Review – Limbo
Sirens fill the tent, calling a wild-haired angel onto the stage ready to bring on the party of eternity – you know you are in for a good night.
Sirens fill the tent, calling a wild-haired angel onto the stage ready to bring on the party of eternity – you know you are in for a good night.
With some thirty plus circus shows on offer at this year’s Fringe, it can be a daunting task choosing which to go and see.
You’re empowered to be involved. Encouraged to yell, distract, and shout whatever you please to the comedian on stage.
An earnest and openhearted performance that leaves you tired from laughing yet full to the brim with the feeling you just experienced something rather special.
One of my closest friends recommended that I should see Simon Keck’s somewhat disturbing comedy show ‘Eating Tiger Dicks’ this Fringe. I don’t know what it says about me, but they were entirely right.
There’s a buzz in the air amidst the paper lanterns and fairy lights in the beer-garden of The Producers for the venue preview party: the hum of unbridled potential, volatile and heady.
Fringe veterans Sound & Fury know what they are doing and clearly love doing it.