Summerhall 2026: Seven First Signals From a Venue That Refuses to Stand Still

There’s a particular electricity to a Summerhall announcement — that sense of a building already humming with ghosts of festivals past, now cracking its knuckles for the next round. With the first seven shows of its 2026 Edinburgh Festival Fringe programme now on sale, the venue once again stakes its claim as the city’s home of the unruly, the searching, the politically alive. What emerges from this first wave is a portrait of a programme thinking internationally, listening carefully, and refusing to let the world’s fractures pass without artistic interrogation.

Below, the early contours of a festival season that already feels like it has something urgent to say.


Two dancers performing a duet on stage, gracefully interacting under colorful lighting.

Tether 인연 — Wonder Fools & Theatre SAN

Scotland ↔ South Korea | Theatre, music, memory

Wonder Fools have long been one of Scotland’s most emotionally literate companies, and their collaboration with South Korea’s Theatre SAN feels like a natural evolution of their practice: expansive, musical, and attentive to the quiet ways history lodges itself in the body.
Tether 인연 spans sixty years and three generations, stitching together folk songs, love letters and war stories into a cross‑continental meditation on the threads that bind people — and nations — long after the headlines fade. It promises the warmth of a ceilidh, the intimacy of a whispered confession, and the political charge of two cultures meeting on equal footing.


As Far As We Know

England | Prophetic storytelling, contemporary dread

YESYESNONO return to Summerhall with As Far As We Know, a new piece that feels eerily attuned to the moment we’re living through. Writer‑performer Sam Ward has always been a cartographer of contemporary unease, and here he guides audiences through a world that keeps glitching: holes opening in the ground, prices rising without logic, bubbles swelling and bursting in endless cycles. It’s a hallucinogenic road‑trip through a landscape where the maps no longer match the territory.

A sign for '99 Cents Only Stores' under a clear blue sky, surrounded by palm trees.

Ward’s storytelling is intimate and conspiratorial, the kind that makes you feel as though you’re being entrusted with something fragile. He threads together cartographers, psychics, crashes and anomalies into a portrait of a society struggling to make sense of itself. The humour is dry, the melancholy is earned, and the political charge hums just beneath the surface without ever tipping into didacticism.

What emerges is a quietly radical act of orientation: a show about trying to understand what’s going wrong in a world that refuses to be understood. YESYESNONO once again offer theatre as a shared act of reckoning — a reminder that even when the ground is shifting, we can still choose to look at it together.

Three dancers in minimal attire striking dynamic poses on a stage with a gray backdrop.

GOOD ENOUGH? — HIMHERANDIT

Denmark | Queer physical theatre, joyful resistance

HIMHERANDIT return with a piece that feels like a rallying cry wrapped in glitter and sweat. GOOD ENOUGH? celebrates imperfection, queer joy and the courage required to take up space in a world that still polices bodies and narratives.
Their work is always kinetic, always emotionally forthright, and here they lean into the boisterous, the awkward, the unapologetic. It’s a show about reclaiming your story — not quietly, but loudly, with a grin.


Tomatoes Tried to Kill Me but Banjos Saved My Life — Keith Alessi

A man playing a banjo while wearing a cap, focused on his instrument in a dimly lit setting.

USA | Storytelling, music, resilience

Some shows become Fringe folklore, and Keith Alessi’s is one of them. Returning for a fourth consecutive year after three sell‑out runs, this warm, banjo‑laced memoir of illness, survival and artistic salvation has become a kind of communal ritual.
Alessi’s generosity is not metaphorical: through donations and artist fees, he has raised over $1.2m for charities worldwide, and this year’s proceeds support Summerhall Arts itself. It’s rare to see a show that radiates this much heart without slipping into sentimentality; rarer still to see one that changes lives offstage as well as on.


SAND — Kook Ensemble

A man in a light-colored shirt appears to be releasing a cloud of sand from his hand, with a focused expression, against a dark background.

England | Circus theatre, dementia, coastal memory

Kook Ensemble’s SAND is a non‑verbal circus theatre piece set against the dramatic Devon coastline, exploring the lives of people living with dementia.
There’s something quietly radical about using acrobatics — a form associated with strength, balance and control — to illuminate a condition defined by fragility and disorientation. The company’s meticulous storytelling promises a work that is both tender and unflinching, a reminder that memory is not just a cognitive function but a landscape we inhabit together.


PUTTANA — Beatrice Festi

A composite image featuring a woman in three poses. On the left, she wears a wolf mask and headphones, in the center she appears contemplative, and on the right, she holds a microphone while wearing a lace bodysuit.

Italy | Immersive solo performance, body politics

Fringe debutant Beatrice Festi arrives with a piece that refuses to look away from the ways society commodifies the body. PUTTANA is bold, uncomfortable, and deliberately confrontational — a solo performance in which one actress voices five characters through a fusion of music and text.
It’s a work that asks what we’ve normalised, what we’ve excused, and what we’ve allowed to be taken from us. Expect a show that leaves the air charged.


LANDSFRAU — Mariann Yar

A male and female dancer performing together on stage under colorful lighting.

Afghanistan / Diaspora | Feminist storytelling, counter‑archive

Mariann Yar’s LANDSFRAU moves between 9/11 and 2021, dismantling the Western gaze on Afghanistan and building a counter‑archive from song, dance and memory.
This is diasporic storytelling at its most intimate: a reckoning with inherited guilt, privilege, distance and longing. Yar’s work promises a feminist perspective that refuses simplification, offering instead a textured portrait of a life shaped by war yet not defined by it.


A Programme Already Speaking in Many Tongues

This first announcement — with more expected — signals a Summerhall season rooted in internationalism, political clarity and artistic risk. These are works concerned with memory, identity, and the stories we inherit or resist. They ask who gets to speak, who gets to be seen, and how we might hold each other through the fractures.

If this is only the beginning, August at Summerhall looks set to be a month of boldness, beauty and necessary discomfort — exactly what the Fringe should be.

More information on the shows here

By Pat Harrington

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