Made in Scotland Programme for 2016 Unveiled

Published: 19 May 2016

Kai-Wen Chuang, KJ Clarke-Davis and Vince Virr of Barrowland Ballet launch Made in Scotland with Karen Watt, director of Culture, Tourism and External Affairs. Photo: Colin Hattersley 

Fiona Hyslop, Cabinet Secretary for Culture, Tourism and External Affairs, today announced the companies and artists selected for the 8th year of Made in Scotland - a curated showcase of music, theatre and dance performed during the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the world’s biggest arts festival.

Made in Scotland is a partnership between the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, Creative Scotland, the Federation of Scottish Theatre and the Scottish Music Centre. Through the Scottish Government’s Expo Fund, Made in Scotland has received £590,000 to present the showcase with part of the funding designed to enable Scottish companies, ensembles and artists to take up onward international touring opportunities from contacts made during the Festival Fringe.

The programme is testament to the strength of work being created in Scotland with the 2016 showcase representing a strong line-up of companies, ensembles and artists including Barrowland Ballet, Janis Claxton Dance, Kieran Hurley, Puppet State Theatre, Andy Manley, Starcatchers, Moishe’s Bagel, Simon Thacker and Justyna Jablonska, Kai Fischer, Sam Rowe, Graeme Stephen, Cryptic, Adura Onashile, Will Pickvance, Sita Pieraccini, Mairi Campbell, Gary Gardiner and Ian Johnston.

Since its inception in 2009, Made in Scotland has funded 159 companies, ensembles and artists to showcase their work. The onward touring fund has enabled 57 productions to tour across five continents, visiting over 20 countries. Made in Scotland productions have picked up over 60 awards.

Playwrights’ Studio Scotland returns with TalkFest 2016 to explore what stimulates the artists behind this year’s Made in Scotland showcase and the wider Edinburgh Festivals and Fringe. The sessions are led and chaired by some of our leading playwrights and theatre-makers - Kieran Hurley, Rob Drummond, Kai Fischer, Adura Onashile, Clare Duffy, Deb Jones and Kathy McKean, David Greig and Lewis Hetherington.

Fiona Hyslop, Cabinet Secretary for Culture, Tourism and External Affairs said: “Over the past eight years, the Made in Scotland 2016 programme has built a strong track record of showcasing high quality productions which push boundaries, flare imagination and examine the intricacies of real life. The opportunity that the showcase offers is invaluable and continues to create international opportunities for Scottish performers and companies.”  

She added: “The Scottish Government is proud to support Made in Scotland via the Expo Fund to bring this innovative piece of work to life and to continue raising Scotland’s cultural profile on the international stage.”

Shona McCarthy, Chief Executive, Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society said: “Made in Scotland highlights the work of many talented artists and companies in Scotland today and presenting their work at the 2016 Edinburgh Festival Fringe in the fields of music, dance and theatre; it opens up an array of opportunities both during the Fringe, when thousands of industry professionals and media are in town, and after by way of the onward touring fund. The Fringe is an extraordinary international stage, and for me, as the new Chief Executive of the Fringe Society, it is fantastic that such a platform exists through partnership with Creative Scotland, the Federation of Scottish Theatre and the Scottish Music Centre and support from the Scottish Government’s Expo Fund.”

Laura Mackenzie-Stuart, Head of Theatre, Creative Scotland said: “The Made in Scotland showcase puts talented artists from Scotland at the heart of the world’s largest art festival, the fringe. It’s an excellent platform to promote Scottish artists to international promoters and to audiences from Edinburgh, Scotland, UK and the world. Scotland has a wealth of talented artists working across music, theatre and dance and this year’s line-up is set to take full advantage of the Made in Scotland opportunity.”

Jon Morgan, Director, Federation of Scottish Theatre said: “The Federation of Scottish Theatre is delighted to be partnering with the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, Creative Scotland and the Scottish Music Centre in the Made in Scotland showcase. This Scottish Government-funded project gives Scottish artists and companies a great opportunity to present their work to national and international promoters who come to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. This is the eighth year of the Showcase and it is fantastic to see that so many of the previous Made in Scotland artists are still touring the world as a result of making connections with promoters and programmers through the Made in Scotland showcase.”

Gill Maxwell, Executive Director, Scottish Music Centre said: "With our partners the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, Creative Scotland and the Federation of Scottish Theatre, the Scottish Music Centre is delighted to present six music shows highlighting the quality and diversity of Scotland’s composers, songwriters, musicians and artists.  The showcases represent a wide range of music genres, from traditional and acoustic, via fusions of klezmer and gypsy, to electronica and multimedia presentations.  We look forward to these artists joining the raft of previous participants who have been enabled to tour their work internationally as a result of Made in Scotland showcasing."

