Share Festival City | Articles | Data Thistle
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
Festival City returns for its first episode of 2018 as intrepid host Gareth K Vile catches up with a trifecta of interviews, headlined by the upcoming manipulate festival. His first guests are Artistic Director Simon Hart and Puppet Animation Scotland's Projects Manager, Melanie Purdie. The three discuss some of their festival highlights and get excited about the 'biggest concentration of experimental theatre outside of the Fringe'. Next up, well known for their TV acting on Emmerdale and Coronation Street respectably, John Middleton and Chris Harper come in for a chat about their stage adaptation of Strangers on a Train. And Gareth's final guest of the pod is Ewan Downie of Company of Wolves, as the two talk physical theatre and his new show Achilles.
Rundown:
00:00:40 – Simon Hart and Melanie Purdie
00:16:46 – John Middleton and Chris Harper
00:34:26 – Ewan Downie
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
In this triple interview edition of the Festival City podcast Gareth is joined by Robbie Thompson, who talks about his work as part of Cryptic's Sonica festival, including a club night at Art School where he harnesses the power of the Tesla coil, the 19th century invention that first made electricity visible, to fuse sound and light.
Next he dashes to Edinburgh, where Morag Deyes (Artistic Director of Dance Base) and Lindsay Kemp (dancer, teacher and choreographer) discuss past controversial performances, current projects and enjoy an impromptu chorus of 'Nobody Loves a Fairy When She's Old'.
Last but not least he meets cartoonist Nick Newman and Private Eye editor Ian Hislop to chat about The Wipers Times, their play based on the true story of the satirical newspaper created on the front line during WWI. The pair discuss the medium of the stage in contrast to TV or print, and the benefits and pleasures of experiencing audience reactions first hand.
Show notes:
00:00:20 – Introduction
00:01:18 – Robbie Thompson
00:13:24 – Morag Deyes and Lindsay Kemp
00:33:22 – Nick Newman and Ian Hislop
00:51:00 – Outro
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
Now onto its third edition, the Scottish Queer International Film Festival has found success fast, and managed to push a few buttons along the way. A great lineup of films catering to a broad spectrum of identities as well as a brilliant programme of lectures, workshops and parties propelled it to the number nine spot on The List's Hot 100 last year. The team behind the SQIFF have continued this trend with the 2017 festival, taking place now in Glasgow.
In episode ten of the podcast, our host Gareth K Vile is joined by SQIFF programming committee member Marc David Jacobs to discuss the festival, what queer means and share some recommendations. For part two of the episode we're very lucky to have writer, photographer and underground filmmaker Bruce LaBruce for a wide ranging discussion starting with the New Queer Cinema of the 80s, punk, confrontational filmmaking and the difficulty of being an 'underground' artist in 2017. LaBruce's The Misandrists just made its Scottish premiere on opening night at the GFT, and he'll be DJing at the Drygate on Sunday, so don't miss that.
Show notes:
00:00:00 – Interview with Marc David Jacobs
00:11:01 – Marc's festival recommendations, including Greg Araki's Nowhere
00:17:02 – Bruce LaBruce interview
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
In the latest episode of Festival City, host Gareth K Vile is joined by the Birds of Paradise theatre company. Actors Robert Softley Gale (also writer), Garry Robson, Kinny Gardner and Amelia Cavallo (also musical director) discuss their new show, Blanche & Butch, a new production inspired by Noel Greig's 2006 play Heels on Wheelz, catching us up with three disabled drag queens ten years later. As well as chatting about the production, the conversation touches on accessibility and where drag sits between cabaret and theatre today. Blanche & Butch is touring now.
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
In episode of eight of Festival City our host Gareth K Vile is joined by Dr Carnesky to talk reclaiming menstruation and cabaret in Dr Carnesky's Incredible Bleeding Woman. Norah Sadava and Amy Nostbakken, the writers and actors behind the play Mouthpiece, discuss having the 'aha' feminist moment and emotional audience reactions to their personal feminist piece. Finally Danyah Miller, writer and solo-performer of Perfectly Imperfect Women, chats with Gareth about her relationship with her mum, being a storytelling trainer and her excellent flyering technique.
Show Notes
00:00:00 – Gareth's introduction
00:00:45 – Interview with Dr Carnesky of Dr Carnesky's Incredible Bleeding Woman
00:16:42 – Interview with Norah Sadava and Amy Nostbakken of Mouthpiece
00:29:18 – Interview with Danyah Miller of Perfectly Imperfect Women
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
In episode seven of Festival City, the writer-director of Morale is High (Since We Gave up Hope) Adrian Berry and host Gareth K Vile get in deep about David Bowie, fandom and obsession with music. Writer Jessica Barker-Wren and director Lucy Ray come in to discuss Cow and end up debating PJ Harvey's cultural importance and West Country accents. And Gareth's final interview of the episode is a fascinating discussion with Palestinian writer-performer Amer Hlehel about the poet Taha Muhammed Ali.
