Edinburgh Fringe Festival Street Performers 2023 look back.
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00:00 Edinburgh's Fringe Festival came to an end this week.
00:04 A four week event that saw nearly 2.5 million tickets sold
00:08 and bringing in audiences from approximately 170 countries.
00:12 But alongside the 288 festival venues, the largest performing arts festival in the world
00:17 also welcomed nearly 500 street performers, buskers and street artists
00:21 as part of the Fringe Street events.
00:27 Spread across Edinburgh from 11.15am till 7pm
00:31 it's the street performances that play such an important role
00:34 in creating a festival atmosphere around Scotland's capital.
00:38 In this video we look back at this year's Fringe Festival
00:42 and meet some of the performers who travelled to Edinburgh this year.
00:46 For the artists, each morning begins outside St Giles Cathedral on the Royal Mile
00:51 where they meet at 10am to find out their schedule for the day.
00:55 So the way it works, you have to register to be a performer at the Fringe
01:00 and then when we arrive we get a little lanyard which has got our name on it
01:05 and a little bit to say that we paid for the storage where we can keep all our stuff.
01:08 And then every morning at 10am we all come here and we put all of our lanyards into a big hat essentially
01:16 and then there's a sheet with all of the different pitches and all the different times available on them
01:20 and basically it's first come first served.
01:22 So when your name comes out of the hat you get to then pick the show that you then want to do.
01:26 So it means that from day to day there's ambiguity
01:29 so you don't necessarily know what you're going to be doing the next day.
01:31 We found it's the fairest way to make sure that it's random and that everybody gets the same treatment.
01:38 So we chose to make it as fair as possible.
01:40 I do physical comedy and circus, yeah, and a lot of improvisation.
01:44 It's kind of a fun time to be here as well with all the other performers, we're all joking around always.
01:51 It's a great little community.
01:53 I would say maybe the West Parliament's good for me for the focus
01:56 because sometimes I can get a bit unfocused and I play a clown.
02:01 [Laughs]
02:04 And yeah, so that's a good spot for me.
02:07 Hunter Square not so much.
02:09 I tried it yesterday and there's lots going on.
02:12 I do a lot of improvisation so I get quite distracted.
02:14 The mid-high street for a lot of the performers, they do like...
02:21 I'm so sorry.
02:23 It's playing up.
02:25 I'm usually pretty good at this, getting a bit distracted.
02:29 So today I lucked out, man.
02:31 So I got 5.15 in West Parliament today.
02:34 So yeah, so I'm buzzing.
02:36 It's usually a little bit quieter then but I kind of like that
02:39 because then when the people that are there, they're there with me.
02:42 So yeah, I'm looking forward to it.
02:44 We're like one big family essentially and a lot of the time
02:47 we'll be on a similar circuit around the world and work in similar festivals.
02:51 But it is a really supportive, amazing group.
02:54 And we're kind of...
02:56 A lot of countries in the world are represented here.
02:58 Do you know what I mean? There's a lot of diversity.
03:00 And some of the folks here have been doing this for years.
03:02 So to be able to tap into what works or talking about routines
03:06 or different ideas for shows.
03:08 It's just a massive melting pot of creativity.
03:12 It's just like, yeah, it's a joy.
03:14 It's a great thing to get up for in the morning.
03:16 I'm a whipcracker mostly, a juggler sometimes,
03:31 and a comedian as well here and there.
03:36 I want to hear everybody clapping, everybody cheering.
03:39 If you have a little baby, toss it in the air.
03:42 My final two stunts are up next.
03:45 Let's make this one loud. Let's make it last.
03:48 On the count of three, let's make it count.
03:50 It's good. It's good energy.
03:52 Your friends from all over the world are here.
03:54 That's what I come for.
03:55 The camaraderie of seeing all the different artists
03:58 from all parts of the world.
04:00 It's still early, but for me it just takes me a minute
04:03 to get used to the different crowds,
04:06 everything that's happening all at once.
04:09 But it's good.
04:10 This is my second time.
04:27 I think people are very kind,
04:32 and have a very big energy.
04:34 I want to come here every year.
04:37 If I can use fire, I do a fire show.
04:45 It's very original.
04:47 I use what's called rope darts.
04:50 When I can't use fire, I do a circus stunt.
04:54 It's a pipe and a roller board,
04:58 and a juggling knife.
05:00 My performance career is now 12 years.
05:04 But when I started the English show,
05:10 it was in 2019.
05:15 So the English show is four years, or three years.
05:21 I'm going to help you.
05:23 I've been coming to the Edinburgh Festival
05:28 for a little over five years.
05:31 But mostly it was just to see shows before.
05:34 I started being a street performer just before COVID hit.
05:38 That's when I got started,
05:39 and then COVID put a little bit of a dent in that.
05:41 It's only in the last year that I've really focused on it.
05:44 I always did acting in school.
05:46 I really enjoyed that.
05:47 I used to work as a tour guide.
05:49 I feel like I've always been a performer at heart.
05:51 It's absolutely magic, honestly.
05:54 It's the biggest arts and culture festival in the world.
05:57 As a performer, generally, you travel quite a lot.
05:59 So it can be lonely at times.
06:01 Whereas the Edinburgh Fringe is this amazing thing
06:03 because all these people who do the same sort of profession as you
06:06 are all in the one place, all supporting each other.