Richard Medrington, Artistic Director, Puppet State Theatre added: "As a result of appearing in the very first Made in Scotland showcase in 2009 with The Man Who Planted Trees, Puppet State's international touring has included two tours to Australia and New Zealand. In 2013 we took part in the Sydney Opera House’s first live stream of a performance to multiple remote audiences, some over 700 miles away. I am looking forward to performing our new show, Leaf by Niggle, in this year’s Made in Scotland showcase and seeing where this unique opportunity will lead us." 

2016 Made in Scotland Companies, Ensembles and Artists

Will Pickvance
Anatomy of the Piano (for beginners)
age guideline: 6+

Will asks Father Christmas for a spaceship - he gets a piano! An adventure into the world of piano - where it comes from, how it evolved and why it makes a pretty cool Christmas present. Featuring Bach's cave piano, Beethoven's bad moods and a jam with 'Fats' Waller.

Scottish Storytelling Centre (venue 30a): Aug 4 Preview | Aug 5-28 (not Aug 17, 22, 23, 24) | 13:00hrs (55mins) | Aug 10 BSL interpreted performance


Sita Pieraccini in association with Feral
Bird 
age guideline: 12+

A vast and desolate world. One lone creature, starved of both food and friendship. With only a patch of soil to call her own, she must be ready to seize every small opportunity that might fly by…

Created through inventive clowning, mime and visceral physicality, and enriched by a detailed and subtle soundscape which is performed live, Bird is a timeless tale of friendship, courage, magic and madness.

Dance Base (venue 22): Aug 5, 6, 7 Previews | Aug 9-28 (not Aug 15, 22) | 18:30 (40mins)


Gary Gardiner /Ian Johnston /Adrian Howells
Dancer

Scotland’s leading learning disabled-artist Ian Johnston and Gary Gardiner hit the floor in this often hilarious exploration of what it really means to be a dancer. With a blistering soundtrack careering from Kylie to Nick Cave, they will attempt to understand what it is about dance that makes them feel most alive. Expect outrageously camp jerks and thrusts... and complete stillness.

Show originally co-created with the late Adrian Howells.

DANCE BASE (venue 22): Aug 17 Preview | Aug 18-28 (not Aug 22) | 17:00hrs (50mins)


Sam Rowe Theatre and Macrobert Arts Centre in association with Showroom
DENTON AND ME
by Sam Rowe, based on the journals of Denton Welch 

1944: Fastidious diarist Denton Welch writes with astonishing honesty about his obsession for reckless land-boy Eric.

2011: A young writer is given the diaries by a family friend and discovers echoes of his own life within.

This multi-layered, stunningly designed show weaves together writer/performer Sam Rowe’s autobiography with the writing of Denton Welch (1915 - 1948), a fascinating figure in queer and literary history, and favourite of Alan Bennett, William S Burroughs and John Waters. A powerful, moving and humorous production.

SUMMERHALL (venue 26): Aug 3, 4 Previews | Aug 5-28 (not Aug 15, 22)| 15:05hrs (75mins)


Scottish Theatre Producers in association with the Traverse Theatre Company
Expensive Shit
by Adura Onashile

’The country change, the city change, the people dem think they change, but I tell you dem shit the same. Dem all dey run from it the same.' One toilet attendant. Two sets of toilets. One night. Worlds apart.’ 

A nightclub toilet attendant in a fictional club based on the Shimmy Club in Glasgow. Her conflicted journey spliced with flashbacks to the toilets of the Shrine nightclub in Lagos, Nigeria, where her younger self dreams of revolution. An unseen, underground heroine struggles to have power and control over her life.

Traverse Theatre (venue 15): Aug 4 Preview | 21:30hrs | Aug 5-28 (not Mondays) | various times (70mins)


Pachamama Productions, National Theatre of Scotland and Regular Music
Glasgow Girls

Cora Bissett and David Greig’s life-affirming, song-filled Scottish drama, based on the true story of seven feisty teenagers, whose lives change forever when their school friend and her asylum-seeking family are forcibly taken from their home to be deported. The young women take a stand and fight for the life of their friend, her family, and, ultimately, for the rights of all children of asylum-seekers. They take on the government and succeed where others have failed, capturing the imagination of the media and inspiring a whole community to unite behind its residents. 

Assembly Hall(venue 35):Aug 4, 5Previews | Aug 6, 7, Aug 8 – 29 (not Aug 15) | 14:20hrs (90mins)


Graeme Stephen
METROPOLIS

Award-winning Scottish composer and guitarist Graeme Stephen presents the world premiere of his score for the 1927 silent film Metropolis, a pioneering science-fiction classic by German auteur Fritz Lang. The screening features the score performed by the composer, innovative Dutch string quartet ZAPP 4 and acclaimed drummer Tom Bancroft. Metropolis is Stephen’s seventh film score. His composition for the F W Murnau classic Sunrise won him the Innovation Award at the Scottish Jazz Awards.

