#Review by Lou of The Last Weekend by Hannah Begbie @hannahbegbie @harperfiction @harpercollinsuk @RandomTTours #Blogtour

The Last Weekend
By Hannah Begbie

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Review written by Louise Cannon 

It’s the weekend and where better to start it with a brand new book called The Last Weekend. It’s a good one for book clubs or just chilling out with after a busy week.
Today, I am on the final stop on the Random T. Tours blog tour with a review.

 

Blurb

Four women

Annie has brought her three best friends and their families together for a long weekend away in a gorgeous seaside Airbnb. It should be idyllic – sun, sea, sand, cocktails and laughter.

One shocking secret

But below the surface, none of these friendships are quite what they seem. And Annie has a secret – and an earth-shattering favour to ask of one of her friends.

A life-changing decision

As the idyllic weekend goes sour – arguments, grudges and a boat trip that goes awry – Annie must make her devastating decision – and change everyone’s lives, forever.

Review

Annie really wants the weekend get together to happen, even more than her friends whom she wants to join, but they all unite and go on their adventure to Dorset.

You get a real feel for the characters and their ups and downs, including disappointments career-wise and in ambitions as well as ageing parents. They have each other though and that’s what matters…. perhaps?
Not all goes swimmingly and tensions rise to the surface as this holiday doesn’t go quite as smoothly nor as idyllically as Annie had imagined.

The complexities of the relationships and challenges of being in such close proximity that become increasingly present creates some twists, making it compelling reading. It’s an interesting exploration of friendships and how they relate to each other and are in their personal lives.

Annie’s news really shakes things up and creates a desire to know how it ends and what, if anything is intact.

#EdFringe News – 100’s of shows available to book now! @EdFringe @assemblyfest @ThePleasance @theSpaceUK @TheFreeFringe @gildedballoon @lhcomedy @FollowTheCow @JTTedinburgh #Comedy #Theatre #Drama #Music #Cabaret #Dance #Musicals #Circus

Written by Edinburgh Fringe Media Team

The Edinburgh Festival Fringe will take place from 01 – 25 August 2025. More information about the programme and tickets can be found at edfringe.com.

The first batch of shows that will be staged at the 2025 Edinburgh Festival Fringe have been announced, and over 556 shows will be available to view and book on edfringe.com now!

The 556 shows span many genres, including cabaret and variety; children’s shows; comedy; dance, physical theatre and circus; music; musicals and opera; spoken word; and theatre. The shows announced today will take place across 100 venues. More shows will be revealed in the run-up to August.

In a continuing trend, this year more Fringe artists than ever have chosen to make their show available at this early stage, giving them longer to promote their show, grow their audiences and capitalise on all the opportunities available when taking part. It is the artists, companies and venues who come to the Fringe who take the risk in bringing work here every August. Fringe-makers all need help to mitigate these complexities, manage rising costs and make sure this August is the best it can be for residents, visitors and the thousands of arts industry and media that come to the city each Fringe for the world’s largest arts expo.

The Fringe Society continues to advocate and lobby for more support for the festival community – support such as affordable and available accommodation, to the continuation of the Keep it Fringe fund, and anyone in a position to support is encouraged to get in touch with the team.

With over 500 shows on sale from today, the Fringe Society also asks audiences from near and far to start booking tickets now, to take a chance on an emerging artist, to plan a visit to a venue you’re unfamiliar with, and to dive into the first batch of shows.

Shona McCarthy, Chief Executive of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, said: ‘It is always an exciting moment to see the first shows that will be performing at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The 2025 Edinburgh Fringe feels more real than ever and being able to browse the first batch of shows adds another level of excitement. It’s incredible to see the range and themes of work as well as the talent and creativity that artists are bringing to the festival this year.

‘More artists than ever have chosen to put their shows on sale at this early stage, allowing more time to plan their trip to Edinburgh this August. The cost of putting on a Fringe show can be a barrier to attending and the Fringe Society is working to support artists in any way that we can, whether that’s sourcing artist accommodation, keeping registration fees affordable, seeking out funding opportunities, or simply providing advice to any artist that needs it. Our Artist Services team is on hand to offer support, so please do reach out to the team.’

