Edinburgh International Festival line-up announced
A huge swathe of the city centre will be transformed into a “magical night garden” for several hours under plans for the biggest ever curtain-raiser for the Edinburgh International Festival to mark its 70th anniversary.
Tens of thousands of people are expected to fill the streets until the early hours of the morning for the event, which aims to recall the “outpouring of joy” created by the original festival and its transformation of the city in the post-war years.
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Hide AdIt is expected to be one of the highlights of a “celebration of internationalism” theme for this year’s festival, which is set to be staged against a backdrop of intense debate this summer about the forthcoming Brexit and the new vote on Scottish independence.
The festival, which will be expanding to Craigmillar and Morningside for its landmark anniversary, will feature guest appearances from Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker, double Mercury Prize winner PJ Harvey, Welsh opera star Sir Bryn Terfel and Scots Makar Jackie Kay, the latter leading an exploration of Scotland’s historic links with the slave trade.
There will also be a celebration of the psychedelic Scottish folk outfit Incredible String Band, the creation of an “underwater grotto” in the festival’s Royal Mile headquarters for a late-night cabaret version of The Little Mermaid and the world premiere of a marathon new play by Alan Ayckbourn.
Director Fergus Linehan has lined up 10 days of special events tackling the current political landscape in the in the UK and around the world, exploring “what it means to be European” and how the festival’s founding ideals still resonate.
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Hide AdArtists and companies from across Europe have been invited to this year’s festival, which will tackle “the fracturing of civilisation” and also “stay true to the belief that the arts have the power to bring people together.”
The free opening event, Bloom, which will see iconic buildings and landmarks in the city centre’s east end transformed by light and sound installations and projections.
The third in a series of free opening events, which were previously staged on the facade of the Usher Hall and Edinburgh Castle rock, it has been inspired by the original 1947 ambitions of the festival to provide “a platform for the flowering of the human spirit.”
Around 30,000 tickets will be given away for a performance starting at 10.30pm, but organisers hope to win permission from the city council to leave the various sound and light installations running until the early hours of the morning to allow as many people as possible to experience them.
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Hide AdMr Linehan said: “When we started thinking about the 70th anninversary a couple of years ago, a lot of the ideas that were connected to 1947 seemed quite antiquated, such as as using art as a way of guiding us back to civilisation and not taking things for granted in the way they seemed before. They’ve take on a sort of resonance recently.
“At a time of crisis in 1947 the solution was perceived as ‘let’s just makes connections, let’s push out in terms of our terms of reference, let’s look at Europe.’
“We’re very conscious of the way people talk about the years during the war in Edinburgh, when the street lights weren’t on and people wouldn’t wear colourful clothing because they felt it was inappropriate.
“Suddenly the castle was lit up, there were flowers all the way down Princes Street, and there was a sense of respite and joy.
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Hide Ad“We want to capture that moment of everything being drab, dark and overly serious and then everything suddenly exploding into colour.
“We want to warm the soul up a little bit and create something that everyone to share.”
Among the big-name European companies visiting Edinburgh in August will be the Bupapest Festival Orchestra, the Bergen Philharmomic Orchestra,
Nederlands Dans Theater, the Mariinsky Orchestra from St Petersberg, and the Filarmoica della Scala, the orchestra of Milan’s world-renowned La Scala opera house.
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Hide AdThere are a number of nods in this year’s programme to the festival’s 1947 origins, including a major new production of Verdi’s version of Macbeth, the first ever opera to be performed at the inaugural event, which will be performed by Teatro Regio, from Turin, the EIF’s resident company for 2017.
Mr Linehan added: “We’re very conscious of Scotland’s place in the world. I don’t know anywhere else I’d rather live right now.
“If you take the political rhetoric you are hearing around the world at the moment it is still a very enlightened place relative to the way things are going.
“There’s something to be said about having just a great celebration of internationalism. There are very direct and overt discursive elements in the programme, but that’s not really how the festival came at it in 1947. It said: ‘Let’s concentrate on those things that we share and investigate each other’s cultures.” It’s that old thing about it being hard to hate someone whose stories you know.”
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Hide AdPJ Harvey, a double Mercury Prize winner, will be playing two shows at the Playhouse to showcase a new album inspired by her travels through Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington.
Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker will be joining forces with Canadian musician Chilly Gonzales to showcase a new set of songs inspired by the Chateau Marmont hotel in Los Angeles, where the likes of Jean Harlow, Marilyn Monroe and Howard Hughes all stayed.
The same stage will play host to a host of big-name stars on 27 August when Edinburgh-based Canongate stages its star-studded celebration of the power of written correspondent.
Benedict Cumberbatch, Gillian Anderson, Neil Gaiman, Nick Cave, Juliet Stevenson, Jude Law and Russell Brand are among those to have brought to life letters by Elvis Presley, David Bowie, Janis Joplin, Charlotte Bronte and Che Guevara.
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Hide AdHalf a century on from their emergence from the Edinburgh folk scene, the Incredible String Band founder Mike Heron will be joined by a host of guest musicians to revive the unique sound that inspired the likes of The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan and Led Zeppelin.
Edinburgh-based playwright Zinnie Harris, a key player on the Scottish theatre scene for the last two decades, has three works in the 70th anniversary line-up, including her version of the Greek drama Orestia, which was premiered to huge acclaim at the Citizens Theatre in Glasgow last year, and a new play which see the Traverse Theatre make a rare appearance in the EIF programme.
Glaswegian Turner Prize winner Martin Creed, who has work on display at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, will be taking over the Festival Theatre’s intimate studio for the for a show billed as a cross between “contemporary music hall” and “art lecture.”
The festival will also be branching out into the cinematic world with the daily screening at the National Library of Scotland a new film shot on the Hebridean islands of Staffa, inspired by the composer Mendelsshon’s famous visit to Fingal’s Cave there in 1829.
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Hide AdAustralian cabaret diva Meow Meow, who appeared at last year’s event with the veteran performer Barry Humphries, will return to transform The Hub into a late-night “underwater grotto” for her take on Hans Christian Andersen’s Little Mermaid fairytale.
The festival has secured the world premiere of a marathon new play by Alan Ayckbourn, The Divide, which will have a running time of more than six hours and will be divided into two parts.
East London hip hop outfit Blue Boy Entertainment, one of the biggest stars of the EIF dance programme, will be staging two special shows at a pop-up venue in the gym hall at Castlebrae Community High School in Craigmillar, which pupils will be helping to create and run to mark the culimination of a three-year partnership with the festival.
The Church Hill Theatre, in Morningside, will be deployed by the festival for the first time in 25 years when it hosts the plays Flight and Krapp’s Last Tape.
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Hide AdScottish culture secretary Fiona Hyslop said: “The Edinburgh International Festival has entertained, delighted and provoked audiences for 70 years, helping to shape Scotland’s identity as progressive, welcoming and world-renowned in its delivery of high-quality arts.
Countless countries have followed our example ever since to develop their own festivals.
“As in 1947, the festival’s inclusive ethos towards international artists and audiences is just as important and relevant today.”