Theatre

Theatre at the <a href="/events/edinburghfringe">Edinburgh Fringe</a> and <a href="/events/eif">Edinburgh International Festival</a>.

On the D'Animate website they say "we offer pure escapism to the general public." And that is exactly what…
A young troupe of Russian performers has a show on at the Assembly Roxy unlike any other.
Neil Forsyth’s fictional Dundonian character, Bob Servant, hilariously deals with the serious issue of spam…
 This production of Salome ticks so many boxes, yet leaves you wondering "Why didn’t I enjoy that?".
Blink is a love story - albeit an unusual one with dark undertones.  It involves a young man and woman -…
Anyone who has witnessed someone dealing with the sentence of a terminal illness knows the pain of seeing the…
Boris and Sergey are causing a ruckus every night at Pleasance Courtyard with their loveable appearance and…
Summer holidays – long days by the sea, dad tinkering with the boat, mum painting, teenage son fishing, and…
Welcome to the mechanised age; the spirit of a new era is upon us. At least that’s the buzz that’s going…
Assembly has  a venue this year at St Mark’s Unitarian Church Hall, a hidden wee spot that is actually just…
Here's a Fringe tip for you for an as yet undiscovered (free) show with potential.
Two actresses, Samara Maclaren and Nalini Chetty, have devised a fresh and intelligent multi-media play…
It’s an interesting and ambitious idea to take two very different plays by two different writers, and present…
Take one expressive puppet head, a couple of pieces of cloth and you have a very remarkable show – you…
Edinburgh has had its fair share of drug addicts. We buried Thomas De Quincey the self-confessed opium eater…
If your country was eating itself from the inside out, if your family were risking life and limb for a…
The soil of a Hebridean island might be too rocky for trees to take hold, but not so for its people and…
Emerging from a barrage of bombs and bangs, a group of (absurdly large) children survey the ruins of their…
Inspired by the true wartime stories of her grandmother in Paris, Caroline Horton wrote her one woman play, “…
I never read press releases about a show until after I have seen it.