Below is a small representative sample of shows available to book from today. The full list of shows released today can be found at edfringe.com.

Cabaret and variety

In 1954: Ella, Etta, Eartha (The Jazz Bar) Melissa Western and her musicians pay tribute to Ella Fitzgerald, Etta James and Eartha Kitt and their ‘swinging jazz, powerful soul and cheeky kitsch’.

Returning this year is La Clique, being staged this year in The Famous Spiegeltent – which is returning to St Andrews Square, while Sexy Circus Sideshow 2.0 brings ‘alternative circus’ to ‘the dark arts of underground burlesque and cabaret’ at Assembly. 

Alex Love: How to Win a Pub Quiz 2025 is ‘part stand-up, part actual pub quiz’ at The Stand Comedy Club.

At theSpaceUKDan Bastianelli: Identity is providing ‘a brand-new magic experience which uses sleight-of-hand, personal stories and honest deception’, while ‘rock’n’roll’s greatest magician’ Arron Jones is at PBH’s Free Fringe with #1 Greatest Hit Rock’n’Roll Magic Show.

Children’s shows

Join Baby Shark and the Mystery of the Sphinx (Gilded Balloon) at for ‘fin-tastic show packed with music, magic and mayhem’ or skip, clap and march together’ to traditional Scottish music at CeilidhKids at the Fringe (Laughing Horse).

‘Experience magical illustrations and amazing new music’ as you follow Milly’s Musical Adventure (Greenside). At School’s Out Comedy Club with Philip Simon (Le Monde), expect ‘children (and maybe even a few parents)’ to ‘take to the stage to share their favourite jokes’.

Among returning shows for children and their families are The Listies: Make Some Noise at Assembly and Doktor Kaboom: Under Pressure! at Pleasance.

Comedy

Dungeons & Dragons fans will want to join Tartan Tabletop: A Dungeons & Dragons Comedy (Gilded Balloon) for ‘improvised comedy at the roll of a dice’. At Laughing HorseChonk hosts a ‘body-positive buffet of comedians from across the Fringe’. Hasan Al-Habib, 2025 Keep it Fringe recipient, ‘was born to Iraqis that moved to Birmingham after deciding Baghdad wasn’t dangerous enough’ in Hasan Al-Habib: Death to West (Midlands) (Pleasance).

Join the ‘longest-running panelist from BBC Scotland’s Breaking the News’ Stuart Mitchell at Hoots or head to Planet Bar for Settle! for ‘a whirlwind of laughter, infectious tunes, and a good old-fashioned roasting’. At theSpaceUK, Chan Lok Tim ‘navigates life as a Hong Konger preparing to become a husband’ in Congratulations, Good for You – Cantonese Stand-Up Comedy.

At Scottish Comedy Festival, enjoy ‘dark, unfiltered and unapologetic takes on the topics most comedians are smart enough to avoid’ at Michael Shafar – Inappropriate. At The Royal Scots Club, Ian Wood relates anecdotes to show ‘being visually-impaired and a wheelchair user, one can get round most barriers in life’ in Living with Mitochondria Against All Odds.

Familiar faces at this year’s Fringe include Nish Kumar and Jason Byrne at Assembly, Andy Parsons, Chloe Petts, Deirdre O’Kane, Elf Lyons, Kiell Smith-Bynoe, Marjolein Robertson and Rhys Darby at Pleasance, Paul Sinha and Richard Herring at The Stand, and Geoff Norcott and Ali Woods at Underbelly.

Representing Scotland’s comedy scene, Susie McCabe is at Assembly, while Connor Burns, Craig Hill and Daniel Sloss are at Just the Tonic and Robert Grainger is at The Stand.

Dance, physical theatre and circus

At GreensideTales From Your Queer Elder ‘blends movement and spoken word’ while ‘creating a powerful testament to living authentically while encouraging others to follow their dreams’.

Australian circus company Gravity & Other Myths return to Assembly with Ten Thousand Hours, bringing ‘an ode to the countless hours of sweat and joy needed to achieve great things’.

