The largest arts festival on the planet is back. Every August, thousands of performers from around the world descend on Edinburgh’s cobbled streets. Pubs, libraries and even occasionally buses turn ...
EDINBURGH, Scotland — For decades, devotees repeated rumors in hushed reverence about starving artists sleeping in bathtubs, out of dedication to the Fringe — one of the world's biggest theater and ...
First it was the Romans and the English; now the cheery residents of Edinburgh have throngs of theater folks invading the capital’s storybook lanes each August for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, a ...
Thousands of performers were hawking their shows on the first weekend of the Scottish arts extravaganza. In Photos Credit... Supported by Photographs by Jaime Molina Reporting from Edinburgh Should I ...
Performances in N.Y.C. The Australian breaker tried to shut down a musical about her. Now, it’s attracting dancing crowds at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Steph Broadbridge as a fictional breakdancer ...
Ahead of Edinburgh’s 78th edition, Festival Director Paul Ridd discusses reimagining the event, embracing August’s festival chaos, and creating space for discovery. Two weeks before the Edinburgh ...