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Edinburgh Fringe theatre reviews: The Burns Project  Elysium  Wild Thing!  House Party  Crime of Pass-ee-on
Edinburgh Fringe theatre reviews: The Burns Project  Elysium  Wild Thing!  House Party  Crime of Pass-ee-on

Scotsman

time08-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scotsman

Edinburgh Fringe theatre reviews: The Burns Project Elysium Wild Thing! House Party Crime of Pass-ee-on

Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... THEATRE The Burns Project ★★★★ The Georgian House (Venue 343) until 16 August The trend for site specific Fringe theatre has waned a little in recent years but there's nothing like landing in some private or privileged space to stimulate the senses before a word has been uttered by any performer. The makers of the Burns Project have their audience from the moment they are escorted up the stairs of The Georgian House, a beautifully preserved period townhouse owned by the National Trust of Scotland, and into an opulent room set for dinner. The title is clinical but their purpose is clear - to find a new way to approach the life, work and legacy of Robert Burns. The Burns Project | David Fettes This is a Burns Supper with a difference as the Bard is the guest of honour, here to give us a potted but irresistibly lyrical life story carved from the pages of his own writing - poems, love letters, sundry correspondence. Other voices offer different biographical perspectives, with opinions on his writing, politics and affairs drawn from countervailing contemporary reports, the words of friends and lovers and 21st century contributors to the NTS Love Scotland podcast coalescing to address the complexities of his character. Meanwhile, musician Lisa Rigby plays and sings, rising from her corner seat to pace the room like a Greek chorus and siren in one. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The Burns Project cannot really hope to offer new information on such a storied individual but it does bring a fresh, fair and immediate slant with writer and actor James Clements up close and eloquent, delivering Burns' exquisite language with natural flair, writing notes to the lassies in the room, addressing a model mouse. His magnetic performance is almost overshadowed by the ravishing staging. Props are spirited from under the table, sauceboats and cloches deployed in witty ways. There is a lot to capture in an hour but, under Cora Bissett's assured direction, The Burns Project feels rich, not rushed. FIONA SHEPHERD THEATRE Elysium ★★★ Gilded Balloon at Appleton Tower (Venue 140) until 24 August Welcome to Elysium Court, where the sturdy gates keep out undesirables, and perpetual surveillance ensures safety and security for all. But when a newcomer couple of young professionals rip up the astroturf to tend their very own veg, they also unearth the sinister community's grisly past. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Part old-fashioned folk horror, part musical, part satire on the emptiness of first-world obsessions, Elysium is a sly but rather slight creation, and one that's quite a bit stronger in build-up and suggestion than it is in ultimate pay-off. But it's a gleefully entertaining ride in storytelling and song all the same from musical duo Ghouls Aloud. Milly Blue has a brilliant knack for convincing accents and for capturing character in just a glance or a turn of phrase, plus a soaring voice too, and she's more than ably supported by Jessie Maryon Davies on keyboards. Their characters are horrifyingly believable, and deftly described, though their plot stays somewhat on the simple side. Nonetheless, Elysium's closing moments take the show in rather an unexpected direction, one that adds shockingly immediate resonances to its apparently safely distant and fictitious story, but which also raises more questions than it answers. DAVID KETTLE THEATRE Wild Thing! ★★★ Summerhall (Venue 26) until 25 August Is that a delicate skin salamander we see before us? Of course not - it's Tom Bailey of Mechanimal giving his best imagined impersonation of said amphibian as the audience files into the venue. As different exotic/ridiculous species names flash up on the screen, he has a bash at inhabiting all of them, from white footed sportive lemur to polymorphic robber frog and a few which sound like they could be fantastical creatures from the Star Wars saga, keeping it up for just long enough to remain funny. Turns out these names to conjure anthropomorphic anarchy with are a tiny fraction of the 48,000 on the newly endangered species list. Somehow Bailey has managed to resist looking up any images of these beasts online. The audience are invited to choose their own spirit animal while Bailey manifests as some pagan witch doctor wrapped in a sheet bearing the list. He has carried this sheet on a long green walking tour to Denmark and has the artful holiday snaps to prove it. It feels like there might be more to add to enrich the show; instead it ends rather abruptly as this clowning parable on how to steward our planet becomes a prayer for its precious ecosystem. FIONA SHEPHERD THEATRE Buzz ★★★ Assembly Rooms (Venue 20) until 24 August Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad In Buzz, Trish Lyons details her personal experience of stalking, literally unpacking the adverse psychological impacts she incurred. 'Do not enter your home alone,' she was advised by police at the time, after a series of break-ins at her studio where photographs were stolen, lingerie was planted in her underwear drawer, and the intruder gratified himself in her bedroom. Understandably, paranoia set in. She no longer felt comfortable in the presence of men, and sleeplessness, anxiety and suicidality emerged, for which she sought expert support through an admission to an unnamed psychiatric facility. From a bag, Lyons produces a glass of gin, hair clippers (which she used previously to buzz her head, to be unattractive to men), and a magnifying glass, among other surprising props. She quotes Emily Dickinson, recounting how books made her feel safe when nothing else did. She didn't need to read them, just be around or surrounded by them, especially when she slept. Regarding books, she quotes the wisdom of her niece: 'You can see them, but they can't see you.' Certainly, Buzz is notable for its attention to language as a form of witness – the very things, Lyons says, that saved her. JOSEPHINE BALFOUR-OATTS THEATRE House Party ★★★ Pleasance Courtyard (Venue 60) until 25 August 'No one has house parties anymore,' says Skip, an aspiring actress and regular at the Job Centre. This, she explains, is because no-one has houses – at least not in Hackney, where she grew up, unless they're a wealthy hipster. It sounds snappy, but parties clearly can take place in rented London flats. However, this victim mentality is also something that writer Chakira Alin satirises in a script, based on her real life. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad There are some killer lines fuelled by anger at the aspirations of sons and daughters of bankers and marketing executives, roaming around East London talking about trips to Cambodia. But the cartoonist characterisation of 'the rich' and Skip struggling to get auditions is less interesting than the smart observations on wider housing crisis, gentrification and arts that come through the monologues. If Oscar Wilde had lived in a council house with his mum in 2025, maybe he'd have sounded something like this. The piece never quite manages to reconcile whether Skip is a voice-of-a-generation revolutionary party planner or a 'lazy workshy layout'. Her ambition to buy back her family home sets up a promising storyline that is underdeveloped and concludes with a party that feels hastily planned. 'I hate you,' Skip screams a new homeowner, the blame simultaneously misdirected but also entirely understandable. Sally Stott THEATRE Crime of Pass-ee-on ★★ Greenside @ Riddles Court (Venue 16) until 16 August This Parisian murder-mystery comedy by Valerie Creasy, set in an interrogation room, makes for heavy going due to huge tracts of exposition-heavy dialogue. Credit, however, is due to Lexie Dykes as Detective John-Paul John who, even though saddled with a pencilled-on moustache and outrageous French accent manages to impart some semblance of pace while tasked with grilling three suspects. The cast are fine, even though their characters are thinly sketched, the plot is baroquely convoluted and there's a good chance that you'll have forgotten whodunnit half an hour after it ends. RORY FORD