Art of Andalucia brings a must-see flamenco spectacle to YOTEL Edinburgh, while at theSpaceUKSole to Soul ‘blends the physical language of traditional Chinese opera with the expressive symbolism of modern dance’.

Music

For an ‘evening of classics from the silver screen’, check out Tutti Orchestra: At the Movies at Canongate Kirk, or ‘experience the beauty of Italian and Neapolitan love songs’ at La Dolce Vita: A Celebration with Philip Contini (Valvona & Crolla).

MASSAOKE has two runs at Underbelly this year, 90s Live – ‘everything from rock to rave, girl power to grunge and Britpop to boybands’ – and Sing The Musicals – ‘Mamma Mia, Hamilton, Frozen, The Greatest Showman, Dirty Dancing, Les Mis, Jungle Book, We Will Rock You, Phantom, Mary Poppins and many more’.

Ali Affleck comes to the Fringe with five shows this year: she’s with her band The Vagabond Jacks playing Hot Roots Jazz, Highway Honky-Tonk, Rags and Blues at the Argyle Cellar Bar; paying tribute to Billie Holiday with Sophisticated Lady at The Jazz Bar; and revisiting both venues with Ali Affleck Presents: A Hot Time in the Old Town – Celebrating the Wild Trailblazers of Blues and Jazz; Ali Affleck and the Traveling Janes – Bringing Bold, Brassy Bedlam to Swing, Blues and Trad Folk/Roots Jazz; and Ali Affleck’s Queens of Swing.

Head over to Footstomping: Live Scottish Music (WHISKI Bar & Restaurant) for a ‘vibrant foot-stomping good time’ or listen to ‘up-and-coming young musicians’ at Marchmont Music (Marchmont St Giles Church).

Journey to Stolen Identity (Saint Stephen’s Theatre) explores ‘women’s rights through a blend of musical genres, starting with classical but evolving into jazz and rock’. At Edinburgh New Town Church, Andrii Kymach: Ukraine is a ‘new recital, Ukraine, specially devised for 2025’s Day of Ukraine Independence’.

There are a number of tribute acts across venues, including Billy Joel, Fleetwood Mac and Celine Dion at theSpaceUK, Abba at Greyfriars Hall at Virgin Hotels Edinburgh and Joni Mitchell at Le Monde.

Musicals and opera

Check out Charles ii: Living Libido Loca at PBH’s Free Fringe for a ‘raunchy adult historical comedy centered around the life and libido of Charles ii’ or head to Rock of Ages at Paradise Green for ‘powerhouse vocals, epic guitar solos, and all your favorite 80s rock anthems’.

How to Win Against History is a ‘tragi-gorgeous comedy musical’ and ‘a true story about expectations, masculinity, privilege and failure on an epic scale’ at Underbelly.

At Greenside, the prince breaks free of the fairytale to ‘sing his very own songs and complain about what his life could be’ in To Be a Prince. At theSpaceUK, ‘ancient Silk Road meets the present, and centuries-old murals come alive’ in Dunhuang.

Updated for 2025 with new songs, I Wish My Life Were Like a Musical the ‘musical comedy revue revealing all about musicals and the people who love them’ is back at Gilded Balloon.

If you fancy a ‘murder-mystery comedy musical’, head to The Detective’s Demise at Just the Tonic for ‘showstopping songs and devilish twists’.

Spoken word

At The Stand, ‘elected MP for Islington North, former Labour leader, and Peace and Justice project founder’ Jeremy Corbyn is in conversation.

For ‘an amusing take on life, with the added hint of truth’, check out What Are You Laughing At? at theSpaceUK, while ‘Peter gives a stirring and passionate account of his great-grandmother’s hard-fought campaign for the right to vote over 100 years ago’ in Alice Hawkins – Working Class Suffragette at the Arthur Conan Doyle Centre.

Theatre

Shakespeare for Breakfast is back at C Venues, offering a ‘sensational Shakespearience, perfect for hardened fans and blank-verse virgins alike’ while former Chelsea FC trainee Alfie Cain delivers a ‘raw and powerful solo performance … exposing the brutal reality of football’s unforgiving system’ in Dropped at Easter Road Stadium.

