The Scotsman

Square to host festival light show

Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival curtain-raiser will mark 70th anniversar­y

- By BRIAN FERGUSON Arts Correspond­ent

More than 40,000 people are expected to throng one of Edinburgh’s most historic public squares for a sound and light show to celebrate the 70th anniversar­y of its summer festivals.

St Andrew Square will be transforme­d between 10pm and midnight on the first two nights of the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival in August for its Bloom event.

A series of animations and projection­s, mastermind­ed by 59 Production­s, will celebrate the origins of the festivals.

More than 40,000 people are expected to flood into one of Edinburgh’s historic public squares for a spectacula­r sound and light show to herald the 70th anniversar­y of its summer festivals.

Three sides of St Andrew Square will be transforme­d between 10pm and midnight on the first two nights of the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival for its new “Bloom” event.

A series of animations and projection­s will celebrate the origins of the festivals, which were instigated in the aftermath of the Second World War, with an ambition to “provide a platform for the flowering of the human spirit”.

The event, which see special effects created in the garden, is being mastermind­ed by 59 Production­s, the design team behind the opening ceremony of the London Olympics, the stage show War Horse and the V&A’S David Bowie exhibition.

The company also created the previous opening spectacula­rs staged on the façade of the Usher Hall and Edinburgh Castle rock in 2015 and 2016.

This year’s event, bankrolled for a second year by Standard Life, will involve an “immersive” experience created to recall how the “darkness and division” of the post-war years was suddenly transforme­d by the “colour and vibrancy” when the Festival when launched in 1947.

The designers said the 15-minute sequence they are creating will draw upon “the architectu­ral beauty of the new town, Edinburgh’s rich cultural heritage and the technologi­cal innovation for which the city is renowned”.

The south, west and north sides of the square will be closed to traffic to accommodat­e the expected crowds on the streets in the event arena, which audiences will be encouraged to walk around “at their own pace”.

The shake-up of the event has emerged after complaints of over-crowding at the previous opening events, which ran for under 40 minutes and for one night. Around 8,000 tickets will be issued in advance for each night, guaranteei­ng access to the square from George Street from 9pm. Anyone without tickets can queue up to gain entry from 10:30pm.

Leo Warner, founder of 59 Production­s, said: “We wanted to build on what we had done in the last couple of years, but also wanted to do something new and equally ambitious, but different. We were interested in something which peo- ple could be inside, explore and, to some extent, create their own experience.

“We spent a long time looking at sites, but for a city that is organised around grids and squares, there were very few that were substantia­l enough and had the architectu­ral variety of a living city. We kept coming back to St Andrew Square.

“We’ve ended up with something both wildly ambitious and bigger than anything we’ve done before in Edinburgh. The first few minutes of the piece are about creating this sense of post-war devastatio­n and desolation across the world. There’s going to be a journey to Edinburgh and then a moment of blossoming that started a chain reaction of cultural events.

“We’re looking at the idea that by injecting culture and internatio­nal collaborat­ion into a geographic­al location you can create an explosion of energy, colour, light and life.”

EIF director Fergus Linehan said Bloom would celebrate the developmen­t of all of Edinburgh’s main festivals since 1947.

He added: “It’s really about Edinburgh being a festival city. You can’t really separate the festivals. People outside the city don’t really understand how they’ re all inter-connected.you don’ t really see all of the festivals collective­ly together anywhere. The piece is almost like having a series of big tapestries, which are in constant motion, on the three sides of the square.”

“We’ve ended up with something both wildly ambitious and bigger than anything we’ve done before in Edinburgh”

LEO WARNER

This year, the 70th anniversar­y of the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival will have a very special launch. The city’s St Andrew Square is the setting for a spectacula­r sound and light show to herald this anniversar­y.

Three sides of the square will be transforme­d on the first two nights of the Festival. Animations and projection­s will celebrate the origins of the festivals, instigated in the aftermath of the war.

It is being mastermind­ed by 59 Production­s, the design team behind the opening ceremony of the London Olympics. How fitting this all is. In 1947, Sir John Falconer – Lord Provost of Edinburgh and the Festival’s first chairman – said the inaugural Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival should “provide a platform for the flowering of the human spirit”.

That it has certainly done. And it has become a constant inspiratio­n, propagatin­g new festivals throughout Europe and beyond, as well as here in Scotland. It is easy to forget how influentia­l the event has been across the world.

This opening night will put the enduring success in context, and with a fitting spectacula­r start to this year’s Festival.

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 ??  ?? 0 St Andrews Square will be mostly closed to traffic so that the audience can immerse themselves in the show
0 St Andrews Square will be mostly closed to traffic so that the audience can immerse themselves in the show
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