Dimanche, Edinburgh International Festival 2023 review - troubling and bewildering

Climate change gets an exquisitely beautiful, gently humorous treatment by two Belgian puppetry and mime companies

A toy car – in fact, a mobile home with comically enormous antenna on top – shudders over arms and shoulders as if they were mountain ranges. A colossal polar bear comforts its curious cub. A lifesize puppet grandmother is chased up and down stairs by her over-enthusiastic stairlift.

Makeshifts and Realities, Finborough Theatre review - Edwardian dramas with a pinch of Chekhov

 MAKESHIFTS AND REALITIES, FINBOROUGH THEATRE Edwardian dramas with a pinch of Chekhov

Plays that show that much may have changed for women in the last 100 years, but much remains the same

We’re in (pretty much literally so in this most intimate of venues) an Edwardian sitting room, time hanging heavily in the air, gentility almost visibly fading before our eyes.

Edinburgh Fringe 2023 reviews: Without Sin / An Alternative Helpline for the End of the World / Two Strangers Walk into a Bar...

Three one-on-one shows offer absolution, advice and a choreographed blind date

With its throbbing crowds and its performers baying for attention (and for audiences), the Edinburgh Fringe can be a hectic, raucous place. But for anyone who needs a break from the crammed-full, in-your-face stand-up gigs, thankfully three shows provide far calmer, more intimate experiences – involving just you and one other.

La Cage Aux Folles, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre review - 40 years on, the drag show still entertains and educates

 LA CAGE AUX FOLLES, REGENT'S PARK OPEN AIR THEATRE Feelgood show acquires added poignancy on an emotional night 

Feelgood show acquires added poignancy on an emotional night

Forty years ago, the world was very different for gay men. AIDS was devastating their communities, especially in the big cities where hard-won enclaves of acceptance were being hollowed out, one sunken-eyed friend after another. Media screamed “Gay Plague” and some politicians barely suppressed their glee at the “perverts’” comeuppance.

Allies were thin on the ground, the redtop press with their finger on the outing trigger never happier than when destroying lives for circulation.

Edinburgh Fringe 2023 reviews: The Grand Old Opera House Hotel / YOU ARE GOING TO DIE

EDINBURGH FRINGE 2023: THE GRAND OLD OPERA HOUSE HOTEL / YOU ARE GOING TO DIE A patchy operatic send-up and an unflinching examination of dirt and degradation in two very different shows

A patchy operatic send-up and an unflinching examination of dirt and degradation in two very different shows

The Grand Old Opera House Hotel, Traverse Theatre