logo
Scottish stories being told at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Scottish stories being told at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

With new shows and events being added every week to the line-up, here are just a few highlights from the ever-expanding programme that is taking shape.
Read more:
When Billy Met Alasdair, Scottish Storytelling Centre: Award-winning writer Alan Bissett's show is inspired by an encounter between Sir Billy Connolly and Alasdair Gray when the comic met the writer at the launch of his novel Lanark in 1981.
Bissett, who is best known at the Fringe for The Moira Monologues, will be exploring the 'origins stories,' struggles and triumphs of Connolly and Gray in a show given a sneak preview at this year's Glasgow Comedy Festival.
The birdlife of Shetland has inspired Kathryn Gordon's Fringe show A Journey of Flight. (Image: Supplied)
A Journey of Flight, Dace Base: Choreographer Kathryn Gordon has created immersive experience inspired by the birdlife of Shetland, where she lives.
Dance, live music and visual projects will be combined to explore themes of arrivals, departures, place and flight. The piece, which was created in Shetland is aimed at encouraging audiences to 'reflect on the delicate balance between 'nature, movement and our emotional ties to place and each other.'
River City and Shetland star Gail Watson will be appearing in Faye's Red Lines at the Fringe.
Windblown, Queen's Hall: A palm tree removed from Edinburgh's Royal Botanic Garden after more than 200 years has inspired a new stage from award-winning singer-songwriter Karine Polwart.
The Sabel bemudana palm was removed last year from the tropical palm house after outgrowing the building, which is currently closed for refurbishment. The tree, which had been transported to the attraction in the 1820s from its previous home on Leith Walk, had 'outgrow' the building and was said to be too frail to be relocated again.
Johnny McKnight will be performing his pantomime-inspired stage show She's Behind You at this year's Fringe. (Image: Traverse Theatre)
Polwart's show will imagine the poetic and musical voice of the tree in what she describes as 'an exploration of historical legacies, ecological loss, collective ritual and the multi-generational promise of gardens.'
She's Behind You, Traverse Theatre: Scottish theatre-maker Johnny McKnight will be reflecting on 'a lifetime spent in pantomimes' in the one-man show he is creating with award-winning director John Tiffany, who was at the helm of the recent Edinburgh stage hit Wild Rose.
McKnight, who has written more than 30 pantos and played 18 dames himself, will be looking back at his personal experiences across 20 years of Scottish production.
The show, which is being adapted from a lecture McKnight delivered in full custom for the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, is expected to be exploration of identity, courage and acceptance.
The Traverse has billed She's Behind You as 'a celebration of shifting traditions and the unexpected beauty found in the anarchy of pantomime.'
Faye's Red Lines, Gilded Balloon: River City and Shetland actress Gail Watson portray a woman with a paralysing fear of intimacy in Rab C Nesbitt creator Ian Pattison's play.
The character played by Watson, who starred alongside Andy Gray and Jordan Young in last year's Gilded Balloon hit Chemo Savvy, will confront her long buried past and her solitary life.
Skye: A Thriller, Summerhall: The Isle of Skye provides the backdrop to best-selling author and theatre producer Ellie Keel's debut play.
It explores the events which unfold when four siblings on holiday believe they saw their their father on a beach four years after he passed away.
The show is billed as 'a relentless search for the truth, on a rugged island where real people and ghosts seem to walk hand in hand among the mountains and lochs.'
24 Weeks, Gilded Balloon: The debate over reproduction rights in Scotland has inspired a play set in a not-so-distant future Scotland where abortion has been made illegal.
The show focuses on the relationships between three friends who are divided on what to do when one of them falls pregnant.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The 8 best shows to see at the Edinburgh Art Festival 2025
The 8 best shows to see at the Edinburgh Art Festival 2025