Competition theme focuses on Burns as a ‘voice for humanity'
Competition theme focuses on Burns as a ‘voice for humanity'

Otago Daily Times

time06-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Otago Daily Times

Competition theme focuses on Burns as a ‘voice for humanity'

The Global Influence of Robert Burns will be the theme for the 2025 Robert Burns Poetry Competition, being presented by a newly formed steering group. Competition organisers said, in a statement, entrants would be asked to focus on Burns as a "voice for humanity". Entries for the 2025 Robert Burns Poetry Competition will open on September 1 and close on St Andrew's Day, November 30, the winners to be publicly announced on January 24, 2026 — the same day as the annual Burns Supper. When Dunedin City Council decided to end its relationship with the poetry competition, a new steering group was formed. The group comprises the Otago Scottish Heritage Council, the Dunedin Burns Club, the Dunedin Unesco City of Literature, the Dunedin-Edinburgh Sister City Society, the Friends of the Library, the Combined Clans and Societies Group Otago and the Southern Heritage Trust. President of both the Otago Scottish Heritage Council and the Dunedin Burns Club Dr Royden Somerville KC is convener of the competition, while Dunedin-Edinburgh Sister City Society chairwoman Sarah Davis is the facilitator. Each of the supporting organisations has its own role, such as the heritage council providing the judges and the upgraded website ( The Burns Club will continue to provide trophies and medals. The committee has set a target of 60 entries for 2025 across the published, unpublished and the Rap like Robbie (18 years and under) junior competitions. The committee will be contacting past entrants to encourage them to enter again, as well as local secondary schools and the Edinburgh Department of Education in the hope students from Dunedin's sister city will enter. In another move to encourage entrants, prize money has been extended this year. — Allied Media

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