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Festival Highlights
By Festival Highlights

Press Assistant Deborah Smith Gives a Local's Viewpoint

Date: 29 August 2011

At Festival Highlights, we buy a lot of papers. There’s nothing like seeing five star reviews in print, or the announcements of our two Fringe First awards for An Instinct for Kindness and Somewhere Beneath It All, A Small Fire Burns Still

So I’ve got to know our local newsagent on Nicolson Street pretty well. While chatting to one of the shop assistants recently, he declared “Just a few more days left, and then we get our city back”. I agreed. It’ll be nice for a ten minute bus journey to take ten minutes rather than forty. I’m looking forward to seeing our streets uncluttered by discarded flyers and free of leering comedians on huge posters adorned with graffiti and the ghost outlines of controversial stickers.

There are a sprinkling of us locals amongst the Festival Highlights team, and doubtless hundreds more across Edinburgh who benefit from the sudden influx of festival jobs and 5am closing times. And I can testify that the festival doesn’t just invade our city and provide jobs. It totally takes over our lives. I’ve become absorbed in the Fringe bubble that most Festival veterans seem accustomed to, where it becomes normal to skip to the Arts section and ignore the front page, and when celebrating my dad’s 60th birthday was reduced to an item on a ‘to do’ list amongst cuttings to circulate and press tickets to book. When my invisible dog chased cyclists around Bristo Square a few days ago while promoting Lights, Camera, Walkies, it seemed abnormally normal.

We locals have the luxurious option to return to normality with the ease of a bus ride home. On days off I have intended to see shows I’ve read rave reviews about, but often found it’s so nice to stay home and see friends and actually wash some clothes that I’ve rarely left Leith. I think taking these mini-breaks from the Fringe have kept me saner than I had expected to be at this stage, but they’ve also made me wish it was longer. I want to see more things and stay out later and make the most of every free hour!

So even though it’ll be lovely to wander down the Royal Mile in a few days without collecting enough flyers to start a small bonfire, I’ve totally loved being part of this bizarre Fringe bubble and I can’t wait for it to return next year.

- by Festival Highlights


Any opinions expressed above do not represent the view of Whatsonstage.com nor any of its staff or contributors beyond the bylined author.



Related Content

Other Posts By Festival Highlights
Assistant Producer Mill Goble Sums Up Festival Highlights' Fringe - 1st Sep 2011 blog
Company Manager Iain Dodds on Accommodation, Welfare, and Curry - 30th Aug 2011 blog
Chat Masala's Guest Booker Andrew Rogers Winds Down - 28th Aug 2011 blog
Lights, Camera, Walkies' Zoe Gardner Reflects On Her 2011 Fringe Experiences - 26th Aug 2011 blog
Press Rep Kate Gambrell On Her Fifth Year With Festival Highlights - 24th Aug 2011 blog
Showstopper's Sean McCann Celebrates 300 Shows - 23rd Aug 2011 blog
Phil Mulryne of The Fitzrovia Radio Hour is Running Out of Time - 22nd Aug 2011 blog
Production Manager Paul Bull Wears Different Hats - 18th Aug 2011 blog
Associate Producer Kat Portman Escapes Edinburgh For A Few Days - 15th Aug 2011 blog
Lights, Camera, Walkies' Richard David Caine Plays 25 Characters Every Day - 13th Aug 2011 blog
 More...
 


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