
Fringe 2025 – Fuselage ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
For Annie Lareau the answer to that is no. The friends she lost in what remains the deadliest terrorist attack in UK history were not just names and numbers; she wants to remember them as the people who were, and still are, so important to her.
Annie is now an acclaimed actor. Fuselage is her story, but it is also the story of all of her friends who died in that attack. By focusing not on their deaths but on their young, vital, exuberant lives, Annie has created perhaps the most moving piece of theatre you will see in this year's Fringe.
On the night of 21 December 1988 Pan Am flight 103 exploded over the small Scottish town of Lockerbie. The flight had left Heathrow less than an hour before, heading for New York, two of the stops on the route from Frankfurt to Detroit. Many of its passengers were students from Syracuse University, in London on a Study Abroad programme and now returning home to spend Christmas with their families.
There were no survivors of the crash. Eleven Lockerbie residents were also killed as parts of the plane plummeted to the ground.
Image: Giao Nguyen
Annie had wanted to take that flight. She had a booking for the next day but tried to change it so that she could travel with her friends. The cost of making the change was £75. She could not afford that, so she waved her friends off from their Portobello Road flat and went on with her packing.
Fuselage is performed by Annie and two fellow actors, Brenda Joyner and Peter Dylan O'Connor. Joyner and O'Connor each take several parts and Annie plays herself.
As we enter the theatre, photos of some of the people who died, of the aftermath of the crash, the police, the press, the lines of coffins and the Memorial Garden in Lockerbie are shown on a screen. Music plays, Total Eclipse of the Heart, FAME! – I want to live forever ('I want to light up the sky…'). The stage is set with plastic chairs, with strings of them also hanging from the ceiling.
Fuselage skilfully draws several strands together. We see the young Annie arriving at Syracuse, meeting her soon to be best friend Theo(dora) Cohen and settling into her drama course. We see present day Annie, travelling with her daughter to Lockerbie to meet Colin Dorrance, the then 18-year-old policeman who was first on the scene of the crash, and who will now show her where her friends died. And we learn about the causative events that began two years before those friends boarded Flight 103.
Image: Giao Nguyen
The minute Annie turns up for her classes, she knows she has met a kindred spirit. Theo is tiny, 'a small scrappy girl' and Theo introduces her friend Geoffrey, another theatre student. There is a hilarious scene in which the three of them act out 1980s student life; psychedelic glasses, shoulder pads, scrunchies. Geoffrey smokes a joint and airplays a chair, they all dance around the stage. In class they endure calisthenics and vocal warmups. Annie moves to the others' floor in the dorm; they drink, they party. They do everything together, love the good bits, laugh about the others. They are having the time of their lives.
Meanwhile a Swiss businessman is selling timers to Libya. A bomb blows up a discotheque in Berlin. President Regan authorises retaliatory air strikes on Libya. Frankfurt airport employs a criminal as its security manager. An investigation notes numerous security lapses at the airport; a screening scanner is found to be malfunctioning but is kept in use. Pan Am prioritises its profits and refuses to hire more security staff, while charging each of its passengers a $5 'security surcharge'.
The Syracuse students know nothing about any of this. It's Christmas, they put up decorations and hang earrings on a spindly tree. They and their friends apply to spend the Fall semester in London. Annie starts to have nightmares about planes crashing and airports catching fire. They terrify her. Is she going to die on a plane?
There is a tremendous warmth around all three of these excellent actors. The close friendship between the students is totally convincing. The optimism and energy of youth radiates from them as they bounce from one thing to the next, hardly pausing for breath. Theo is especially lively, always up for anything, taking any chances that come her way, and already very successful in her field.
There are so many poignant moments, small details that will later form such precious memories. Annie and Theo's adventures in Greece, the group's weekend in Paris and Christmas shopping in London.
Annie's nightmares continue.
Image: Giao Nguyen
On 21 December Theo and friends head for Heathrow, squashed into two taxis. A few hours later their plane falls out of the sky.
In present time, Annie meets Colin and his neighbour Josephine. Josephine was one of a group of women who washed, ironed and stored every scrap of clothing recovered from the scene. The humanity and kindness shown by the people of Lockerbie, even in the midst of their own tragedy, will never be forgotten. Personal possessions were scattered over the town – handbags, cards, Christmas presents.
