You don’t have to be a self-diagnosed ‘performative male’ to have noticed that matcha has officially taken over Edinburgh’s café scene. From minimalist Japanese teahouses to Caffè Neros, matcha and all its variants have been all over café menus and honestly, I’m not mad about it. So whether you are a ceremonial-grade matcha purist or are simply looking for your next matcha latte with oat milk, here are...
We are delighted to share that Lilia Foster, an accredited writer as part of The Student’s 2025 Fringe team, has been named 2025 Fringe Young Writer of the Year.  Lilia reviewed a number of Fringe shows for The Student; her submissions included reviews of Sugar and Ziwe’s America, though it was ultimately her review of Saria Callas, described by Lilia as a “captivating exploration of womanhood and freedom,” which impressed judges the most.  Despite...
Photo of a room with light filtering in through the windows
The Edinburgh International University Film Festival (EIUFF) 2025 took place between the 31st of May and the 2nd of June. EIUFF is a student film festival. Find them @edi.iuff on Instagram. Beyond These Walls – dir. Christine Seow – ★★★★ As the only solely documentary short film of the States of Mind category, Beyond These Walls, directed by Christine Seow...
The Edinburgh International University Film Festival (EIUFF) 2025 took place between the 31st of May and the 2nd of June. EIUFF is a student film festival. Find them @edi.iuff on Instagram. Drawn In – dir. Johanna Denke – ★★★★☆ Drawn In is a bizarre, comedic, contemporary fantasy. The film centres on a disillusioned marketing executive, Wanda, who possesses the magical ability to bring the objects she draws to life. When her boss discovers her powers after a doodle of a […]...
Sunday 15th March saw the arrival of a slew of well-dressed stars onto the red carpet for the Academy Awards. It is not...
Song Recommendations: ‘Ground Scores’, ‘Say Anything’ If Dutch Interior is anything, it is its capacity to tune listeners in to a feeling. The mellow,pared-down acoustics and languid vocals which dominate It’s Glass...
Two characters onstage, one holding the other who is lying down in the mud
To hunt or be hunted? Carrion is a dark comedy performed by Oxford University’s Clarendon Productions, and explores the vicious cycle of life through the relationship between three unnatural allies: an unreliable fox, patronising bear and malicious crow. The audience are transported to the forest, evident from the bird noise and log in the centre of the stage, where a...
The Scottish duo behind the smash hit Square Go! return to this year’s fringe with another comedic two-hander about the confusing and tumultuous pubescent escapades of two young lads, Max and Steve. Both Gary McNair and Kieran Hurley are the playwrights behind two of my favourite Scottish plays, namely Locker Room Talk written by McNair...
It’s a Sheet Show boasts a promising concept: one bed, two people, the beginning, middle, and end of a relationship. However, despite its promise, the production lacked the simplicity necessary to make it a thoroughly engaging experience. The first fault was the lack of a linear narrative. The show tracks a relationship from beginning to...
A selfie of Dan Rath holding up a box of melatonin
At Underbelly Bristo Square, Dan Rath’s self-deprecating comedy hour Pariah Carey is a medley of absurd, twisted, nihilistic and cucked comedy. Jumping around from topic to topic, with a healthy dose of everything-is-going-wrong crowd work, Rath is a dispossessed clown to his baffled and eager audience. Describing the set as “the lived experience of a...
Venessa Peruda’s All the Rage is less a performance and more a masterclass—a blistering course on the politics of female rage, the right to anger, and the freedom to be unapologetically loud, ugly, and emotional in a world that demands the opposite. From the moment she stepped on stage, Peruda commanded the room. Though there were moments...
a woman on a stage
Natalie Palamides is no stranger to the Edinburgh Fringe stage, having won best newcomer in 2017 for her raucous later ego, Nate. Returning to this year’s festival but on the Traverse’s stage, Palamides delivers an electrifying whirlwind 90’s romcom in her new show WEER. Splitting her face and body down the middle, Palamides plays both...
Weathergirl must be one of the hottest tickets of this year’s fringe, having sold out its entire run only a few days into the festival, and upon announcing four new performance dates last week, all were sold out within a few hours. The buzz around the play is enormous and the pessimist in me did...
4 Men with screens in front of their heads with their own faces on the display.
When the lights come up at the beginning of The Last Incel, the audience is met with three male faces framed with hand-held frames as laptop screens shouting women-hating obscenities, aptly immersing us in the chilling setting of an incel group chat. In the middle of celebrating a birthday for one of their members (that...
After a half-decade absence, Sh!t Theatre, composed of Rebecca Biscuit and Louise Mothersole, returns to the stage. This time, they return with a slightly different focus: a newfound love for folk music and a question lingering in the air, can they still make Sh!t Theatre as they once did? The show is called Sh!t Theatre:...
Sophie Swithinbank’s play Bacon took Edinburgh Fringe by storm last year and left audiences reeling with Swithinbank’s marvellous and masterful storytelling. This year, she returns with Surrender, a collaboration with Phoebe Ladenberg who acts as the one-woman performer in this marvel of a play.  It’s a simple set, only a chair with three hooks and...
I never thought I’d be so invested in the drunken antics of 6 nepo babies. But it’s the Fringe, any and all inhibitions have been left at the door. Jess Terrier’s play You Deserve It brought poignancy, mystery and excessive glamour to theSpace on the Mile, and over the course of an hour wove a...
Three people stand on a dark stage with two desks and a chair

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Moments, the new production from innovative theatre company Theatre Re, is both a break from their usual style and a compelling advertisement for their future (and past) work. The show sees the three central company members (alongside a BSL interpreter and an unseen sound designer) take the stage together to explore the nature of their own work, breaking down the elements and demonstrating their devising process as they create a production about grief and fatherhood on stage. 

It is a play-within-a-play, set at their own rehearsal and meant to demonstrate the development process. Occasionally, however, it resorts to lecture with each member breaking the fourth wall to explain their component. The explanations, which occasionally felt a bit trite, fell away as soon as they got back to the central story, a truly heart-wrenching narrative about fatherhood and grief. Director and mime Guillaume Pigé acts opposite a chair (sharing both the role of father and son), while the lighting and music bring you into a world that feels fraught and dreamlike. Working on stage, lighting designer Dr. Katherine Graham generates an instant, dynamic ambiance in the black box theatre, expertly crafting an environment around Pigé’s movement. 

We sat in on the pre-show workshop, where Pigé coached a group of local performers on the company’s approach to movement and devising. He continuously stressed the importance of stakes; of creating a sense of life and death; not only to the success of an individual show, but to the survival of live theatre. “If the stakes aren’t the highest… people will stay home and watch Netflix” he told the group. It is a testament to the company that the play-within-the-play never lost these stakes, despite the interjections of the “rehearsal”. The music, masterfully composed and performed live on stage by Alex Judd, deserves particular applause; every time they returned from the rehearsal frame narrative, Judd’s music immediately restored any emotional momentum that may have waned. The final sequence plays out with no interruptions, with Pigé and the chair moving frantically around the stage and crescendoing to an ending that left many in tears. Having heard each performer explain their component, it is easy to say they did themselves little justice – but it’s possible they were given an impossible task. Not only does each of their crafts requires such specific training and talent and instinct, but the chemistry between them is the kind of thing that can only be developed over time. Ultimately, Moments is not only a powerful story of grief but a testament to the undefinable magic of artistic collaboration, and proof that the great work is always more than the sum of its parts.

Image courtesy of Theatre Re