedy venue was right to cancel a run of shows by Jewish performers because staff had 'safety concerns'. The First Minister said he could not 'dismiss' concerns raised by bar staff working at the venue because of his own security risks as a high profile politician. But he made his comments only minutes after delivering a keynote speech in which he pledged to protect freedom of speech to inaugurate the Edinburgh International Festival. Comedians Rachel Creeger and Philip Simon were due to perform at Whistlebinkies during the month-long Fringe festival but had their gigs dramatically pulled after bar staff at the venue allegedly expressed fears of feeling 'unsafe'. Ms Creeger was set to perform her show Ultimate Jewish Mother, while Mr Simon was due to host a Jew-O-Rama – a showcase of different Jewish comics that has played at the venue for years. The concerns were initially raised after the venue was told it would get extra police supervision amid continued worries over the safety of Jewish acts, it has been claimed. Neither show is political or about the Israel-Hamas war, but were still deemed a security risk. Speaking to reporters ahead of the Fringe's opening weekend, the First Minister said: 'I think the individual venues will make an assessment of their circumstances and the issues around security that might need to be considered. 'I live in an environment where issues of security are considered all the time about my whereabouts so I can't dismiss these issues, where security concerns are raised, but I think that has to be very carefully considered in the steps that are taken about judgements by individual venues.' Asked if another venue should come forward to host the cancelled comics, he said: 'A venue would have to make its judgement about the security situation.' The comments appeared to clash with Mr Swinney's commitment to 'always protect' freedom of speech as part of a speech inaugurating the beginning of the Edinburgh International Festival set to start on Friday. The First Minister warned prominent figures in the arts industry: 'Freedom of expression is under attack both at home and abroad. 'I want to ensure that Scotland, the birth of the Enlightenment, remains a country of robust debate and inquiry. 'I firmly believe that arts and culture must be able to challenge us, to ask tough questions and to force us to look at things from different perspectives.' Days after Whistlebinkies cancelled Mr Simon's show, a separate venue cancelled another run of performances by the comedian, Shall I Compere Thee in a Funny Way?, for attending a vigil held for victims of the Oct 7 attacks. The Banshee Labyrinth pub said it made the decision because of alleged 'rhetoric and symbology' linked to Israel that they had discovered after scouring Mr Simon's social media pages. The alleged concerns identified by the venue included a series of photos posted by Mr Simon from a vigil 100 days since the attack on southern Israel; a message on his X account saying that it was powerful to 'stand strong against terror'; and a post warning that Oct 7 rape victims were being forgotten. Simon said the only opinion he had expressed on the Gaza conflict was a desire for peace and to see the hostages freed. The pub told The Telegraph: 'If we hadn't found anything of concern he would obviously still be performing with us.' Mr Swinney said pro-Israeli performers should have their rights to perform protected, saying: 'I think what I feel is that our society is healthier where we have an expression of our views respectfully and courteously, so all of us are able to do so on all subjects – in particular on the issues of the greatest sensitivity in our society.'


South Wales Guardian
2 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Fringe organisers call on audiences to ‘dare to discover' as festival begins
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