Edinburgh Fringe 2023 reviews: Rob Auton / Laura Davis / Matt Forde

EDINBURGH FRINGE COMEDY ★★★★ Rob Auton / ★★★ Laura Davis / ★★★★ Matt Forde

Storytelling magic, a fantastical journey, and political satire

Rob Auton, Assembly @Roxy 

Rob Auton has previously done shows around a theme – the colour yellow, hair, the sky, to name a few - because, he says, he can become a little bit obsessed with a subject. Now, though, he wants to do his most personal show yet, hence The Rob Auton Show.

Edinburgh Fringe 2023 reviews: Groomed / Let the Bodies Pile

Gripping one-man play, and Covid revisited

Groomed Pleasance Dome

“How can a truth be told? How can a secret be spoken?” Patrick Sandford asks in Groomed, his searingly honest account of his experience of abuse by a teacher at primary school several decade ago. Over 50 minutes he recounts his tale, weaving in other stories to illuminate his own.

Edinburgh International Festival 2023 reviews: FOOD / Dusk

EDINBURGH INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL THEATRE 2023 FOOD / Dusk

Our compulsion to consume and our acceptance of outsiders investigated in two visually impressive shows

FOOD, The Studio 

There’s no denying it: Los Angeles-born Geoff Sobelle is a theatrical magician (quite literally – it’s how he began his career). Through a string of visually spectacular shows on the Fringe and more recently at the International Festival, he’s unleashed wildlife into the streets of Edinburgh, drawn aeons of history from a cardboard box, and even constructed an entire house on stage.

Edinburgh Fringe 2023 reviews: Ania Magliano / Elliot Steel / Alexandra Haddow

EDINBURGH FRINGE COMEDY 2023 Ania Magliano / Elliot Steel / Alexandra Haddow

A bad hair day, testicular fun, and saying sorry

Ania Magliano, Pleasance Courtyard

When Ania Magliano made her Fringe debut last year, her show was rightly garlanded with four- and five-star reviews. She sounded like an original voice on the comedy scene and this year her show, I Can’t Believe You’ve Done This, sold out its entire run before the festival opened.

Edinburgh Fringe 2023 reviews: Ed Byrne / Fiona Allen / Kieran Hodgson

EDINBURGH FRINGE COMEDY 2023 Ed Byrne / Fiona Allen / Kieran Hodgson

Bereavement, the daily grind, and reinventing oneself

Ed Byrne Assembly Rooms

Ed Byrne has frequently referenced his loved ones in previous shows but this new hour is one he would never wanted to have written, as it was prompted by the death of his younger brother, Paul, last year. Its title, Tragedy Plus Time, is taken from an aphorism attributed to Mark Twain about the definition of humour.

Edinburgh Fringe 2023 reviews: The Death and Life of All of Us / Anything That We Wanted To Be / Chicken

Three solo shows at Summerhall cover family secrets, untrodden life paths - and poultry celebrity

The Death and Life of All of Us, Summerhall 

Victor Esses was 16 when he first discovered his grandmother had a sister – someone the family had never discussed. It was just a year after his own first illicit visit to a gay sauna.

First Person: Marc Burrows on getting to know Sir Terry Pratchett

In the lead up to his live lecture on the life of Terry Pratchett, biographer Marc Burrows discusses the lessons he’s learned from Discworld and beyond.

In a very real sense, Terry Pratchett taught me how to write. I first came across his work when I was 12 years old, in the early 90s.

My parents had been given copies of two of the earliest books in his Discworld series, Guards! Guards! and The Colour of Magic, by a bloke down the pub – which is how you’re supposed to get Discworld books – and, knowing that I was an utter nerd with a preposterously overactive imagination and a love of silly humour, passed them down to me.

Urooj Ashfaq, Soho Theatre review - assured UK debut by Mumbai stand-up

Divorce, dating and teenage diaries

It's takes a confident comic performing only her second show in English – her second language – to joke near the top of the hour: “I didn't know I wasn't as funny in English.” Urooj Ashfaq also told us she would get upset if the audience didn't like her – but she shouldn't worry. Her confidence proved to be justified.