SUMMERHALL (venue 26):Aug 18, 19, 20 |22:15hrs (120mins)


Kieran Hurley with Show And Tell
HEADS UP

A city. Just like this. Right now. A woman staggers home after a two-day bender. A priest who doesn’t believe in God stares blankly at the endless disasters on the TV news. A finance worker tears down a Keep Calm And Carry On sign outside a Café Nero. In just one moment, all their worlds will end. With an original innovative score by Michael John McCarthy, multi award-winner Kieran Hurley (Beats, Chalk Farm, Hitch) weaves a picture of a familiar city at its moment of destruction, asking what would we do if we found ourselves at the end of our world as we know it.

Summerhall  (venue 26): Aug 3, 5 | Aug 6-28 (not Aug 15, 22)| 19:05hrs (60 mins)


Starcatchers in association with the RSNO & Pleasance Kids
HUP
age guideline: 0-24months

A quirky quartet of playful musicians create an enchanting classical music experience for 0-24 month olds and their grown-ups. Discover two violins, one cello and one very mischievous raccoon. Hup is created for babies, and has a relaxed and comfortable performance style with the chance to stay and play afterwards.

EICC (venue 150): Aug 11-16, 16-23, 25-28 | 10:00hrs & 11:30hrs | Aug 12, 19, 21, 25, 27 | 14:00hrs (45mins)


Simon Thacker and Justyna Jablonska
Karmana, Songs of the Roma

Scottish virtuoso guitarist/composer Simon Thacker returns to create a new Romani musical journey in this dazzling world premiere of reimagined Gypsy songs and original works inspired by Indian, Balkan and Spanish traditions. With the outstanding Polish cellist Justyna Jablonska and one of the Roma Gypsy tradition’s finest exponents, singer and violinist Masha Natanson, Karmana features music of a rare emotional directness and spontaneity embracing the incredible talents of three diverse musicians and one of the world’s great song traditions.

Summerhall (venue 26): Aug 12-20 | 21:15hrs (60mins)


Kai Fischer, in association with National Theatre of Scotland
Last Dream (On Earth)
age guideline: 12+

A traveller stands on a beach in Morocco with a group of friends. Tonight, they are getting ready for a journey to change their lives. Decades earlier, a young man is getting strapped into a tiny sphere, ready for his mission: to become the first Human in Outer Space. Experienced on headphones, this award-winning production creates a world of immersive sounds and stories, interweaving a driving live music score with accounts of those who risk their lives for a distant dream.

Assembly Hall (venue 35): Aug 4, 5 Previews | Aug 6-28 (not Aug 10, 15, 22) | 13.25hrs (60mins)


Puppet State Theatre Company
Leaf by Niggle

In 1939 JRR Tolkien was despairing of ever bringing his great work The Lord of the Rings to a conclusion.  One morning he woke up with the tale of Niggle, a struggling artist on a curious journey, complete in his mind and wrote it down. The story is often seen as an allegory of the writer's own creative process. Surrounded by ladders, bicycles, easels and heirlooms, Richard Medrington (Jean from Puppet State’s The Man Who Planted Trees) recounts Tolkien’s miniature masterpiece, with an original score by Karine Polwart and MJ McCarthy. 

Scottish Storytelling Centre (venue 30a): Aug 4 Preview | Aug 5-28 (not Aug 10, 15, 22, 23) | 17:00hrs (75mins) | Aug 17 BSL interpreted performance


Greengold Projects and Authentic Artist Collective
Mairi Campbell: Pulse

Award-winning Scottish musician’s solo quest to heal cultural wounds. A homecoming in viola, voice, movement, animation and storytelling.  From London’s classical Guildhall training, to love and danger in Mexico, discovering step-dancing in Cape Breton, Campbell “Campbell opens her throat in a spirit of belonging that is ancient and modern, and life affirming for all of us.” Mary Brennan, The Herald. Co-devised and directed by Kath Burlinson.

Summerhall (venue 26): Aug 3, 4 Previews | Aug 5-28 (not Aug 15, 22) | 14:25hrs (55mins) | Aug 18 & 25 BSL interpreted performances


Andy Manley and Red Bridge Arts
MIKEY AND ADDIE
by Andy Manley and Rob Evans
age guideline: 9+

Mikey is a sunny boy. He lives alone with his mum. Mikey's mum has a secret. It’s not well kept.  Everyone knows it.  Everyone except Mikey. Addie is a good girl.  She doesn't tell lies. Her father makes sure of that. Addie tells the truth. It's what you have to do. Isn't it? It's hard to tell when your life will change. The day you wake up normal, but end up falling far from everything you've ever known. Spinning into nothingness. Today is that day.

