Cross Rhythms journo and Edinburgh resident Tom Lennie went to a wide range of events at this year's EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE
It's the biggest Arts Festival on the planet. And with 2,050 different shows, performed in 250 venues over just three weeks, the 61st Edinburgh Festival Fringe became the largest to date. The event has in fact doubled in size in the past five years and there is now concern that it has become just TOO big, that a city as small as Edinburgh just can't cope with the vast influx of visitors (and 18,600 performers) from all around the globe, and that, with so many shows on at the same time, it's just not possible for even all the award-winning events to be sellouts. Still, it is estimated that well over 1.5 million tickets were sold over the course of these weeks, so that, all things included, tens of millions of pounds were generated for the Edinburgh and Scottish economy.
I'm told that 10 or 15 years ago any Festival event centring on
anything religious was pretty much a rarity. World events seem to have
changed all that. Like last year's Festival, but not, perhaps as
noticeably so, a prominent theme in this year's Fringe was religion.
You could attend a one-hour Buddhist tutorial at the Edinburgh
Buddhist Centre. Or partake of the beauty of the Yiddish musical
tradition from the Yiddish Song Project at 'The Lot'. There was even a
mini Islam Festival all of its own, consisting of talks, performances
and an Arabic calligraphy workshop in Edinburgh's Central Mosque.
Most religious-themed events, however, honed in on
Christianity, be they devoted to enjoying its rich and unsurpassable
musical heritage, honestly questioning its teachings and authority,
poking fun at it, or in some cases, heaping showers of mocking
contempt at it. Some such events were pretty unique and hard to
categorise. One of the most original was 'Soulgait', an organised walk
through the Old Toun with actor/pastor Ian Gemmell
and a troupe of strolling players and musicians, as they interacted
with the Psalms in a combination of drama, comedy, Scottish history
and music. And though I failed to turn up for 'Confessions' before an
experienced Catholic priest (this was a scheduled Festival event!), I
did make it to the 'Rest For Your Soul' hour in the
same St Patrick's venue, an hour of peaceful contemplation and sung
chants. This really was refreshing to body, mind and spirit amidst the
hustle-bustle of the Festival, and, despite the utter quiet both
inside and outside the church, the building was located less than a
minute's walk from the noisy High Street, centre of Festival activity.
On the Festival's children's menu were a number of Bible-based plays
('Fish 'n' Ships' from the Red Balloon Theatre Co;
'Terrific Tales From The Miracle Book' from Rhema Theatre
Company), as well as a creative two-day family celebration in
the small and little-known George V Park.
In the field of
classical and choral music one had the option of attending numerous
Christian-based repertoires, ranging from organ recitals (free entry!)
to full orchestral productions. I went to see the Luduis
Baroque Chamber Orchestra & Choir present a 10th
anniversary concert of Bach's famous 'B Minor Mass' in the beautiful
old Canongate Kirk situated near the foot of the Royal Mile. A
Lutheran, Bach was of course a deeply spiritual man and this work,
arguably his most ambitious and comprehensive, resounds with spiritual
feeling as it relates the message and passion of Christ. The five
soloists were in particularly sharp form, and apart from Libby
Crabtree's "Laudamaus Te" which dances with vivacity, the best section
for me had to be the final Part, with its magical "Agnes Dei" sung by
Michael Chance, and the resplendent "Osanna In Excelsis" chorus (well
I do love a good praise song and this one is about as authentically
worshipful and God-exalting as you can get in classical music).
Almost immediately following this two-hour concert I nipped down
Carrubbers Close to Old Saint Paul's, a magnificent 300-year old
Episcopal Church, to hear a one-night only performance of 'Choral
Classics by Candlelight' performed by St Andrew
Camerata, a 20-piece mixed Edinburgh-based choir. The 15
pieces chosen comprised a wonderfully diverse selection of popular
tunes (eg, from Elgar and Mozart), as well as several interesting
lesser-knowns. I was personally impressed with a religious piece from
Anton Bruckner, an Austrian composer and devout Catholic. Once again
the concert finished on a note of high praise - with a serving of
Handel's "Hallelujah Chorus".
