A Life in Three Acts (part one)
August 30, 2009
Traverse
18-30 Aug, times vary

“As the old prostitute said: it’s not the work, it’s the stairs” quips Bette Bourne as he takes his seat opposite interviewer Mark Ravenhill and proceeds to divulge an extraordinary personal history. Read more
Bane
August 30, 2009
Pleasance Dome
5-31 Aug, 3.30pm

“The name’s Bane, Bruce Bane. I’m a hired hand that gets the job done. I don’t waste time and I take no prisoners…”
So begins Bane, the one man film noir pastiche that’s got both movie geeks and theatre buffs excited over at the Pleasance Dome. The show shouldn’t really work and certainly not on this reviewer, whose film tastes are Clueless in more ways than one. But Bane has been one of the happiest surprises of my Fringe experience. Read more
Sammy J in the Forest of Dreams
August 30, 2009
Underbelly
6-31 Aug, 10.15pm

Sammy J’s life is falling to bits and the films of his idol Walt Disney have nothing to offer by way of help or guidance. He expresses his sense of deep loss in an opening number entitled “Fuck you Disney”, which draws our attention to the fact that Walt was a Nazi; then he finds himself sucked through a portal to an enchanted forest where he, among other things, stages a coup, steals his best friend’s girl, and does some extremely questionable drawings of the King of the forest enjoying a squirrel. Read more
Ward No 6
August 30, 2009
C Cubed
7-31 Aug, 4.10pm![]()
Having recently formed from graduates of Drama Studio London, DogOrange presents an adaptation of Chekhov’s short story Ward No 6.
We walk in to find four lunatics in filthy hospital gowns, each one with their own tics and torments. After some kind of occult ritual, one of them is called upon to play the role of Dr Ragin, and the rest of the play tells his story. An ambitious and foolhardy psychiatrist, Ragin becomes fascinated by Gromov, one of the patients on Ward 6. Read more
The Penny Dreadfuls Present … The Never Man
August 30, 2009
Pleasance Courtyard
7-31 Aug, 8.30pm
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Having made their name at the fringe with sketches in the Victorian style, comic trio The Penny Dreadfuls have changed tack this year, presenting a James Bond-style thriller set on the fictional Beef Island.
Evil genius Dr Lovable is using the island’s theme park as cover for a dastardly operation to rule the world with beef, and the only hope of stopping him comes in the form of an ex-policeman, dismissed for massacring owls, and an eight year-old giant. Read more
Eurotrash
August 30, 2009
Gilded Balloon
10-31 Aug, 5.30pm
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Sirqus Alfon’s production, like many Fringe shows, defies categorization. Melding acrobatics, slapstick physical humour, along with hyperrealist dance tunes, and the technological lingo usually reserved for computer game aficionados, Eurotrash is a bustling and joyous feast for the senses. Read more
Party
August 30, 2009
Assembly Rooms, George Street
7-31 Aug, 2.25pm
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Political satire is one of those strange breeds of narrative work, which audiences often approach with a degree of caution. Luckily for us, former if.comedy winner Tom Basden has penned an accessible, humour-filled take on the genre that manages to reveal a nuanced argument about political hypocrisy, whilst also maintaining an effortless sketch show-like experience. Read more
The Hotel
August 30, 2009
Assembly @ George Street
5-31 Aug, 4.00pm
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This sublime example of experiential theatre is one of the Fringe’s best-conceived and certainly funniest offerings this year. It’s a logistically impressive undertaking which, whilst providing a wholly personalised and random experience, also builds to a satisfying denouement. Read more
Weepie
August 30, 2009
C soco
18-31 Aug, 9.25pm
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Chris Goode is a dramatist I generally admire, but Weepie, first seen in 1996, is nowhere near his strongest work. It’s a play in which the central issue is muddled by obscurity, where ambiguity and abstraction create befuddlement and a deep sense of having missed something. Read more
A Lot of Nerve
August 29, 2009
Pleasance Dome
6-31 Aug, 10.50pm

Having taken their show to clubs and theatres across the UK, ‘Martha and Arthur’ bring A Lot of Nerve to Edinburgh. A mixture of cabaret and dance, the show draws on many different styles and influences, performed with a kind of over-arching grotesque grace. Read more


