Posts Tagged Peter Marchant

Night Owl Shows Announce Four Major UK Premieres for Their 10th Birthday at the Edinburgh Fringe 2026

To mark a decade of redefining the music‑theatre landscape, Night Owl Shows return to theSpaceUK with four brand‑new productions celebrating some of the most influential artists in pop history. From Bowie’s cosmic reinventions to Madonna’s cultural dominion, Phil Collins’ unlikely ascent to ABBA’s immaculate songcraft, this year’s programme promises a festival of stories, sound and sheer emotional voltage.


There are Fringe institutions, and then there are Fringe rituals — the things audiences build their Augusts around. Night Owl Shows have long crossed that threshold. Their blend of forensic musical storytelling, powerhouse musicianship and emotional intelligence has earned them a loyal following across continents. For their 10th birthday, they’re not just celebrating; they’re detonating a glitter bomb over the programme.

This August, at their spiritual home of theSpaceUK, Night Owl unveil four brand‑new UK premieres, each honouring a titan of modern music: Phil Collins, David Bowie, Madonna, and ABBA. It’s a line‑up that reads like a syllabus for the last half‑century of pop — and a reminder that Night Owl’s great gift is not imitation, but illumination. They don’t just perform the songs; they excavate the lives, the cultural weather, the seismic shifts that made those songs matter.

Below, we break down the four new productions — each one a world premiere or UK debut — and why they’re set to be among the most coveted tickets of Fringe 2026.


Both Sides: Phil Collins & Genesis Celebrated

Aug 7–16, 18–30 — 19:00 (50 mins)
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Phil Collins is often reduced to the meme, the drum fill, the soft‑rock shorthand. Night Owl’s new production insists on the full story: the drummer who stepped out from behind the kit and reshaped the sound of the 1980s.

Fronted by three‑time Adelaide Music Award winner Angus Munro, this show charts Collins’ ascent from Genesis stalwart to global solo force. Expect the emotional architecture of In the Air Tonight, the bruised romanticism of Against All Odds, the sheer pop exuberance of Sussudio, and the Genesis canon — Invisible Touch, That’s All, I Can’t Dance — reframed with fresh clarity.

Munro’s voice is a weapon, and paired with Night Owl’s trademark narrative spine, this becomes less a tribute and more a reckoning with Collins’ legacy: the craft, the vulnerability, the improbable stardom of a man who never set out to be front and centre.


The Bowie Story

Aug 7–30 — 16:50 (50 mins)
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There is no artist more mythologised — or more misunderstood — than David Bowie. Night Owl’s world‑premiere production approaches him not as a museum piece, but as a restless cultural engine whose ideas still shape the world we live in.

Led by Peter Marchant and an all‑star band, The Bowie Story traces the shapeshifter’s evolution through the songs that defined entire eras: Space Oddity, Life on Mars?, Heroes, Let’s Dance and beyond. But the show’s power lies in its dramaturgy — the way it threads Bowie’s reinventions through the political, sexual and aesthetic revolutions he helped catalyse.

Night Owl have always excelled at contextualising genius without embalming it. Here, they offer Bowie not as nostalgia, but as a live wire — a reminder that pop can be philosophy, theatre, provocation and solace all at once.


Material Girl: Madonna the Icon

Aug 7–29 — 17:55 (50 mins)
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To tell Madonna’s story is to tell the story of modern pop itself — ambition, reinvention, provocation, survival. Night Owl’s new production, starring Voice of the Fringe 2025 Maia Elsey, embraces that scale with a confidence befitting its subject.

Elsey, already a Fringe favourite, leads audiences through the eras: the downtown grit of Like a Virgin, the moral panic of Papa Don’t Preach, the spiritual electronica of Ray of Light, and the countless reinventions in between. Backed by a dynamite band, she captures not just the sound but the ferocity — the unapologetic self‑authorship that made Madonna the most successful female artist in history.

This is Madonna as cultural architect, as lightning rod, as blueprint. A world premiere that promises both spectacle and substance.


ABBA: The Journey

Aug 7–30 — 14:40 (50 mins)
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ABBA’s story is often told as glitter and Eurovision kitsch, but Night Owl’s world‑premiere production digs deeper: four musicians navigating fame, heartbreak and global adoration, crafting some of the most structurally perfect pop songs ever written.

