The Scotsman

Festival plans to go ahead in new open-air pop-up venues

- By BRIAN FERGUSON newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival has revealed plans to reboot this summer by creating new open-air venues for shows.

More than 200 performanc­es will be staged at pop-up pavilion venues which are being planned to give the event the best possible chance of going ahead in August.

A mix of Scottish, UK and internatio­nal artists will feature in the EIF’S programme of music, theatre and opera production­s.

The full line-up will be announced in the first week of June ahead of tickets going on sale later in the month.

The EIF, which has had its plans approved by the Scottish Government and the city council following months of behind the-scenes talks, has decided against using any of its usual indoor venues in favour of the temporary structures.

It is understood they will be able to accommodat­e audiences of up to 800, depending on official guidelines.

The open-sided venues will be fitted with an“acoustic shell” and have seating layouts designed to accommodat­e social distancing.

The festival was unable to say how many people will be able to attend each performanc­e, as the Scottish government has still to publish clear guidance ahead of the events industry reopening in mid-may.

However, the EIF plans to film some of the pavilion performanc­es and release them online for free throughout the three-week run of the festival, from 7-29 August, to ensure this year’s event is as accessible as possible.

The festival has confirmed two sites so far – Edinburgh University’s historic Old College quadrangle, which has been used by the Fringe and film festival in recent years, and the site of a new cultural quarter being created at Edinburgh Park.

As well as the third site for a pop-up pavilion, which has yet to be confirmed, additional outdoor venues could be created at three more sites across the city, for smaller-scale performanc­es.

However, the festival has ruled out staging any event in Princes Street Gardens, which are already due to host a number of pop and rock concerts this August.

Organisers have also revealed that the traditiona­l fireworks finale is not being planned this year.

It plans to film some of the pavilion performanc­es and release them online throughout the three-week run of the festival, which is due to run from 7-29 August, to ensure the audience for the event is as wide as possible.

All of Edinburgh’s summer festivals were forced to cancel their planned 2020 programmes last April in the face of the pandemic.

Tickets for this year’s Tattoo, which is planned at Edinburgh Castle esplanade with a reduced capacity, have been on sale since October, while the book festival announced in January that it was relocating from Charlotte Square to a new home at Edinburgh College of Art.

The EIF’S announceme­nt is expected to be the catalyst for further festival announceme­nts and raises the possibilit­y that traditiona­l EIF venues, such as the Usher Hall, the Festivalth­eatre, the play house, the King’s Theatre and Leith Theatre could host Fringe shows.

The EIF is delaying putting tickets on sale until June when it hopes to have more clarity on audiences sizes and social distancing restrictio­ns from the Scottish Government. Under guidelines published last year, audience numbers are capped at just 250 for outdoor events.

Festival director Fergus Linehan said: “We had to make a call on this year’s festival a few months ago to make sure we had dates in the diaries of the people we are working with.

"Even with the outdoor structures­we’ re talking about we are still speculatin­g that we’ll be in a much better place in August that we are now in terms of permission­s.

"We're going to have three big pieces of infrastruc­ture, with large stages and coverings, but there will be special projects going on elsewhere, in locations that we’re still working on.

"We’re really interested in what is going at edinburgh park and that there’ s a developer outside the city centre with real cultural ambition and there’ s some really strong communitie­s in the area.

"I really hope that some of the indoor venues will be able to open in August and that Fringe activity will be able to happen.

"But we felt that if we don’t put a marker down and say ‘we’re going to do live performanc­e and this is how we’re going to do it’ it becomes a vicious circle of uncertaint­y. We’ve tried to work within the realms of the possible.

"People are very cynical about buying tickets for things they think’re going to cancel and the endless moving of dates.

“We’ve felt we had to try to build a festival that had the very best chance of not being cancelled.

"If we did do a festival and programmed the Usher Hall and Playhouse and everywhere else, all that would be open to us if that wasn’t allowed would be complete cancellati­on of the festival. That would be a really devastatin­g blow.”

Donald Wilson, culture leader at the city council, said: “The Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival is an explosion of performing arts, cultural exploratio­n and sheer exhilarati­on.

"After the challengin­g year we’ve all had and the disappoint­ment of not being able to enjoy the festival in the usual way last year, it’ll be fantastic for audiences to share in the live performanc­e experience again.”

Tony Hordon, managing director of Parabola, the developers of the new Edinburgh Park culture quarter, said: “We’re very excited to be a host for the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival this summer, especially after such a difficult time for the creative industries. Our passion for the arts in all forms is part of our strong belief of the importance of creativity in our wellbeing, in enhancing the quality of our lives and contributi­ng towards delivering exceptiona­l places.”

 ??  ?? 0 More than 200 performanc­es will be staged at pop-up pavilion v enues which are being planned to
0 More than 200 performanc­es will be staged at pop-up pavilion v enues which are being planned to
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 ??  ?? 0 The pavilions will be able to accommodat­e audiences of up to 800, depending on official guidelines
0 The pavilions will be able to accommodat­e audiences of up to 800, depending on official guidelines
 ??  ?? give the event the best possible chance of going ahead in August
give the event the best possible chance of going ahead in August

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