A number of years ago Room
Three Records organised a little Christian Music Festival within the
parameters of the mammoth Fringe, attracting the likes of Jennifer
Knapp and Ian White to its platform. Perhaps it all got lost amidst
the sheer volume of shows on offer, for this mini music feast hasn't
endured over the years. Much the pity. Hence, unfortunately, there was
no big name Christian pop/rock/singer/songwriter performing at this
year's Festival. The 'Shine At The Lot' sessions, featuring a bunch of
international acoustic artists, did appear to have been at least
partly faith-based, but I didn't know any of the names -
Darren Thornberry, Aria Souder, Christel Meijer, Chris
Brown and Denver Jacobs - and was unable to
get to see them.
What we did get, however, was another blast from the Grammy
Award winning Soweto Gospel Choir, returning to the
Fringe with the world premiere of their exhilarating new show,
'African Spirit'. We were also treated to the 'Gospel
According To Hollywood', a batch of popular gospel songs
taken from major Hollywood films. A mini-version of a show first aired
in Edinburgh's Usher Hall in 2004, this event included a full rock
gospel choir draped in sky-blue silk robes, and a six-piece rock band
- all part of the 'Exile' team, a highly-trained
choir, band and orchestra, headed by Colin Peckham, who perform
Christian music throughout Britain and abroad. The sound was loud,
joyous and necessarily OTT - and included songs from The Blues
Brothers, O Brother Where Art Thou and The Preacher's Wife. The energy
that exuded from the team was quite infectious and the three soloists
were masterful in delivery, as too was the band - Luke Wilson's
agility on drums being particularly impressive. Got to say, though,
the songs picked weren't the most appealing of gospel numbers, and my
favourite of all came right at the end - in form of the heart-stirring
"Amazing Grace", offered as an encore and the only song to get the
audience vocally enthused.
A couple of churches in
prominent city centre positions took advantage of the throngs passing
their doors by opening them up for a drop-in coffee house experience.
Over six nights, the Point Cafe in Charlotte Baptist Chapel served
tea, coffee, snacks and live music from Livid, which
consists of siblings David and Linda Harrison. They played a selection
of acoustic music, ranging from Metallica to CCM, some of their own
stuff being part of the mix. I found them a talented duo with a
relaxing sound and a relevant message. A similar "experience" could be
had in the larger Carrubbers Church, right on the High Street itself.
For a long time Carrubbers has attracted believers with strong musical
gifting, and many of these took to stage over two full weeks to sing
gospel, soul and contemporary worship to anyone who fancied a breather
between main shows. My fave among this crop of musicians was
Bob David Bell, a local folky singer/songwriter with
a fine, unique voice and a couple of discs to his credit. The cafes
are of course operated predominantly as a form of outreach, and, added
to these, here and there throughout the city centre, you would come
across small church groups doing some form of musical or theatrical
outreach, with the hope of arresting the attention of passers by. The
motive is obvious - who needs to travel to the nations to preach the
Gospel, when, for three weeks each August, the nations seem to
converge en masse on Scotland's capital. Still, was it any wonder that
next to no-one stopped to hear the plain and predictable, artless
preaching that I saw being presented by the Tron, when, just 10 yards
either side along the 'Mile someone was doing outrageous acrobatics
from a tightrope and someone else was engaged in a most graceful
Flamenco dance.
As well as music, a number of
theatre productions took biblical characters and stories, or the
Christian faith in general, as a theme. Lance Pierson
brought Jesus' message close to his audience in his powerful one-man
show, 'Mark's Gospel'. Elsewhere, Linda Marlowe's
'Believe' drew on the stories of four women in the
Old Testament, while 'Options Of Life' aired five
parables from the same Scriptures, thoughtfully interpreted by a
Polish Professor/philosopher, using exquisite sculptures as props and
a backdrop of live piano. On top of all this, there were two
productions of the musical 'Godspell' as well as a
recurring lunchtime staging of 'Jesus Christ
Superstar'.
