Posts Tagged Edinburgh Festival 2025

Experience Edinburgh Fringe’s Bold ‘Ask A Stripper’

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Ask A Stripper: Pulling Back the G-String: 646 words, 3 minutes read time.

Some shows at the Edinburgh Fringe are one-off thrills. You see them, you laugh, you go home. Ask A Stripper isn’t like that. I first saw it on a converted bus—an intimate, cheeky, slightly chaotic setting that suited it perfectly. Now it’s in Dragonfly, an atmospheric cocktail bar just a short walk from the so-called “pubic triangle,” home to three of Edinburgh’s strip clubs, including the iconic Western and the Burke and Hare. That proximity isn’t just geographical—it’s thematic. You’re in the heart of the conversation before the show even begins.

Two female performers in colorful outfits pose for a promotional image. One holds a sign reading 'SEX WORK IS WORK!' while the other poses confidently by a pole.

This time the hosts were Stacey Clare, author of The Ethical Stripper, and Savannah DuVall, who brought her own sharp wit and warm presence to the mix. The format remains disarmingly simple: two strippers on stage, an audience with questions, and absolutely nothing off the table. I’ve seen this show multiple times over its five-Fringe run, and that’s the beauty—you can go again and again because the audience shapes it. No two nights are alike. This time, the questions centred on boundaries—where they’re set, how they’re enforced (and by whom)—and what makes a venue truly good to work at. That led to revealing stories about respect, safety, pay, and the fine line between “fun” and “exploitative.”

What Ask A Stripper does especially well is expose the transactional nature of sex work. Yes, there’s the obvious exchange of performance for money, but there’s a deeper layer—a psychological transaction. Customers often come seeking validation, fantasy, or even a kind of therapy disguised as entertainment. The labour is emotional as much as it is physical. It’s about creating an atmosphere, playing a role, and knowing exactly how to negotiate those unspoken contracts while keeping control of the interaction. Stacey’s insights into the psychology of how to control a group of potentially rowdy males was gold. That emotional labour is invisible to many outside the industry, yet it’s central to the job. Given that the job is transactional it’s no surprise that some strippers start to think about broader power relations in society.

And that’s why strippers need unions as Stacey Clare made clear. This is a job like any other in the sense that it involves management, workplace rules, payment systems, and power dynamics. It’s also a job like no other in the level of stigma, legal ambiguity, and exploitation it can attract if workers aren’t organised. The Sex Workers’ Union here in the UK has done sterling work in pushing for basic rights—safe working conditions, fair pay, protection from harassment—but they are up against deeply entrenched prejudice and politicians eager to regulate without listening. As a union man through and through, I recognise the same patterns I’ve seen in countless other industries: bosses maximising profit by keeping workers divided, insecure, and afraid to speak out. Organising is the antidote.

The mood in Dragonfly suited this conversation perfectly. Intimate with the hosts close, and £10 cocktails worth every penny helped create the sense that we weren’t just at a performance, but in an unfiltered, wide-ranging dialogue. The humour was sharp and plentiful—these strong, intelligent women can puncture awkwardness in a heartbeat—but the political undercurrent was unmistakable. This is about the realities of sex work: the rights, the risks, the compromises, and the pride. It’s also about the human side of an industry that too many only see in terms of titillation or scandal.

And yes, there’s nudity. This is Ask A Stripper, after all. If that, or frank sexual talk, makes you squeamish, then it’s not for you. But if you can handle honesty in its rawest form, you’ll leave with more than you came for—new perspectives, a few laughs, maybe a cocktail buzz and perhaps even a renewed sense of why empathy and solidarity matter.

Reviewed by Pat Harrington

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Angela Mackenzie’s Captivating Gospel Choir Performance

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377 words, 2 minutes read time.

Florida native Angela Mackenzie, now based in Stirling, has assembled a very accomplished fifty-voice gospel choir. Leading from her grand piano, Angela brings bubbly enthusiasm to the stage in the historic New Town Church. The acoustics in this elliptical building enhance the quality of the music.


Coming from a Presbyterian tradition, I especially enjoyed the choir’s a cappella rendition of the ‘Old One Hundredth’, All People that on Earth do Dwell. The Amazing Life Gospel Choir are very versatile; some songs sung in unison, others in harmony. Apart from the piano, the choir were accompanied at times by drums, a violinist, a cellist, an electric keyboard, and an upright bass. The deep sonorous sound of Amazing Grace played on a solo cello is more felt than heard. It reaches down to the core of your soul.


The audience (or was it a congregation?) lapped it up. During an interval, a pastor from a local church gave a message, ‘What do you want more of in your life?’

A vibrant group of singers from the Amazing Life Gospel Choir performing on stage, showcasing a diverse range of expressions and enthusiasm.


I was less impressed by Angela’s altar call and the manipulative use of music to proselytise ‘for Jesus’ with reference to the penitent thief who died on a cross beside him. This was irritating me but then the mood changed. Angela asked from the stage for requests for songs. We got the old Carter Family standard; Will the Circle be Unbroken? Then a voice came from the back, Yeshua. Angela looked puzzled. ‘How does that go?’ A couple of voices started singing. Beautiful unaccompanied singing filled the church.


Angela was impressed. She invited the singers to come to the front of the church. They were members of a visiting South African choir. They sang their song, Yeshua a cappella with impressive harmonisation. They stole the show.


The concert concluded with an exuberant medley of I’ll Fly Away and When the Saints Go Marching In where everyone was up, singing, dancing and clapping in time with the music. It was a fantastic gig, and a reminder that music can unite, music can inspire boundless joy and delight, but it can also manipulate the emotions. That might not be the Holy Spirit touching your heart, but something more psychological. Something to think about.


Reviewed by David Kerr

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Save the World with Burlesque: A Review of ‘Bombshell’

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Scarlett – a graduate in environmental science – inherited Club Fistfight, a Las Vegas nightclub, from her heel of a father. With her friends, Eliza and Jane, Scarlett hatches a plan to save the world, ‘to make global warning hot again’ by using burlesque to awaken the masses to the perils of climate change.

Three performers in colorful burlesque outfits pose on stage, holding a red and blue bowl, with a backdrop of shimmering black curtains and stage lighting.

As you might expect, it’s not a roaring success. One year on, the showgirls are giving their final performance. Scarlett reflects on what happened.

What follows is a witty, fun-filled romp through the past year as she recalls dealing with her daddy issues, unreliable and manipulative boyfriends, and some of their campaigns against overfishing in the oceans, the dairy industry, and a car show protest.

“BOMBSHELL is for anyone who’s heard the phrase ‘climate crisis’ on the news and thought, ‘How can they make this sexier?’” says Madison Mayer, the writer. Well, she’s done it. Her sparkling fast-paced script delights the audience. Alia Swan’s music keeps the action moving as the three performers, Madison, Alia, and Emory dance and sing all the parts.

Bombshell is a funny, sexy, enjoyable, yet thought-provoking attempt to address one of the major concerns of our day, the health of Mother Earth.

Reviewed by David Kerr

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