Timestamp at Dovecot Studios is a ‘performance duet of sonic verse, dance, and audience experience that challenges the expectations imposed upon us in society.’ A Period of Faith follows Faith’s ‘battle against Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder in a moving and thought-provoking way’ at Hill Street Theatre.

Brown Girls Do It Too: Mama Told Me Not to Come (Underbelly) explores ‘messy realities, fantasies, sexpectations and navigating life and relationships as British Asian women’.

Experience the beauty of Italian literature and the terror of looming deadlines at Valvona & Crolla with No Shakespeare. At theSpaceUK, The Boy from Bantay takes us on Jeremy’s ‘heartwarming journey of growth and self-discovery’.

Miriam Margolyes is back this August with Margolyes and Dickens: More Best Bits, bringing ‘more characters, more Dickens and more fascinating stories about the man behind the classics’ to Pleasance. More familiar favourites returning this year are Trainspotting Live at Pleasance and Xhloe and Natasha with three shows at theSpaceUK  A Letter to Lyndon B Johnson or God: Whoever Reads This First, And Then the Rodeo Burned Down and What If They Ate the Baby?

Head to Robot Vacuum Fight Club (Outhouse Bar) to ‘form a team, select a knockoff Roomba, customise it, then pit it against a dozen rivals in a series of knockout competitions’, or check out Tomatoes Tried to Kill Me but Banjos Saved My Life (Summerhall), an ‘inspirational true story … about overcoming obstacles, pursuing passions, and the healing power of the arts’.

You can find out more and book edfringe.com

#EdFringe News – the Space UK Venues Announce New Shows for Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2025 @theSpaceUK @edfringe #Theatre #Drama #Music #Musicals #Cabaret #Comedy #Dance

theSpaceUK Announces Over 100 New Shows on Sale for Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2025

 

 
There’s even more reasons to be excited this April as theSpaceUK adds over 100 new shows to its 2025 Edinburgh Festival Fringe programme, now on sale at www.theSpaceUK.com.

From powerful new writing and gripping drama to outrageous comedy, magic, musicals, and cutting-edge physical theatre, the latest additions promise something for everyone. Book your tickets now and be part of the Fringe’s most dynamic venue!

Drama & Theatre
Tackling big themes with wit and urgency, The Pornstar Martini Effect: A Bartender’s Guide to Not K*lling Yourself at Christmas (52 Theatre Co.) follows two bartenders confronting harassment, gender dynamics, and identity on Christmas Eve. Meanwhile, dark comedy A Play About Feet (Find Your Feet Theatre Company) takes audiences on a chaotic journey through love, ambition, and questionable life choices.

History and myth collide in 1 King, 2 Princes and Shakespeare’s Lie (Slade Wolfe Enterprises Limited), where Richard III returns to challenge history itself in an electrifying solo performance. Elsewhere, Waiting for Elvis (Plush Tiger Productions) imagines a chance meeting between a young Elvis Presley, Agatha Christie’s Margaret Rutherford, and an eager fan in a Scottish airport lounge.

For those who wonder what happens after “The End,” After Shakespeare (Slade Wolfe Enterprises Limited) weaves a fresh narrative for four of Shakespeare’s most iconic characters, blending historical research with original storytelling.

Music & Musicals
The life of Vincent Van Gogh takes centre stage in Vincent: His Quest to Love and Be Loved (Wêla Kapela Productions), a moving mini-musical exploring the artist’s passion, pain, and relentless drive to create.

Meanwhile, corporate satire meets song in You’re Fired! The Musical (McPhilemy and Pozzuto), a razor-sharp look at ambition, success, and the personal cost of capitalism, as one hopeful businessman competes for his big break.

Rocky Horror and Beetlejuice fans won’t want to miss Ghosted! A New Musical (Makena Margolin and Hayden Kline), a riotous blend of comedy, music, and paranormal mayhem following a grieving best friend’s attempts to summon a ghost—only to be haunted by a mischievous spirit.

