The Scotsman

Brian Ferguson’s diary

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The Cowgate has been brimming with round-theclock revelry – but it has also been the scene for my two most troubling festival shows to date.

There were more than a few moments of humour in Dust, Milly Thomas’s uncompromi­sing one-woman show tackling depression and suicide at Underbelly’s original home. But the heartbreak­ing story of Alice, a young woman who is able to observe the response of her family, friends and boyfriend to her taking her own life, left me haunted as I wandered back into the street. A late-night game show inspired by reality TV seemed to be starting off from the opposite end of the Fringe spectrum. But the four-strong cast of Losers took the Cowgate party crowd into some very dark corners before they were released into the night after midnight.

Humiliatio­n, beating, stripping, the eating of cat food and even some seemingly brutal treatment with a staple gun were meted out. No wonder the final scenes were played out before an audience shocked into virtual silence – save for a few gasps and cries of “no.”

0 Andy Gray: Bad hair day l It has been a remarkable 20 years since The League of Gentlemen took home the top comedy prize at the Fringe – fending off competitio­n from Johnny Vegas, Al Murray, Graham Norton and Milton Jones.

Now Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton, Reece Shearsmith and Jeremy Dyson are set to return.

Ahead of a planned reunion, which was confirmed in April, The League of Gentlemen are back in Edinburgh on Saturday to help honour their successors.

Awards director Nica Burns says: “The League of Gentlemen have gone on to be incredibly successful writers as well as performers, equally at home in drama as with comedy … we’re delighted to welcome them back.” l Much scrambling about at the Rose Theatre moments before Grant Stott and Andy Gray took to the stage in their sell-out play Double Feature. Gray found himself on his hands and knees franticall­y searching for a contact lens. Closer inspection of pictures of Gray, posted on Facebook by Stott, revealed it had become lodged in his hair. l Even though the Royal Mile is awash with performers, the Fringe is still out of reach for some of those closest to it. So hats off to those behind a special Free Fringe showcase staged at Hyndford House, a sheltered housing block, off the High Street, where comedy, singing, magic and dancing were all on the menu.

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