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

The 8 best shows to see at the Edinburgh Art Festival 2025

All human life is at the Edinburgh festivals (sometimes, walking on the Royal Mile, it feels as if that's literally the case). It has never been entirely clear to me why they all happen at the same time, the Fringe and the International Festival crashing into the film, book, TV and art jamborees every August, but one advantage for the Edinburgh Art Festival (EAF) is that it can provide a welcome respite from the noise. As a body that commissions work and provides an umbrella for exhibitions that would be happening anyway, the EAF can feel frustratingly disparate (and the website is maddening), but there is still much to enjoy. Of the commissions this year, Lewis Hetherington and CJ Mahoney's delicate film about queer Scottish lives obscured through history is the strongest, and can be found in the festival pavilion at 45 Leith Street, a disused office building given over to artists' studios (some are open to visitors on certain dates). • Edinburgh Festival 2025: the best shows to see this year And as ever, slipping into a gallery and shifting your mindset for an hour or so, especially if you've spent the past few hours being aggressively entertained, is always worthwhile. Here are the top shows. ★★★★☆A fascinating exhibition that uses fabulous paintings, books, jewellery and other objects to reveal a man about whom English audiences at least may have a pretty fuzzy idea, overshadowed as he has been by the travails of his descendants (especially Charles I and II) and his mother (Mary, Queen of Scots). It reveals a complex, intelligent, devoutly religious king scarred by childhood trauma but given to breathtaking arrogance; a dog lover, fashion plate and patron of the arts who hated smoking almost as much as he hated witches, and who managed to hold together two fractious nations, but had a weakness for pretty young Galleries, Scotland: Portrait, to Sep 14, ★★★☆☆Curated by the IKEA Museum in Almhult, Sweden, this jolly exhibition traces the early development of the massive interiors brand's textile division and highlights the designers behind some of its most popular fabrics (such as Inez Svensson's banana print — a nice detail is that when she died in 2005 she requested her coffin be draped in it). It's really only mildly interesting, but it's enjoyable, and does make you want to buy new cushions. Dovecot Studios, to Jan 17, • Edinburgh festivals 2025: the best theatre, music and dance shows ★★★★★It's rare to see Andy Goldsworthy's work inside a gallery — mostly he makes it in the landscape, out of natural materials, then leaves it to the mercies of nature, often to disappear altogether. This poetic, gently witty, quietly magical show includes photography and video documentation of some of his more ephemeral works, as well as objects and large installations that recognise and pay tribute to our integral relationship with the land. With works ranging from an elegiac room of stones displaced by human burials to vast paintings made by the muddy feet of hungry sheep, it's a strangely touching experience that makes you want to immediately tramp up Arthur's Seat, fires permitting, and hold your arms Scottish Academy, to Nov 2, ★★★★☆With their quiet clarity, soft palette and domestic focus, the paintings of the Philadelphia-based artist Aubrey Levinthal feel familiar in a way that is comforting yet disquieting. Revolving around life with her husband, son and friends, they are full of relatable detail that you rarely see in painting — a Tupperware containing the remnants of lunch; the startling black of a laptop screen reflecting an overhead light; a charger; discarded hoop earrings; an escapist scribble of spaghetti; drooping houseplants; children clustering around an iPad. She skilfully evokes, too, the solitude that comes with the territory of artist — and motherhood. Don't miss her prints in the hallway of the gallery, or the small exhibition upstairs of gorgeous canvases by Mia Kokkoni, a recent graduate based in Gallery, to Sep 13, • Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2025: the best comedy shows to see ★★★★☆The glorious sculpture park of Jupiter Artland is always worth visiting, but every summer a couple of new commissions are presented there, and the standout this year is the film-maker Guy Oliver's new piece, Millennial Prayer. Looking back at the day we briefly thought the clocks were going to stop, this hour-long, highly entertaining exploration of a cultural moment that was hugely significant and a complete damp squib wields deadpan humour to create a nonchalantly acute social Artland, to Sep 28, ★★★★☆Exquisitely made and totally compelling, this exhibition by the Egyptian artist Wael Shawky centres on two films about politics and history. The two-hour epic (part of a trilogy) Cabaret Crusades III: The Secrets of Karbala uses intricate glass marionettes, some of which are on display ('We are all like marionettes, manipulated by forces we cannot see,' he says), to give an Arab perspective on the context and motivation underpinning the Crusades. The strange but stunning Drama 1882 is an operatic rendition of Egypt's abortive nationalist Urabi revolution against imperial rule, undermined by the British to protect its interests in the region and leading to Britain's occupation of Egypt until 1956. Most visitors won't sit through them, but they're really worth your time. Talbot Rice Gallery, to Sep 28, • Read more art reviews, guides and interviews ★★★★☆At the heart of Edinburgh's Royal Botanic Garden, Inverleith House feels like an oddly appropriate location for this 50-year survey of work by the post-punk feminist artist Linder, who often draws on floral imagery to wittily subvert the tropes of femininity. Her scalpel-sharp, surgically executed photomontages critique conventional assumptions about gender and sexuality. From soft porn spliced with images of domestic appliances to photographs of the working-class drag clubs of 1970s Manchester, she kicks hard and precisely where it hurts. Inverleith House, to Oct 19, ★★★☆☆Mike Nelson creates immersive environments from salvaged materials that are stuffed with cultural references. They're not always easy to read, and this, a study in the politics of construction and destruction across all three gallery spaces, is no different — the short film upstairs, in which he reluctantly explains where he's coming from, is by far the most helpful place to start. Based on two sets of photographs — one of Mardin, a predominantly Kurdish city in Turkey that was at the time in a remarkable state of infrastructural redevelopment, and one of an unnamed London housing estate in the last silent days before its destruction — it's a cumulative experience that is more poetic and atmospheric than expressive. Make sure you visit the warehouse section of the gallery (through the café, then through a big metal door) or you'll be to Oct 5, Follow @timesculture to read the latest reviews

The Great British Sewing Bee star abruptly stops during on-air chat 'I can't say'
The Great British Sewing Bee star abruptly stops during on-air chat 'I can't say'

Wales Online

time5 hours ago

  • Wales Online

The Great British Sewing Bee star abruptly stops during on-air chat 'I can't say'

