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Summerhall

  • Art
Summerhall, theatre
Photograph: Peter Dibdin
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Time Out says

The current king of the city’s arts scene, hosting performances of all shapes and sizes. Even when there’s nothing on, great bars and food are worth dropping by

As Edinburgh’s newest – and hippest – multi-arts venue, Summerhall has quickly evolved from its former life as the Royal Dick School of Veterinary Studies into a cutting edge performance space.

Year round it puts on a programme of largely avant-garde, occasionally political exhibitions, talks, music, theatre and dance, and film events – as well as functioning as a space for workshops and residencies.

It’s quickly emerged as the go-to for ground-breaking, thought-provoking work during the Festival, with shows performed in everything from the lecture hall-slash-theatre spaces, to site-specific works in basement corridors and tiny lifts. In lesser hands dubbing yourself as a ‘cross cultural village for innovators’ would sound a little, well, pretentious. But here, they largely deliver.
 
Geeks aren’t ignored either, with the addition of TechCube providing a space for technology start-ups to rub shoulders and develop their ideas.

Eccentricities from its former life as a veterinary school reside throughout what’s essentially a labyrinth of a building, from the odd bit of taxidermy on the wall and operating tables in the bar, to the much-loved Dissection Room.
 
Beyond its success an arts venue, it’s also establishing itself as a popular place to grab a coffee or a beer, and The Royal Dick Bar and Bistro, which was once the Small Animal Hospital at the school is fast emerging as great place to loiter in, largely thanks to a decent food menu. Across in the café, a decent cuppa is guaranteed, along with a regular exhibition of pop art posters, including work by usual suspects Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol and more.

As an additional hoorah, they have a resident craft brewery, which produces Summerhall Pale Ale, brewed by Barney’s Beer.

Written by Anna Millar

Details

Address:
Summerhall Place
Edinburgh
EH9 1PL
Transport:
Rail: Edinburgh Waverley

What’s on

Sh!t Theatre: Or What’s Left of Us

  • Experimental

Shambolic and profound, hilarious and inspiring, the mighty Sh!t Theatre – that’s Becca Biscuit and Louise Mothersole – return to the Fringe for the first time in five years with a show about folk music… and coming to terms with the shocking sudden death of their longterm collaborator (and Becca’s partner) Adam Brace. Expect a show that’ll be ridiculous and sad in equal measures; each performance will end with a singaround in the Summerhall bar.

June Carter Cash: The Woman, Her Music and Me

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To be absolutely frank a one woman show called ‘June Carter Cash: The Woman, Her Music and Me’ sounds like the ultimate Edinburgh Fringe cliche. Scratch the surfuce, though, and it}s instantly apparent that this show about the country singer legend and second wife of Johnny Cash is clearluy going to be a cut above. Staged in the perennially hip Summerhall, the show is a collaboration between the National Theatre of Scotland and site specific legends Grid Iron. Cora Bissett – herself a Fringe legend as both performer and director – will help the cabaret-seated show, which wil star writer Charlene Boyd as she explores Carter Cash’s life and what it’s meant to her over the years.

Show Pony

  • Experimental

What happens to actrobats when they hit middle age? That’s what feminist German circus collective Still Hungry (styled as still hungry) are looking to find out in this intriguing new show, a collaboraton with Brit performance artist Bryony Kimmings, who made her name at the Fringe and is now returning for the first time in aeons.

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