The Scotsman

Get ready for live shows

This year’s Edinburgh Internatio­nal Children’s Festival will be a hybrid event, with a mix of both online and outdoor events

- Joycemcmil­lan

When the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Children’s Festival was founded in 1989 – under canvas, in the city’s Inverleith Park – few of those who braved the changeable spring weather to experience its programme of internatio­nal theatre and outdoor fun imagined its extraordin­ary future, as it gradually evolved into the one of the world’s largest and most successful children’s theatre festivals, and became a permanent fixture on the city’s festival calendar, in late May and early June each year.

And even fewer, of course, could possibly have predicted that soon after its joyful 30th birthday celebratio­ns, in 2019, the festival would follow the rest of the global arts scene into the biggest crisis it has faced since 1945. Last spring, EICF was one of the first Scottish arts organisati­ons to announce the cancellati­on of its 2020 event; and although Imaginate, the Scottish children’s theatre organisati­on which runs the Festival, had originally hoped to re-stage the planned 2020 festival one year on, it gradually became apparent that the 2021 event, too, would have to be very different from a normal Children’s Festival.

Which is how the festival’s Australian director, Noel Jordan – himself in pandemic exile, and unable to visit family back home since his last trip in 2019 – found himself, a fortnight ago, announcing a 2021 Edinburgh Internatio­nal Children’s Festival with the subtitle “Online And Outdoor,” featuring 24 shows, nine of which will be available to watch online throughout the festival, with the rest taking place in outdoor locations across the city.

“Fairly early on last year,” says Jordan, “I decided that our 2021 programme would focus entirely on work from the UK and Ireland. That was partly to make travel easier, but also because we felt that in this crisis one of our priorities had to be to use our Creative Scotland funding in ways that would help support artists in our own community through the pandemic. This year, between and 80 and 90 per cent of the work in the Festival programme has been made in Scotland.”

Jordan is particular­ly pleased that this year’s online programme includes Robert Softley Gale’s Super Special Disability Roadshow, a longdiscus­sed joint project between Imaginate and Birds Of Paradise Theatre company designed to encourage awareness of disability issues in audiences aged between 8 and 12. The 45-minute show is currently being filmed in Glasgow, and features Softley Gale and pianist Sally Clay – two of Scotland’s leading performers with disabiliti­es – in dialogue with two young disabled performers, Oona Dooks and Oliver Martindale, who appear only on screen.

“The idea,” says Softley Gale, “is that Sally and I are this duo who have been performing a show about disability around schools for years, and my character thinks he knows it all about disability issues, until we arrive at a school where some of the young people begin to challenge us. There are plenty of songs and jokes, and we’re trying to make it into a really effective film, recorded as a live performanc­e; but we’re also very much hoping that a stage version will be able togo on tour, as soon as the pandemic situation improves.”

The EICF online programme also includes some previous Scottishma­de favourites, including Shona Reppe’s Potato Needs A Bath, and Catherine Wheels’s global hit White; and what Jordan describes as a remarkable live online magic show from the Cahoots company of Northern Ireland, The University Of Wonder And Imaginatio­n.

One of the main reasons for Jordan’s excitement over this year’s programme, though, lies in the festival’s successful effort to develop what were its much-loved family weekends at the National Museum of Scotland – now on hold – into a positive outdoor alternativ­e, staged mainly in partnershi­p with the Royal

Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh. The programme at the Botanics includes nine short snippet-sized shows, including My Land Your Land by Edinburgh-based company Two Direction Language, whose artistic director Katherina Radeva has been talking to Edinburgh-based children who share her Bulgarian heritage about their sense of home, and the different cultures they inhabit; and at the Lyra Theatre in Craigmilla­r, Tony Mills of the East Lothianb ased company Room 2 Manoeuvre will be continuing the company’s exploratio­n of how sport and dance can be combined with an outdoor show based on the movements of basketball.

“We noticed during the autumn and winter that the Botanics was one of the few venues still staging events despite the pandemic,” says Jordan, “and that they seemed to have huge expertise in dealing with all the issues involved. So it made so much sense to partner with them this year.

“There’s a real joy in presenting work outdoors though, in such a beautiful environmen­t, after the year we’ve all had. We just hope that people will love it; and that we’ll be able to take some of what we’ve learned about the positives of being online and outdoors forward into the new post-pandemic world.”

“There’s a real joy in presenting work outdoors in such a beautiful environmen­t”

Edinburgh Internatio­nal Children’s Festival 2021 runs from 25 May to 6 June, www.imaginate.org.uk

 ??  ?? The Super Special Disability Roadshow, starring Robert Softley Gale and Oona Dooks, is a joint project between Imaginate and Birds Of Paradise Theatre company
The Super Special Disability Roadshow, starring Robert Softley Gale and Oona Dooks, is a joint project between Imaginate and Birds Of Paradise Theatre company
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