From the early days to the Eurovision breakthrough, from the studio alchemy to the emotional undercurrents that shaped their later work, ABBA: The Journey reframes the band as both phenomenon and human story. Expect the euphoric highs — Dancing Queen, Mamma Mia, The Winner Takes It All — delivered with the musicianship Night Owl are known for, but also the narrative threads that reveal why these songs endure.

It’s a celebration, yes, but also a study in craft: how four voices and two marriages produced a catalogue that still defines joy for millions.


A Decade of Night Owl — and a Summer Worth Counting Down To

Ten years in, Night Owl Shows have become one of the Fringe’s most reliable sources of catharsis — productions that honour the artists we love while interrogating the worlds that shaped them. This year’s quartet feels like a culmination: four icons, four seismic stories, four chances to remember why live music‑theatre can still feel like revelation.

Tickets are already moving fast across theSpaceUK and official Fringe retailers. If you’re planning your August, start your countdown now. Night Owl’s 10th birthday looks set to be the summer’s defining soundtrack.

By Pat Harrington

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The Legend of Queen: Capturing Freddie Mercury’s Spirit at the Fringe

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The Legend of Queen – Edinburgh Fringe 2025

For me, Queen has never just been a band. Their music was part of the fabric of my upbringing, something I shared with my late mother, who loved them as much as I do. So when The Legend of Queen was announced for this year’s Fringe, I knew I had to be there. It wasn’t simply about nostalgia—it was about measuring whether this show could capture even a fraction of what made Queen so extraordinary. My favourite track, Killer Queen, sums up their appeal: clever, witty lyrics, bound to a melody that still sparkles fifty years on. But behind that style was Freddie Mercury, a frontman whose vocal range and theatricality were unmatched. He sang like an opera star, commanding power one moment and tenderness the next. Any tribute, to succeed, has to reckon with that legacy.

A performer singing passionately on stage, wearing a red jacket with white details, surrounded by band members playing instruments in a vibrant concert setting, with a backdrop featuring 'The Legend of Queen' on the screen.
Peter Marchant radiated charisma

Peter Marchant, leading the Night Owl Band, stepped into that daunting role and didn’t disappoint. His voice carried the weight of expectation and delivered—clear, strong, flexible enough to soar and twist across the songs without ever straining. But just as important, he radiated charisma. Freddie was never only about technique; he was about presence, energy, and generosity to his audience. Marchant channelled that same generosity. He didn’t mimic Mercury so much as embody a spirit of joy in performance. The Night Owl Band were tight and versatile, taking us on a journey through Queen’s different musical phases—from the raw power of early rock, through their disco-inflected experiments, to the anthems that can still fill a stadium.

What struck me most was the atmosphere in the room. I’ve attended other Night Owl shows at the Fringe and enjoyed them, but the crowd here was far more alive. It was as if Queen’s music unlocked something in everyone. People were singing at the top of their lungs, clapping in time, stomping their feet, and before long the floor was shaking with dancing. I joined in too—I couldn’t help it. It was infectious. Looking around, I noticed the mix of people: older fans reliving their youth, teenagers discovering the music as if it were brand new, families sharing a common soundtrack. That, to me, is Queen’s true legacy. They never belonged to a single time or generation. Their songs still speak across age and background, uniting people in pure, unguarded enjoyment.

There’s also something to be said about Queen’s cultural role. At a time when rock was often macho and narrow, Freddie Mercury embodied flamboyance and theatricality. He brought camp, opera, and drama into the mainstream, unapologetically. Songs like Radio Gaga or Bohemian Rhapsody didn’t just push musical boundaries; they expanded ideas of what performance could be. Seeing a tribute show in 2025 that can still spark such joy suggests that Queen’s boldness remains relevant. In a festival full of new writing and experimental theatre, The Legend of Queen reminds us that art also survives by being passed on, reinterpreted, and celebrated anew.

By the end of the night, I felt both exhilarated and oddly moved. I had gone in with scepticism—could anyone really take on Mercury’s voice?—and left convinced that while no one can ever replace Freddie, the spirit of his music can still be shared in ways that feel vital and alive. Marchant and his band offered not just a tribute, but a communal act of remembrance and renewal. My mother would have loved it. And I walked out into the Edinburgh night with our favourite songs in my head, grateful that some legends never fade.

Reviewed by Pat Harrington

More information and tickets here

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