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PLEASANCE COURTYARD (GRAND)

60 Pleasance
Edinburgh EH8 9TJ



Review: FIREWING, Hampstead Theatre


by Clementine Scott - April 27, 2026

For a play ostensibly about wildlife photography, we don’t actually see too many photographs in Firewing. Instead, this is a story about truth: our relationship to it, how we represent it, and what it can cost us....

Review: THE PRICE, Marylebone Theatre


by Clementine Scott - April 27, 2026

Much like All My Sons, the virtuosic Arthur Miller tragedy revived in the West End earlier this year, Miller’s lesser-known 1967 play The Price holds a mirror up to the American Dream and finds people varying degrees of broken by their desire to succeed. “I want money,” declares a character e...

Review: TWO HALVES OF GUINNESS, Park Theatre


by Gary Naylor - April 26, 2026

Zeb Soanes captures the voice perfectly to give us the life and times of a huge figure in 20th century acting on stage and screen...

Review: DON QUIXOTE, Sadler's Wells


by Vikki Jane Vile - April 25, 2026

Carlos Acosta’s favourite ballet full of Spanish sun and slapstick humour is a very silly story. But with an audience who’ve braved tube strike misery Don Quixote (Don Q) is just the ticket for a bit of carefree escapism, transporting us to an exotic and colourful land and danced with great reli...

Review: HOWIE THE ROOKIE, Cockpit Theatre


by Gary Naylor - April 27, 2026

Two technically brilliant performances illuminate a play interesting in form and content , but can't quite rescue its outdated approach to its key issues...

Review: PLEASE PLEASE ME, Kiln Theatre


by Gary Naylor - April 24, 2026

The Beatles' first manager flies too close to John Lennon's sun and falls to earth...

Review: THE RESISTIBLE RISE OF ARTURO UI, starring Mark Gatiss


by Cindy Marcolina - April 26, 2026

A corrupt lot steeped in scandal puppeteers the economy. Unreasonable taxes are plaguing the people. Violence is rampant. All the while, a megalomaniac is gaining more traction by the day. Did we turn on the news, or are we watching Bertolt Brecht’s merciless satire? Seán Linnen transforms the al...

Review: THE WAVES, Jermyn Street Theatre


by Clementine Scott - April 21, 2026

Virginia Woolf isn’t the easiest author to adapt for the stage, and her lesser-known 1931 experimental novel The Waves presents a particularly interesting dramaturgical challenge. Six friends meet at school, and undergo the typical trials of a bildungsroman, all within an ambitious stream of multi...

Review: MANAGED APPROACH, Riverside Studios


by Aliya Al-Hassan - April 21, 2026

First seen at last year's Edinburgh fringe, Jules Coyle's semi-verbatim play, Managed Approach, now comes to Riverside Studios for a short, but important run. Between 2014 and 2020, a local government initiative in Holbeck, Leeds allowed sex workers to operate under certain regulations and was know...

Review: BETWEEN THE RIVER AND THE SEA, Royal Court Theatre


by Cindy Marcolina - April 21, 2026

“I’m just here to talk about my divorce,” says Yousef Sweid right after a preamble about the reception of political productions. He and Isabella Sedlak write a poignant reflection on how beliefs and birthplaces raise us and shackle us at once. Between The River and The Sea approaches the Pales...

Past Shows

The Nature of Forgetting
The Nature of Forgetting
Aug 9 – Aug 23, 2025

Theatre Re, one of the UK’s leading theatre groups, returns to the Fringe bringing their explosive and joyous five-star sell-out international hit The Nature of...

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