Saltmine Creative Arts aired two productions
at the Festival - the comedy play 'Three Wise Men And A
Baby' and 'The Cross And The Switchblade'.
The first of these, most unseasonable for mid-August(!), was a
humorous fusion of drama, dance and music, and, I've got toy, was well
performed and a good clean laugh. What took me by surprise was that,
amidst the fun and frolics, there were some quite poignant and moving
moments. The free mince pies (honest!) weren't to be turned down
either. The stage show of David Wilkerson's classic was a different
ballgame altogether. Though the stark stage favoured the 1950's New
York setting of the play, complete with a vandalised car and
scaffolding, an evangelical church was hardly the most convincing
place (nor an evangelical audience and cast the most likely people) to
portray a violent gang headed by "one of the most feared figures in
the city's underworld" in or to. Still, the two hour+ performance was
appreciated and applauded by many.
Unfortunately, and to
my annoyance, I overlooked a one-woman presentation by Dominican nun
Nancy Murray on the life of Catherine of Siena.
Indeed I only found out about it after it had stopped showing (with
over 2,000 separate shows, you're bound to miss some!). Thankfully I
didn't overlook 'Miracle In Rwanda', a play based on
the genocide in 1994's Rwandan civil war, and the faith of one woman,
Immaculee Ilibagiza, who hid from her Hutu aggressors along with seven
other women for 91 days in a pokey little toilet. A friend of
Immaculee's played all 10 diverse characters in the play, which was
performed, for added effect, in an equally pokey side room in the
Gilded Balloon, which was so hot and stuffy that the audience was
issued with folding oriental fans as they entered. The striking point
of the story was that though Immaculee lost her family in the war, she
eventually found herself able, through her strong faith in God, to
forgive her family's killers.
Meanwhile, at least four shows tackled the thorny subject of faith and
homosexuality. While the play 'Corpus Christi' had as
its controversial and dubious central character a gay Jesus, the
below-mentioned 'Cash In Christ' made an assault on ex-gay
ministries, suggesting their programmes were unnecessary and that many
who embarked on them ended up feeling more defeated and screwed-up
than when they started. More-open mindedly, 'Leave A
Message' theatrically examined the role of Christianity
amongst today's youth. The series of sketches had as their topics a
minister's son who can't face telling his dad he's gay, a soldier in
Iraq who's "fighting for God" and a girl who gets converted and loses
her boyfriend as a result. The sketches didn't contain a morale per se
but they did ask some pertinent questions. Then there's the
not-to-be-forgotten Festival Of Spirituality And
Peace in the unashamedly ecumenical St John's Church, which
featured a talk on being 'Godly and Gay' by the British Rabbi, Lionel
Blue. The programme in this venue was, indeed, absorbing and
wide-ranging, and, though strictly non-evangelical, tackled numerous
issues that should interest all believers. Included on the bill was a
study of modern slavery in the UK, essays on the lives of William
Wilberforce and C S Lewis, testimonies from survivors of torture and a
workshop in learning the Lord's Prayer in Aramaic!
Some
shows did a tongue-in-cheek take on biblical texts, eg, 'For God's
Sake' picks on the creation story for some melarky, while 'Original
Sin' finds God bored with run-of-the-mill sins and sends his angels
a-searching the earth for more novel misdeeds. 'God's Pottery Saves
The World' is different only in that the two performers are themselves
Christians, humorously taking on the roles of Jeremiah and Gideon in a
pertinent satire.