Show Notes
00:00:00 – Music from Morale is High (Since We Gave up Hope)
00:01:35 – Interview with Adrian Berry
00:10:02 – Music from Morale is High (Since We Gave up Hope)
00:12:15 – Interview with Jessica Barker-Wren (writer, performer), Lucy Ray (director) of Cow
00:24:30 – Interview with Amer Hlehel of Taha
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
Brace yourself: our theatre editor Gareth K Vile confesses he's actually enjoying himself at the Fringe. It might be down to his enthusiasm for Wild Bore, which he describes as the 'most important piece of work I'll see this year at the Fringe, or anywhere else for that matter'. Today's episode is a little inspired by that show, as he looks at different ways of making theatre, starting with traditional, script-based director and ensemble cast. First up, director James Haddrell of Greenwich Theatre introduces to the festival two shows from female playwrights, Under My Thumb and Gazing at a Distant Star. In part two, Sha Nazir, Art Director and Publisher of BHP Comics and Founder of Glasgow Comic Con, shares a couple of festival picks. Finally Gareth talks to Rachel Briscoe, director of Lists for the End of the World, and they discuss that show, theatrical form, and the meaning of dramaturgy.
Show notes:
00:00:00 – introduction
00:01:11 – interview with James Haddrell, director of Under My Thumb and Gazing at a Distant Star
00:11:09 – Sha Nazir (Glasgow Comic Con, BHP Comics) festival picks: One Man Shoe, Ahir Shah: Control
00:19:41 – interview with Rachel Briscoe, director of Lists for the End of the World
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
It's a special triple bill as we move into week two of the Fringe: and we are getting serious and excited about the plethora of performers banging on the door to get onto the podcast. Kicking off with a chat with a bin-man, host Gareth K Vile decides to share the reasons for his fear of baked beans with performer David William Bryan, whose show Trashed at Underbelly is a booze-fulled sucker punch of a play. Gareth moves swiftly onto his next guest, Nicola Wren from Replay (Pleasance Courtyard), who admits that she rather likes being at the Fringe. Finally, Joanne Ryan delves into Ireland's sexual health history in Eggsistentialism, an autobiographical comedy about trying to figure out whether to have children and all the cultural baggage that comes with that in her home country.
Show notes
00:00:10 – Intro and David William Bryan interview for Trashed
00:14:08 – Nicola Wren for Replay
00:23:18 – Joanne Ryan for Eggsistentialism
00:36:09 – Outro and thanks
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
Beginning with a song about lice, Gareth K Vile offers a food and drink episode bereft of food and drink recommendations for the duration of your visit to Edinburgh. First up on the pod we talk to Daniella Isaacs of Hear Me Raw and discover why eating healthily isn't necessarily a good thing and how ghost writing a fitspiration book is a very bad idea. Composer and producer Matthew Whiteside is accosted to share his Fringe experiences so far and what he plans to see. And finally, Vile meets a man who has been eaten by a lion, as performance artist Mamoru Iriguchi comes to the studio to discuss Eaten.
Music in today's episode comes from Ami and Tami, a musical reimagining of Hansel and Gretel.
Show notes:
00:00:41 – Welcome introduction
00:01:48 – Daniella Isaacs, writer and performer of Hear Me Raw
00:13:24 – Music from Ami and Tami
00:13:47 – Composer Matthew Whiteside talks Assembly Rooms' VR Experience, Sonica installation Nearer Future by Heather Lander, Rhinoceros and Scottish Opera's Greek
00:19:03 – Music from Ami and Tami
00:19:15 – Performance artist Mamoru Iriguchi of Eaten
00:28:16 – Outro and thanks
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
Episode three of Festival City stays in Glasgow (outrageous!), or at least meets a couple of artists who are either from or living on the West Coast. They are still, of course, at the Fringe during August.
First up, there is more Vile conversations with the National Theatre of Scotland: this time, Graham Eatough dives into the problems of making theatre as he reveals the process behind How to Act. Musical interludes come from the new musical, The Local, featuring songs about that subject dear to all critics at the Fringe – the pub.
Gareth then decides to 'indulge himself' by giving his opinions on what he wants to see, and goes on and on about clowns... before the show is rescued by the arrival of a comedian Rachel Jackson. Gareth asks her for some dating advice, even though she is a bit of a Bunny Boiler.
Show Notes:
00:00:00 – Introduction
00:00:58 – Graham Eatough interview
00:12:31 – Music from The Local
00:14:36 – Gareth's clowning picks: Hi. (Entering Burned Area), Cheeks, Natalie Palamides: LAID
00:17:54 – Music from The Local
00:23:18 – Rachel Jackson interview
00:31:44 – Outro and thanks
Further reading:
Gareth's interview with Lina Minora for Cheeks
Natalie Palamides interview
Credits:
Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.
Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
The podcast currently has 12 episodes available.