For a dose of romance, My Sweetheart and Me (Suntree Productions) transports audiences to a Northern Irish bar in 1969, where love and laughter unfold through intertwined love stories.

Cabaret & Comedy
Scottish absurdist comedy takes centre stage with This Play Sucks! (Sean Tennant), a wild, vampire-infused caper that sees two Highlanders hatch a half-baked plot to kidnap a reclusive lord—only to find themselves in way over their heads. Over in the apocalypse, 4’s a Crowd (Or What Not to Do When Stuck in a Bunker During the Apocalypse) (The Fiascoholics) delivers a fast-paced, side-splitting farce about five survivors, four shares of food, and one impossible decision.

Award-winning stand-up Diya Shah? Diya Shahn’t (Diya Shah) brings sharp observational humour to her Fringe debut, while Abby Denton: My Favorite Loser (Abby Denton) makes the case that a forgotten Cuban postman from 1904 is the world’s greatest role model.

For fans of the absurd, End of the World FM (Kevin Martin Murphy / Wandering Artist Collective) follows a lone radio host broadcasting into the void as he grapples with the end of days. Over in cabaret, Closure Cabaret (Maria Ansdell) sees lovelorn emcee Razmatastic bringing her exes to the stage for one last (unwilling) performance.

Dance & Physical Theatre
Scotland’s lost percussive dance traditions take the spotlight in Deiseil: Dancing in Time (Alison Carlyle and Amy Geddes), a captivating blend of live fiddle, Gaelic song, and powerful movement directed by Gerry Mulgrew.

Award-winning Korean theatre company Theater Sangsangchangkko presents I Woke Up One Morning and Had Become AI, an exhilarating physical comedy about two brothers transformed into artificial intelligence.

Blending magic with personal storytelling, Hidden Powers (Angus Baskerville) offers a mind-blowing exploration of neurodiversity, while Sauna Boy (Dan Ireland-Reeves) delivers an unflinching and powerful drama based on real events inside a hidden world of sex, survival, and friendship.


Tickets for over 280 exciting Edinburgh Fringe shows are now on sale at www.theSpaceUK.com. With a programme that spans theatre, comedy, music, and dance, there’s something for everyone at this year’s fringe season. 

#Review By Lou of Tim Rice – My Life In Musicals: I Know Him So Well Tour @SirTimRice #Theatre #TimRiceMyLifeInMusicals #TouringTheatre #UKTour

Tim Rice – My Life in Musicals: I Know Him So Well UK Tour

Review by Louise Cannon

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Wow, (not a word I usually start with or add into a review, but it’s warranted here). Sir Tim Rice knows how to put on a show, even when it’s not a full blown musical. It’s a show I’d watch again the chance. You forget about all the cares and concerns of the day as you’re whisked off into his wonderful show. He, the band and the Westend singers are incredibly talented. Between the songs they sing and Tim Rice (who joins in here and there) telling his life stories, it’s a lively, fun, great night of fascinating entertainment.

Think you know all there is to Tim Rice? Perhaps you do and perhaps you don’t. If you don’t, this gives a chance to discover his life’s works and if you do, it gives you time to re-live some special moments. It’s a spirited, enthusiastic show that leaves you warm-hearted and uplifted by the end.

The curtain opens and on comes his troop of fabulous singers creating a fabulous energy in the auditorium as they sing some hit songs, starting with Joseph, setting the atmosphere just right for the man everyone was waiting for, Sir Tim Rice, to enter the stage. The songs are carefully thought out and placed throughout the show, from musical theatre to pop to film, making everything succinct.

The show is jam-packed full of anecdotes of how he and Andrew Lloyd Webber got together and how things aligned to create a stellar career spanning many decades, but not necessarily easily, there were times when it may not have taken off in the direction it did. He hasn’t only worked with Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber, he’s worked with many others including in the music industry, like Mike Batt and David Essex,  Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson (ABBA), also within the film industry from writing lyrics for a James Bond film to Disney films and more…

There’s humour, fascinating stories, some very special awards to glimpse at and a terrific finale.

