Musical
| 02 August 2011
What are you expecting from this year’s Festival? I’m over the moon about coming to the festival this year, because I’m finally coming for the entire month and not just to work! I’ve rented a house with my husband, Neil Gaiman (who’s going to be taking part in the Book Festival) and I plan on drowning myself in music and theatre. It’s my idea of paradise.
| 25 August 2010

In a round-the-world trip via New York and back again, Reel-to-Real delivers the sensational iconic 20th century sing-a-long hits of the great MGM and Warner movies with style, clarity and heaps of pizzazz. Slightly more intimate and contemporary in its production, with projected scenery acting as a sort of interactive prop repertoire, it breathes new life into time-honoured Broadway and movie hits.
| 25 August 2010
Wonderland tells the true story of the relationship between Charles Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll, and Isa Bownman, the actress who played the part of Alice in the stage version of Alice in Wonderland. | 24 August 2010

Vive Le Cabaret offers a mixture of burlesque, boylesque, circus performances, magic tricks, and music, combined with some filthy jokes, to guarantee a sexy night out. While the show offers a different collection of acts each day (that can be seen in their own festival shows if they impress), there are a number of regulars, as well as the glitteringly camp compère Desmond O’Connor, who treats the audience to songs on his ukulele that never stray from the distasteful.
| 18 August 2010
You know in American sitcoms, when some previously unmentioned theatrical friend forces the lead characters to go to their dire musical, and it’s incredibly embarrassing and nothing makes sense and everyone prances about in shiny catsuits?Ray Bradbury’s 2116 could be that musical.
| 16 August 2010
"Porn plus musical plus late night antics = does it really get any better?" asks Kelly Rae Smith.
"I left dumbstruck, enraged and saddened," writes Hilary Donald.
| 13 August 2010

Clarke Peters, star of HBO drama The Wire, brings his Laurence Olivier award-winning musical to the Edinburgh Festival, offering a toe-tapping night of jazz and blues music with impressive vocal and dance performances.
| 13 August 2010
Spring Awakening is part of One Academy Productions’ Emergence Series at The Pleasance, showcasing graduating students from RSAMD. The musical itself is making its debut in Scotland after becoming a cult hit on Broadway and in the West End. Inspired by Frank Wedekind’s 1891 play, the musical explores the sexual awakening of three friends – rebellious student Melchior, his conflicted friend Moritz and Wendla, an example of pure feminine innocence. The source material is interesting, despite the exploration of religion, guilt and shame being somewhat outdated and clichéd. Obviously this is a popular musical (one girl in front of me sang along with every word) but the songs themselves are the only stars of this average production.
| 19 July 2010
Clarke Peters is an accomplished actor, star of The Wire, playwright and singer. Now he’s returning to he stage with the musical he created two decades ago – Five Guys Named Moe.
“People like to rock ‘n’ roll and they like to party, and that’s what Louis Jordan was about,” says Clarke Peters. “As a jazz musician he was about a good time, and if you take a look at the state of the world right now, don’t you feel like you want to have a good time and forget about things for a minute?” he pauses. “I tell you, right now, I do.”
Peters is saying this at 5am in Albany Airport, New York. His wife has just missed her flight to their home in London. When he says that he “just wants the good times to roll,” he does so with understandable conviction.
| 19 July 2010
Playwright Danielle Ward is currently pondering how to set a chainsaw to music for her new show Gutted: A Revenger’s Musical.
“Apparently, we’re hiring someone whose sole job is to mop up all the blood at the end of the show, then clean it out of the clothes!” exclaims Martin White of Gutted: A Revenger’s Musical, the gory, late-night comedy musical he’s penned with regular collaborator Danielle Ward. “The characters end up absolutely drenched, so there’ll be a lot of wipe-clean costumes. There’s a few beheadings.”
Along with The Revenger’s Tragedy, the all-singing, all-dancing, all-decapitating musical has shades of Hamlet and, amusingly, Batman Begins. When young Sorrow witnesses her parents’ murder, she plots to become the killer’s ideal woman, marry him and then murder his entire family on the weekend of their wedding. Yet all is not as it seems.
| 29 August 2009

Pleasance Dome
5-30 August (ex. 10, 17, 24), 22.00
Little Johnny’s life is one big failure, and he’s singing his heart out about it in a near-empty theatre. Which is a shame, because there’s a lot to love about this cheery tribute to sequins and show tunes.
| 24 August 2009

The Space @ The Royal College of Surgeons
24–29 August, 17.40
As the audience filed up the stairs to be seated for ‘The Mikado’, we were gently berated by tuxedoed and bow-tied gentlemen about the state of our dress; on entering the auditorium, young ladies clad in black stalked the aisles carrying forbidding signs: ‘No Flirting’.
| 19 August 2009

C Venue
17–22 August. 17.20
It was a time, observed Alexander Pope, when it was ‘ignominious (in this Age of Hope and Golden Mountains) not to Venture.’ What was ventured were huge sums of capital by the British public in the mania which surrounded the South Sea Company in the early eighteenth century.
| 19 August 2009

Gilded Balloon Teviot
5-31 August (ex. 18) 17.30
Dumdumdum deedeedum… yes the cult 80’s show the A-Team has finally been resurrected in musical form and it is playing at the Gilded Balloon Teviot this Fringe.
| 18 August 2009

Pleasance Dome
5-31 August. (ex. 12,19) 22.45
A show that references Prince, The Karate Kid, bullfighting and wildlife conservation might sound destined to crumble into a heap of disastrous confusion, but in the hands and hearts of a cast so talented, confident and practiced, these elements combine to create something utterly magical. And honestly, this is coming from one who really ain’t into musical theatre.
| 17 August 2009

Sweet ECA
9-13 August 16.40
14-15 August 12.30
Buddy's pretty solid but as for Sweet ECA, that'll be the day. The show, adapted from the West End musical, begins with a hitch or three as the opening scene featuring the KDAV Sunday Party, where Buddy and the Crickets are said to have been first aired, has to stop and start over due to sudden venue blackouts: a technicality that the gang gracefully ignore for as long as they can before we're left to sit in darkness, however enjoying the sounds of Johnny Cash and Jimmy Swan.
| 17 August 2009

C Venues (Chambers Street)
16-31 August 22.30
In an audience of young giggly teenagers I sat down to Facebook: the Musical not having a clue what to expect (although from the flyers it was supposed to be “not what you expect”). There was one wee boy who looked about 7 and was falling asleep before curtain came up – do kids that young really have Facebook accounts? – I wasn’t sure if he or I were going to last til after midnight.
| 14 August 2009

Musical Theatre @ George Square
6–31 August (ex. 11,18,25) 11.15
What do William the Conqueror, Winston Churchill, the Duke of Wellington all have in common? It’s something Napoleon Bonaparte, Thomas Jefferson and George Washington also shared. Elizabeth the first too. All of them, of course were gingers.
| 13 August 2009

Musical Theatre @ George Square Two
6-31st August, 15.45
‘Chat! - The Internet Musical’ turned out to have everything I thought it would lack: talent, insight, and scope for amusement. It’s an unconventional compliment, but a compliment none the less.
| 13 August 2009

Musical Theatre @ George Square
12–31 August (ex.18, 24) 21.05
Why one would embark on composing a musical based around a string of dated sexual innuendoes is beyond me, but Indiscarf have attempted it and it shows this month on George Square. The cast are clearly enjoying themselves and revel in the scrappy nature of the production, but even so ‘Makeshift Man’ and other such admissions of haphazardness failed to win my heart.