There were a few shows, however, that,
though taking advantage of the appeal of humour, went way beyond
gentle satire and mickey-taking. 'Cash In Christ' is
a spoof-take of the wackier side of TV evangelism shows, and featured
Bob and Fanny Comfort (Johny Berliner and Van Badham) as pastors of
the Sunrise Fellowship. Initially I was a tad uptight, concerned that
both my own beliefs and the name of Christ might be offended. But for
the first half of the show I saw nothing that I hadn't already seen on
some of the God channels, as the duo tore right through the hypocrisy,
sham and blatant manipulation that so often saturates the more
flamboyant and extreme charismatic churches/TV programmes. The way
they mis-quoted Scripture to show that Jesus was rich and wants us to
be rich too, their constant appeals for BIG donations and their
simplistic "words of knowledge" - "there's someone watching who's got
a headache" - I found all too sickeningly familiar. In fact I almost
felt I was sitting in the audience of a real live Christian Telethon
event. But as the show progressed I became more uneasy, as Berliner
and Badham took a swipe at just about everything evangelical - Youth
ministries, Christian rock music, the ex-gay ministry, etc. It all
became utterly farcical at the end when they sang of Christians
seeking to "kill the Buddhists and the Jews". The "service" ended with
an onscreen fact sheet warning viewers of the "alarming" growth of
evangelical churches worldwide, while a hardcopy fact sheet was handed
out to everyone, quoting the sources for some of the show's content. I
managed to secure a half-hour chat with Badham. She said she was a
Catholic from Australia who had become increasingly alarmed at the
inroads evangelicalism was making among Catholics in that nation. Much
of the material for the show was taken directly from Hillsong Church
services (Sydney and London) and Ron Luce's Teen Mania ministry.
Nevertheless, although it had involved several months of serious
research, there was far too much factual errency and personal bias for
me to commend it.
A more professional performance came from Rick Miller in his
show 'Bigger Than Jesus'. Billed as being just as
controversial as 'Cash In Christ', I was actually refused a Press
ticket when I phoned up c/o Cross Rhythms (I already had a Press
Pass). After inquiring as to what Cross Rhythms stood for (they
checked the website), and no doubt aware that I would not take a
positive view of the show, I was informed that 'Bigger Than Jesus' was
unlikely to be of interest to CR readers and I was offered a ticket to
see an Eagles tribute band instead! Having been a fan of the Eagles
back in the '70s, and determined I would make it to 'Bigger Than
Jesus' another night, I took up their offer. . .and so enjoyed a
thoroughly entertaining hour+ watching the six-piece Dutch
Eagles magnificently render most of the American giants'
greatest hits.
Sure enough, I secured entry to the Rick
Miller show a few nights later. Visually, it made for stunning
viewing. I was spellbound as Miller, co-writer and sole actor in the
show, intertwined drama (he's previously played Jesus in Godspell and
JC Superstar), art, suspended camera effects and subtle wit into a
flowing narrative. Thematically, Miller explored how "a small-town
Jewish rabbi, who died ignobly and largely in obscurity 2,000 years
ago, has become such a phenomenon - with millions worshipping him as
God and wars carried out in his name". Evangelicals have walked out of
the show in offence. Atheists have been equally annoyed that it wasn't
offensive enough. But as Miller has stated in numerous interviews, and
as he also shared with me at the close of his 25th and final Festival
performance, he doesn't see his show as anti-Christian at all
(although he does have a gripe against aspects of evangelical
fundamentalism and Catholicism, the tradition he himself was brought
up in). Indeed, as other reviewers have already observed, one cannot
help but sense an uncanny feeling of reverence and spiritual depth as
the show artfully progresses. Personally I found it made a challenging
yet inspiring impact. I in turn challenged Miller on some of its more
controversial or inaccurate points (eg, that Christians hate Jews, the
non-existence of sin, only the fourth Gospel sees Jesus as Son of
God), and also asked him if he would dare to attack Islam in the same
way he did Christianity. "No", replied Miller candidly, "I don't want
my head to get blown off!"
A great, well-balanced read - thanks for the legwork Tom!