Whether, like me, you’ve been inspired/enjoyed by Tim Rice’s musicals (for me, I was hooked after seeing Joseph and His Technicolor Dreamcoat at a young age) or think you’ve not discovered him, this is the perfect time to find out more about the man behind the music and how he’s got to where he is today. He still has plans in the works for the future too… Tim Rice’s career seems to be one of the most fascinating careers in musical theatre history!

I see the show as one not to be missed!

You too can hear all about Joseph, Chess, Aladdin, The Lion King, Jesus Christ Superstar, which James Bond song he was involved in and which Christmas song he was involved in and more by checking out the tour here:
My Life In Musicals: I Know Him So Well

#Review by Lou of The Spectaculars: Battle of the Stars By Jodie Garnish #JodieGarnish @Usborne #Childrensbook #MiddleGrade #kidslit

The Spectaculars: Battle of the Stars
By Jodie Garnish

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Review written by Louise Cannon

Enchanting, theatrical, dramatic, The Spectaculars: Battle of the Stars is an entertaining read for middle-grade readers to get lost in and travel with a magical theatre school.

Blurb

Jump onboard the Wondria… The Spectaculars is an enchanting adventure series filled with magic, theatre and danger, perfect for drama lovers. For fans of Nevermoor, The Train to Impossible Places and Carrie Hope Fletcher.

There’s magic in the air as Harper begins her third year as a Spectacular at the Wondria – her magical travelling theatre school.

An immersive theatre show is touring the Hidden Peaks, bewitching everyone with its starry charms. But when the show’s fortune-teller predicts danger in Harper’s future, Harper is suddenly pulled into a terrifying battle of powerful spells and sinister figures.

With her friends, Harper must uncover who is behind it all – because if they can’t, it will be closing night for the whole of the Hidden Peaks…

Review

Immersive theatre shows are amazing and this book reflects this style of theatre to a degree. Hidden Peaks is charming everyone, but there are sinister forces at work after Harper talks to a fortune-teller who predicts her future.

What unfolds is a theatrical world of magic and friendship to pull readers in. The mild trepidation creates a desire to see how this entertaining read where the colliding fantastical world of theatre and magic ends.

#Review of ShadowHall Academy: Ghost Story Society By Phil Hickes @Hickesy @Usborne #Middlegrade #GhostStory #Usborne #Kidslit #ChildrensBook

ShadowHall Academy: Ghost Story Society
By Phil Hickes

Review written by Louise Cannon

Rating: 5 out of 5.

If your child likes friendship and a bit of a haunted atmosphere and wonderment of what happens next, that causes that next page to turn, this is the book for them.

Blurb

Welcome to Shadowhall Academy, where spirits haunt the school halls. A brilliantly spooky new series from the author of Aveline Jones.

It’s the perfect night for a ghost story, don’t you think?

As if Shadowhall Academy wasn’t creepy enough, Lilian and her friends have started a Ghost Story Society. It’s all harmless fun, until one girl warns of a sinister book hidden somewhere in the school that can bring your darkest secrets to life.

So when Lilian finds a mysterious book and discovers a long history of strange happenings at Shadowhall, she starts to suspect the terrifying story might be true.

Lilian’s friends warn her not to mess with dark magic, but she’s never been one to resist an adventure. And when she writes her deepest secrets in the book, she unleashes a danger far worse than she could ever imagine…

Review

Lillian and her friends created what seemed harmless fun, an innocuous ghost story. Nothing more was to be expected. Sinister things start to happen and with a mysterious book and quite a history to be discovered, the story builds into something else that sends the girls, and readers, into a world of secrets and magic. As weird mystical things start to unfold, there’s also true friendship throughout between the girls, which brings a heart-warming element of sit on the edge of your seat darkness and discover what the whispering walls have to say.

Discovering the characters who play detective, uncover ghostly goings on are, posh Serena, goth, Marian , anxious Angela, gutsy, loyal Lillian is also fun.

The Shadowhall Academy is an entertaining read. Fans of Jennifer Killick will like this book. I highly recommend Shadowhall Academy.