Wigging out: why drag is bigger and wilder than ever at Edinburgh

It used to be that just wearing a dress and lip-syncing was enough. But now drag is mainstream, the bar for this most creative and transgressive art form has been raisedIt’s Friday night at the Edinburgh fringe. Artists are running all over town, weavi…

Continue Reading

Jessica Fostekew review – punchy polemic about gender stereotyping

Monkey Barrel Comedy, Edinburgh The standup rails against old-fashioned ideals of femininity, the diet industry and society’s policing of women’s bodies. It’s strong stuff.Who decides what’s womanly? Culture, you might say, or tradition, or the patriar…

Continue Reading

Will Adamsdale review – a masterclass in self-deprecation

The singular standup’s new show FaceTime is a delightful, devastating and stealthy account of his domestic woesThe 2004 winner of the Perrier award (as it was known then) pops up every few years with a show that bears no resemblance to the last. Withou…

Continue Reading

Phil Wang review – record-breaking riffs on sex, race and Popeye

Pleasance Courtyard, EdinburghWang is back with a new no-messing, harder-nosed attitude, along with excellent jokes including some choice one-linersPhil Wang made a little piece of fringe history this year before the festival even began, when he sold o…

Continue Reading

Stage invaders: why indie musicians are rocking up at the Edinburgh fringe

Members of the Hoosiers, Maxïmo Park, Belle & Sebastian and Shed Seven talk about mental health, the pitfalls of the music biz and why they are swapping gigs for theatre audiencesFelix Scoot and Lee Delamere, from one-time chart-toppers Felix &…

Continue Reading

Sara Barron: Enemies Closer review – brassy, sassy standup

Pleasance Courtyard, EdinburghParading her sex life, friendships and militant subjectivity, the triumphantly profane comedian takes a step into the big leagueThe men have gone sensitive, it’s been said of this year’s fringe comedy – while female standu…

Continue Reading

Tom Rosenthal: Manhood review – dick jokes, demons and diatribes

Pleasance Courtyard, EdinburghThe standup, who was circumcised as an infant, gets het up in a show where the polemic overshadows the comedyDick jokes are as old as comedy, but few – Richard Herring with docu-comedy Talking Cock excepted – dedicate whol…

Continue Reading

The beat goes on: drummers crash the Edinburgh fringe

A trio of performances – Daniel Bellus in Beat, Alexander Fox in Snare and Mick Berry’s Keith Moon: The Real Me – put drums centre stage It must be something to do with being at the back all the time, but give a drummer their moment in the spotlight an…

Continue Reading

Tom Parry: Parryoke! review – bringer of comfort and joy

Pleasance Courtyard, EdinburghThe best newcomer nominee of 2015 returns with a look at the funny side of weddings in this smart and satisfying showThat title, “Parryoke!”: the pun, the exclamation mark, the reference to karaoke. I must admit I went int…

Continue Reading

Anna and Helen review – self-care klutzes conjure comedic bliss

Pleasance Courtyard, EdinburghMining the comedy of motivational seminars with a delectably clownish touch, this double act could make anything funnySelf-help and motivational speaking have provided rich pickings for comedy over the years, and do so aga…

Continue Reading