In the Paris of the 1880s, Dr Jean Martin Charcot is studying hysteria at the Salpêtrière Hospital. Despite being a condition that affects all genders, Charcot and his contempories focus on the female patients, attempting to prove their theories about the "four stages of madness", exhibiting the women and having them "perform" for the public.... Continue Reading →
Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2024 Theatre Review: Every Brilliant Thing (Summerhall) ★★★★★
Touching, uplifting and thoughfully created, this 10th anniverary production of Every Brilliant Thing is as meaningful now as when it was first staged. Jonny Donahoe in Every Brilliant Thing. Photo credit: Mihaela Bodlovic. Skillfully written and expertly performed, this is a truly collaborative piece from Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahoe. The story follows our unnamed... Continue Reading →
Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2023 Theatre Review: Sea Words (Summerhall) ★★★
Roll up, roll up, it's time for the play. Or is it? When only half of the double act is willing to appear, how will the show go on? Olly Gully in Sea Words. Photo Credit: Stephanie Mackrill. Chris bounds onto the stage: high-energy, camp and irreverant. Part of a mother and son partnership that... Continue Reading →
Exclusive Interview: erotic artist Sam Morris on his debut book Don’t Fall In Love, Sam – “usually my work is very carefully constructed but this is the reality of who I am & what I feel”
This month saw the publication of gay erotic artist Sam Morris' tender, intimate and emotional debut book Don't Fall In Love, Sam. Morris' unguarded personal essays take us behind his hugely popular online image as constructed by his visually sumptuous and carefully composed photography and video work, as he contemplates anxiety, sex, and sexuality as... Continue Reading →
