These Shows Won in 2nd Round of The Scotsman's Fringe First Awards | Playbill

Playbill Goes Fringe These Shows Won in 2nd Round of The Scotsman's Fringe First Awards

Recognizing the best of new writing at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the newspaper's Fringe First Awards are coveted by artists.

The Scotsman, a newspaper and news website based in Edinburgh, has announced the next round of winners for its Fringe First Awards. The awards are one of the most coveted to earn at the Edinburgh Fringe as it recognizes the best new writing at the festival while it's taking place. 

Newly announced are Choo Choo! (Or... Have You Ever Thought About ****** **** *****? (Cos I Have)) at Pleasance Dome's JackDome, The Last of the Soviets at ZOO Playground's Playground 1, Blue at Assembly George Square's The Box, Club Life at Summerhall's TechCube 0, Square Peg at Paradise in Augustines's The Studio, Gunter at Summerhall's Anatomy Lecture Theatre, and Everything Under the Sun at Army @ The Fringe's Drill Hall.

The first round of Fringe First Awards recognized Playbill Pick England and Son which plays the Roundabout @Summerhall, Funeral at Zoo Southside, A Funeral For My Friend Who Is Still Alive at theSpace @ Niddry Street, The Grand Old Opera House Hotel and Heaven both of which play Traverse Theatre, and JM Coetzee's Life & Times of Michael K at Assembly Hall (which is also a Playbill Pick).

The Fringe First awards are the oldest at the Fringe, and celebrate their 50th anniversary this year. Launched in 1973, the awards are given to new writing debuting at Fringe. Scotsman arts editor Allen Wright and Fringe administrator John Milligan came up with the idea of the Fringe First Awards to help revive new work at the festival 25 years after it started.

Since then, the awards—which are only the recognition without any financial reward or other such opportunity—have become a driver of crowds at the festival, and have been a good indicator of seeing work before it grows like Phoebe Waller-Bridge's Fleabag. Winners are announced in three rounds over the course of the festival as The Scotsman's team of critics, led by the newspaper's chief theatre critic and chair of the awards Joyce McMillan, pack in seeing as many of the eligible shows as possible. According to the Fringe website, there are 291 registered shows tagged as new writing this festival.

For those interested in a look back at the Fringe Firsts' history and the shows that met acclaim at the festival ahead of launching on to other stages, there is a free photography exhibition on the south side of St. Andrew Square in New Town throughout the festival. It is titled The Fringe Firsts at 50.

The University of Edinburgh sponsors the Fringe First Awards.

 
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