SUMMERHALL (venue 26): Aug 3,4 Previews | Aug 5-28 (not 10, 15, 22) | 11:25hrs (55mins) |Aug 24 BSL interpreted performance


MOISHE'S BAGEL WORLD FOLK MUSIC

A thrilling mix of klezmer, folk and jazz. Stunning original compositions meet sublime traditional melodies, backed up by infectious foot-stomping grooves. This virtuoso band (fiddle, accordion, piano, bass and percussion), featuring some of Scotland’s finest musicians, will also perform excerpts of their recently commissioned silent film score Salt for Svanetia

Acoustic Music Centre at St Brides (venue 123): Aug 14 18:00hrs | Aug 15 & Aug 17 | 20:00hrs (75mins)


Barrowland Ballet and Macrobert Arts Centre
Poggle 
by Natasha Gilmore and the company
age guideline: 6 months – 4 years

Mischief maker, Maker of fun, Tumble tumble, Tickle my tum,

Beasties beasties, Buzzing bees, Poggle’s not scared of climbing trees. 

Vince wants to explore the forest but he’s too scared until he meets Poggle, a friendly creature who takes him on an adventure through the forest, where they meet the magical musical tree. This is a warm-hearted, sensory show with live music in an imaginatively changing world that the children have the chance to explore.

Dance Base (venue 22): Aug 5, 6, 7 Preview | Aug 9 |  Aug 10-21 (not Mondays) | 13.30hrs (40mins)


Janis Claxton Dance
POP-UP Duets (fragments of love)

Award winners Janis Claxton (choreographer) and Pippa Murphy (composer) join forces with four world-class dancers for a series of short, contemporary dance duets choreographed specifically for public spaces. Based around the theme of love, POP-UP Duets draws on Claxton’s signature trademark of bringing high quality dance to public spaces.

National Museum of Scotland (venue 179): Aug 4, 5 Previews | Aug 10-14, 17-21, 24-28 15:30hrs  (50mins)


Mark Lyken
THE TERRESTRIAL SEA

The Terrestrial Sea highlights the diverse and ever-changing environments of the Cromarty Firth through music and film. In 2012 Mark Lyken was Artist in Residence at The Lighthouse Field Station in Cromarty, where he worked alongside the Field Station’s team of ecologists and recorded The Terrestrial Sea album. In this Cryptic commission for Sonica, presented in partnership with Filmhouse, Lyken has developed The Terrestrial Sea into an enthralling audio-visual performance with regular collaborator Emma Dove.

Filmhouse (venue 352a):Aug 16-18 | 16:30hrs (45mins) | Aug 17 relaxed performance


Barrowland Ballet
Whiteout
by Natasha Gilmore

A heartfelt dance theatre piece that gives resonance to the complexities of bi-racial relationships. Informed by personal experiences from her marriage and as the mother of bi-racial children, acclaimed choreographer Natasha Gilmore (Tiger and Tiger Tale), explores this issue with honesty and humour. With original music by Luke Sutherland, the six dancers use their versatility of styles to create a visually exciting show. 

Zoo Southside (venue 82:) Aug 5, 6 & 7 Preview | Aug 9 | Aug 10-27 (not Mondays) | 17:00hrs (50mins)


For further Information, interviews, photographs contact: Wendy Niblock, Publicist, on 07961 814834 / wendjniblock@btinternet.com

Notes for Editors

MADE IN SCOTLAND:

  • supports Scottish dance, theatre and music companies/ artists to present their best work on an international stage;
  • raises the profile of the work of Scottish dance, theatre and music companies/artists and offers them unique networking opportunities with promoters;
  • increases the number and diversity of international promoters coming to see Scottish work at the Fringe through a year-round promoter development programme;
  • nurtures and encourages international creative dialogue and the development of international collaborations by Scottish dance, theatre and music companies/artists;
  • supports international touring opportunities for all Scottish dance, theatre and music companies/artists performing at the Fringe;
  • offers a year-round programme of training, support and advice to companies/artists so they can maximise the impact of their appearance in the showcase.
  • The Scottish Government’s Edinburgh Festivals Expo Fund is available to all 12 Festivals, to support the development of Scottish-based work and to allow that work to reach international audiences through presentation at the Edinburgh Festivals.
  • The Made in Scotland programmes were selected by a panel of arts experts. Full details on both panel members can be found on: www.madeinscotlandshowcase.com
  • Full information on national and international touring opportunities for companies who have been part of the Made in Scotland showcase since 2009 can be found on: www.madeinscotlandshowcase.com
  • The full 2016 Edinburgh Festival Fringe programme is launched on Wednesday 8 June. For further information visit: www.edfringe.com