Guerilla artist Heather Marshall helped launch three weeks of online arts events called Army@TheVirtualFringe.

Among the highlights will be the online premiere of 10 SOLDIERS, a spectacular contemporary dance production, which will be followed with a panel discussion with guests including double Olympic gold medallist Colonel Dame Kelly Holmes.

There will also be live-from-home theatre performances, readings, workshops and discussions celebrating everything from theatre, film and dance to photography and music.

Army@TheVirtualFringe features more than 40 free events from 10 to 30 August. It replaces Army@TheFringe, a programme of live shows which takes place in an Edinburgh drill hall as part of the Edinburgh Fringe each August. 

It kicks off on Monday with a film shorts night with Royal Marine turned filmmaker Phil Spencer and a session with Corporal Rebecca Brown, who became the Army’s first female photographer of the Year in 2019.

On Wednesday, 12 August, there will be a chance for aspiring actors to pick up tips from Paisley-born Mark Rowley – famous for his role in TV historical drama Last Kingdom.

That evening there will be the chance to see 10 SOLDIERS by the Rosie Kay Dance Company – a production that so impressed Colonel Dame Kelly Holmes when she saw it live in Birmingham that she wanted to be part of the post-show discussion panel.

She said: “10 SOLDIERS was an incredible experience, the show is accurate, well observed and really captures the strength of the relationships between soldiers. 

“It is an impressive portrayal of military life that explores the highs and the lows for men, women and BAME soldiers in an honest and uncompromising way.”

Dame Kelly was raised on a Kent council estate, joined the Army at 18 and later won gold in the 800 metres and 1500 metres at the 2004 Athens Olympics and is an honorary colonel with the Royal Armoured Corps.

Heather Marshall, of Leith’s Creative Electric, is running a youth engagement arts activism project called Guerilla Art as part of Army@TheVirtualFringe. This will be used to create an online gallery.

Heather said: “This is the first time that we have had so many restrictions on our lives. As adults it’s hard but for young people it’s incredibly frustrating – they should be finding their freedom and using their voices.

“As part of Army@TheVirtualFringe I’ll be hosting workshops where families can work together to create their own pieces of guerrilla art to share their thoughts and hopes with the world.”  

Heather will also be sharing the film of her project My Auntie’s a Vandal, created with her 12-year-old godson Charlie (and supported by Imaginate and the International Children’s Festival) which exploresalternative methods of communication and enabled young people to have their voices heard. 

The event team is being led by Edinburgh producer Jordan Blackwood and Army Head of Arts Lieutenant Colonel Wendy Faux. 

Lieutenant Colonel Gordon Mackenzie, the Army’s Head of Engagement in Scotland who has been a driving force behind Army@TheFringe, added: “It’s four years since we opened a venue at Edinburgh’s Fringe to allow theatre to be a catalyst for conversations about who we are and the values important to us. 

“Despite coronavirus we have more partners and interest than ever, and our fully-packed virtual programme means we can support artists and maintain public interest while we prepare for a physical return in the future.”

Rosie Kay was brought up in Edinburgh but now lives in Birmingham which is home to her successful international dance company

Her show 5 SOLDIERS, which is the predecessor of the new show, was the headline production for the first ever Army@TheFringe in 2017.

  • See attached programme for the line-up or visit [email protected]
  • Army@TheVirtualFringe events are free but places need to be reserved in advance at [email protected].
  • Photos are being sent to news and picture desks, but a wider selection (including images by Rebecca Brown) is available here https://bit.ly/2XuqcYd

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Notes for editors

Picture by Mark Owens

About Army@TheFringe

  • Army@TheFringe was established to present a diverse programme of performances that tell stories of life in and out of uniform.
  • It normally takes place at Hepburn House, an historic Army drill hall in Edinburgh’s New Town, which offers a variety of performance spaces, a relaxed and comfortable Mess Bar plus an Army Tuckshop.
  • For full details see www.armyatthefringe.org

Shows from past years

Army@TheFringe has a track record of presenting bold, high quality, independently produced performance art. Highlights last year included:

  • Dead Equal: All-female opera performed by three world-class sopranos telling the forgotten true story of Flora Sandes, heroine of the Allied frontline in World War I.  
  • The Happiness Project: Queer theatre looking at the need for non-sexual physical contact in a digital age.  
  • Unicorns, Almost: Owen Sheers’ play about the poet Keith Douglas and his Faustian pact with war. Initially as an audio experience and then as a live performance.

The 2018 dance theatre production The Troth, from the Akademi, (★★★★★ Broadway Baby, ★★★★ Herald) won Herald Angel and Lustrum awards with its portrayal of the experiences of South Asian soldiers on the Western Front in World War I.

In 2017 5 Soldiers, from the Rosie Kay Dance Company, achieved huge critical acclaim with a string of ★★★★ and ★★★★★ reviews and went on to enjoy major national and international success.

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Twitter @ArmyatTheFringe

Website: www.Armyatthefringe.org

For media information about Army@TheFringe contact Matthew Shelley at SFPR on 07786704299 or [email protected]