06:08 It's a wonderful community,
06:10 and the audiences are the best in the world.
06:12 You've just got the best friends in the world.
06:14 It's really like nothing else.
06:16 When you're doing dangerous things,
06:17 I think it's important to know what you're doing
06:19 and make sure that you're doing them safely.
06:21 But I do have a first aid certificate.
06:23 Yeah, this is the first time.
06:36 I've been a performer for 15 years,
06:38 but I've always wanted to come here,
06:40 but I've always postponed.
06:41 But this year, I said, "You know what?
06:43 Let me make the effort and come."
06:44 So yeah, it's the first time.
06:45 Does it meet your expectations?
06:47 How's it been so far, even up to earlier days?
06:49 It's been okay.
06:50 And I think because of the lack of funding,
06:52 it's not as big as it used to be.
06:55 That's what I heard.
06:56 So I'm not sure if this is what I expected
07:00 because, I mean, this is the kind of crowds I get in London.
07:02 I was expecting a much bigger crowd,
07:04 but I think maybe the publicity was not as much
07:07 as it used to be in previous years.
07:09 Yeah.
07:10 I use physical comedy in my facial expressions
07:21 and my imagination.
07:23 Improvisation as well.
07:25 I was a true actor.
07:28 Correct, yeah. I act as well.
07:30 Thank you so much.
07:34 Hello, everybody!
07:36 My name is Dina Perilou.
07:38 And it's an absolute honor to be here with you.
07:44 It's extremely exciting and extremely challenging.
07:47 It's like the best school I've ever done.
07:49 I'm personally a dance student.
07:52 But when I came here for the first time last year,
07:56 after my first day, I felt like I learned more
07:59 than the three years of university
08:01 because you're immediately in contact with audience response,
08:06 with stage challenges,
08:09 and you have an immediate response on the work you've done,
08:13 which is what matters as an artist.
08:15 I definitely like the way children listen to stories
08:20 and the language we use to tell stories to children.
08:23 But I don't see my show and my art
08:26 to be entirely only addressed to children.
08:29 I like to speak to adults.
08:31 I like adults that like the children's language
08:34 and the children's playfulness.
08:36 And I really enjoy when there's teenagers and adults at my shows.
08:40 It turns out so well, actually.
08:42 I hope to keep doing a fusion of dance, clown, and puppetry.
08:57 Ten years ago, I went around the world.
09:01 I was busking around the world, touring, and finished.
09:06 But then I didn't go to Ejinbara.
09:11 So I want to go to Ejinbara.
09:14 It's a big festival, so it's my dream.
09:17 So I want to go in here now. Come.
09:20 [music]
09:26 Here we go!
09:27 [music]
09:30 People smile, and so, yeah, very kind.
09:34 And so, Japan and Ejinbara are so different.
09:38 And so, because Ejinbara is a busking culture,
09:42 Japan is not a busking culture.
09:45 And so, yeah, I love it here. I love it.
09:50 [music]
09:53 I've probably come up to the Fringe at least four or five times,
09:57 kind of spanning from probably about seven, eight years ago.
10:00 I think it was probably the first one.
10:02 And my show was very different back then.
10:04 I kind of used to do chainsaws and a lot of the dangerous stuff.
10:08 And then just over the years, I got some mentoring
10:11 from an amazing performer here, Herbie Treehead,
10:13 who's been coming up here. I think he's done 37 Fringes.
10:17 And this is just one of the most incredible festivals in the world
10:20 to come and see so many and learn from so many incredible different acts
10:23 from all over the place.
10:25 And Herbie said to me that I should start working nonverbal.
10:30 So now in my show, I don't speak.
10:32 The way I describe it, it's a bit like Mr. Bean with tricks, you know?
10:35 But what's really lovely about it is when I look up and look at my crowd,
10:39 everybody's there because I'm not taking the mickey out of anyone.
10:42 I'm not using a language that people don't understand.
10:45 So I get a really diverse audience, which is the really fun thing to do,
10:48 from little tiny kids all the way up to OAPs and stuff, you know?
10:51 So it's really fun.
10:53 My favourite, you know, the finale tricks, my favourite trick I've ever made
10:57 because the toothbrush going into carpets got a definite end, you know?
11:00 It's like a ball hitting the back of the net, you know?
11:02 So, yeah, it's really fun.
11:04 I've been to, yeah, lots of other festivals all over the country.
11:13 There's none, nothing quite like it.
11:15 We help each other out, and, you know, the other circus acts
11:18 that are in other places will be doing venues, and, you know, we're all,
11:21 "Oh, no, my juggling clubs are broken. Oh, someone, someone can borrow it.
11:24 "Oh, yeah, oh, my speaker didn't charge. Can I borrow someone?"
11:27 It's like, yeah, of course, you know, everyone's kind of like really there
11:30 to help each other, you know? So it's a really special month. It really is, yeah.
11:39 Scottish people are so friendly and welcoming, and being up here is amazing.
11:42 You know, there's not many councils that would be that supportive
11:46 and allow this to keep happening, so please, let's keep street art happening.
11:49 Let's keep it all going because, you know, without this, you know, yeah,
11:53 like, this is what life's all about, all coming together
11:55 and showing off everybody's differences and having a great time, you know?