Dawn thinks she's joining a dating show in Paris, France, only to land in Paris, Texas. She has an exit plan — until sparks fly with the cowboy bachelor.
This frank but breezy touring show is a boon for her devoted fanbase while the Irish comic appears to be living her best life ...
Bach and breakdancing were made for each other. Any notions that this collaboration between the Orchestra Of The Age Of Enlightenment and choreographer Kim Brandstrup rested on incongruous novelty are ...
In a Fringe that has plenty of Scottish performance, Ma Name Is Isabelle leans into more traditional storytelling from this nation. From a Bothy Ballad, told in Doric, it relates the story of a woman ...
The winners of The List Festival Awards have been unveiled, highlighting another exceptional season of art, books, film, comedy, dance, theatre and plenty more. Taking place at Johnnie Walker Princes ...
Hot girl summer or just perimenopause? Tiff Stevenson’s latest hour is fully relatable, with topics like farting in relationships (go early and hard), looking after a parent with dementia, and ...
It’s important to caveat that this performance of Oooky Pooky almost didn’t go ahead due to a very low audience turn-out. Reluctantly battling on with a crowd of five (including reviewer), it’s to ...
Two Scottish titans meet on stage in writer and performer Alan Bissett’s When Billy Met Alasdair, a thoughtful and entertaining piece that speculates on a meeting between Billy Connolly and Alasdair ...
The List Festival Awards in partnership with Johnnie Walker Princes Street are almost upon us, showcasing the diversity and talent you can find all across Edinburgh throughout summer. Shining a ...
If you tried to count the interesting creative decisions that have made their way into Scottish Ballet’s new production, you would run out of fingers in the first ten minutes. And then completely lose ...
Delivering a performance that glimmers with promise, Star Dust (Kat McGarr) attempts to reach the orbits of her 24-karat studded cabaret aspirations. Blending spoken word, movement and clowning, the ...
Ben Wheatley has long been the British filmmaking equivalent of Evel Knievel, releasing wild experiments in genre that, while not always sticking the landing, remain impressive for their sheer ...
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