The Great British Sewing Bee star abruptly stops during on-air chat 'I can't say' The Great British Sewing Bee star Patrick Grant appeared on BBC's The One show on Monday night as he chatted about the new series The Great British Sewing Bee judge Patrick Grant was forced to remain tight-lipped about the possibility of a future challenge. ‌ The Scottish tailor, 53, has made his comeback for the show's 11th series alongside fellow judge Esme Young and presenter Sara Pascoe. ‌ Despite the programme featuring numerous inventive and unconventional tasks over the years, there remains one particular challenge that hasn't yet made it onto our screens - something Patrick was questioned about during his appearance on The One Show with presenters Alex Scott and Roman Kemp. ‌ When Alex pressed him about potentially reviving Y-fronts as a challenge theme, Patrick appeared momentarily lost for words before starting to respond, only to halt himself and remark: "I can't say." Patrick Grant was teased about a future challenge (Image: BBC) However, he confessed: "I'm a big fan of the Y front," describing them as both "comfy" and "sexy". He enthused: "You've never been more comfortable than the Y-fronts," reports the Express. ‌ Speaking about his sustainable and ethical fashion label Community Clothing, Patrick added: "Community Clothing, we do normal pants and boxers which is what everybody wears but I'm like, let's get the Y-fronts back." Patrick also hinted at an imminent challenge centred around repurposing and recycling materials this week, describing it as a "great" task. He explained: "At some of these big festivals, 40-50,000 tents get left behind. When we were researching this challenge, I Googled how much you could get a tent for and on a cheap website you could get one for £5.70. ‌ "Tents have essentially become single-use plastic, they are 100% plastic, you could use it for a weekend and leave it behind. But where does all that fabric go?" The Great British Sewing Bee is in its 11th season (Image: BBC) He continued: "Our contestants made some amazing stuff. They have to make a festival outfit out of the tents left behind at last year's festivals." ‌ Discussing the varied backgrounds of the contestants on The One Show with hosts Alex and Roman, Patrick said: "They're an amazing bunch with a brilliant eye and just the loveliest people." Following the introduction of new challenges during Korea Week on The Great British Sewing Bee, which celebrated the nation's rich fashion and textiles, Patrick hinted at future excitement, revealing to "There's another great one next year. It's a really good set of challenges." "I really enjoy the international weeks because I really enjoy finding out about the kind of ins and outs of their culture and their clothing traditions," he shared with the outlet. Article continues below "And I think the audience really like it too. We've had some amazing ones over the years." The Great British Sewing Bee is broadcast on Tuesdays at 9pm on BBC One and iPlayer.

The Great British Sewing Bee star makes 'sexy' underwear confession
The Great British Sewing Bee star makes 'sexy' underwear confession

Daily Mirror

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

The Great British Sewing Bee star makes 'sexy' underwear confession

The Great British Sewing Bee judge Patrick Grant was quizzed on The One Show about future challenges. Patrick Grant, judge on The Great British Sewing Bee, was questioned about a potential future challenge on the show and was left a momentarily speechless. ‌ The Scottish clothier, 53, has returned with the competition for its 11th season with co-judge Esme Young and host Sara Pascoe. ‌ Despite the programme's history of unique and inventive challenges, there's one that hasn't yet been tackled. ‌ This was brought up by The One Show hosts Alex Scott and Roman Kemp, leaving Patrick lost for words. When Alex asked him about the possibility of reintroducing Y-fronts as a challenge, Patrick started to respond but quickly stopped himself, joking: "I can't say." ‌ However, he did confess: "I'm a big fan of the Y front," describing them as "comfy" and "sexy". He added: "You've never been more comfortable than the Y-fronts," reports the Express. Referring to his ethical clothing brand Community Clothing, Patrick continued: "Community Clothing, we do normal pants and boxers which is what everybody wears but I'm like, let's get the Y-fronts back." In addition, Patrick hinted at an upcoming challenge centred around reusing and recycling fabric, insisting it's a "great" one. ‌ He revealed: "At some of these big festivals, 40-50,000 tents get left behind. When we were researching this challenge, I Googled how much you could get a tent for and on a cheap website you could get one for £5.70. "Tents have essentially become single-use plastic, they are 100% plastic, you could use it for a weekend and leave it behind. But where does all that fabric go?" ‌ He continued: "Our contestants made some amazing stuff. They have to make a festival outfit out of the tents left behind at last year's festivals." Discussing the diverse backgrounds of the contestants on The One Show, Patrick shared with hosts Alex and Roman: "They're an amazing bunch with a brilliant eye and just the loveliest people." This update follows the introduction of new challenges for the contestants on The Great British Sewing Bee during Korea Week, which paid homage to the country's rich fashion and textile heritage. ‌ Patrick hinted at future excitement, revealing to "There's another great one next year. It's a really good set of challenges. "I really enjoy the international weeks because I really enjoy finding out about the kind of ins and outs of their culture and their clothing traditions," he expressed to the outlet. "And I think the audience really like it too. We've had some amazing ones over the years." The Great British Sewing Bee is broadcast on Tuesdays at 9pm on BBC One and iPlayer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store