And by now the audience feels it knows the young people who packed those bags, wrapped those gifts. The detail of Annie's writing has made them real for us. These are the people who danced together, stayed up all night together, hanging their earrings on a Christmas tree.
The aftermath of the bombing is a further hell for Annie. Syracuse's London office asks her to go through their list of students and mark the names of anyone whom she knows to have been on the flight. The press hounds her. She has an agonising call with Theo's mother. She is consumed by guilt. Her relationships with men become toxic; she wants them to hurt her, to take away the greater pain. It has taken her many years to recover from 'a deep-seated self-hatred'.
Fuselage ends on a note of cautious hope. Annie and Geoffrey are still friends; their lives are intertwined. When Annie finally opens Theo's box in the Pan Am archive at Syracuse, she finds an earring she had lent to her friend as she left for the airport,
'A little bit of me had been with her through the sky, the fire, and the silence.'
I am sure that there were few dry eyes in the house at the end of Sunday's performance. All three actors in Fuselage are outstanding, but it is the strength of Annie Lareau's writing, and the immense courage and personal commitment she shows on stage, that elevate this play to stellar heights.
'The victims are names, barely acknowledged. They belonged to us…'
By writing and performing this stunning play, Annie has honoured her friends and shown them to be so much more than victims; she has celebrated their lives, and invited us to celebrate them with her. As someone who remembers Lockerbie, I was far more affected by Fuselage than by all the news reports at the time. Then, everything seemed somehow distant; now at last it is real, and our hearts break for all those lost lives, and for the people they left behind.
Fuselage is at Pleasance Courtyard (Above), 60 Pleasance (Venue 33) at 3.45pm every day until 25 August. Please note that there are no shows on Wednesday 13 and Tuesday 19 August.
Tickets here
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Edinburgh Reporter
3 hours ago
- Edinburgh Reporter
Fringe 2025 – Fuselage ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
What can you say about an act of terrorism committed more than thirty years ago? Hasn't everything already been said? For Annie Lareau the answer to that is no. The friends she lost in what remains the deadliest terrorist attack in UK history were not just names and numbers; she wants to remember them as the people who were, and still are, so important to her. Annie is now an acclaimed actor. Fuselage is her story, but it is also the story of all of her friends who died in that attack. By focusing not on their deaths but on their young, vital, exuberant lives, Annie has created perhaps the most moving piece of theatre you will see in this year's Fringe. On the night of 21 December 1988 Pan Am flight 103 exploded over the small Scottish town of Lockerbie. The flight had left Heathrow less than an hour before, heading for New York, two of the stops on the route from Frankfurt to Detroit. Many of its passengers were students from Syracuse University, in London on a Study Abroad programme and now returning home to spend Christmas with their families. There were no survivors of the crash. Eleven Lockerbie residents were also killed as parts of the plane plummeted to the ground. Image: Giao Nguyen Annie had wanted to take that flight. She had a booking for the next day but tried to change it so that she could travel with her friends. The cost of making the change was £75. She could not afford that, so she waved her friends off from their Portobello Road flat and went on with her packing. Fuselage is performed by Annie and two fellow actors, Brenda Joyner and Peter Dylan O'Connor. Joyner and O'Connor each take several parts and Annie plays herself. As we enter the theatre, photos of some of the people who died, of the aftermath of the crash, the police, the press, the lines of coffins and the Memorial Garden in Lockerbie are shown on a screen. Music plays, Total Eclipse of the Heart, FAME! – I want to live forever ('I want to light up the sky…'). The stage is set with plastic chairs, with strings of them also hanging from the ceiling. Fuselage skilfully draws several strands together. We see the young Annie arriving at Syracuse, meeting her soon to be best friend Theo(dora) Cohen and settling into her drama course. We see present day Annie, travelling with her daughter to Lockerbie to meet Colin Dorrance, the then 18-year-old policeman who was first on the scene of the crash, and who will now show her where her friends died. And we learn about the causative events that began two years before those friends boarded Flight 103. Image: Giao Nguyen The minute Annie turns up for her classes, she knows she has met a kindred spirit. Theo is tiny, 'a small scrappy girl' and Theo introduces her friend Geoffrey, another theatre student. There is a hilarious scene in which the three of them act out 1980s student life; psychedelic glasses, shoulder pads, scrunchies. Geoffrey smokes a joint and airplays a chair, they all dance around the stage. In class they endure calisthenics and vocal warmups. Annie moves to the others' floor in the dorm; they drink, they party. They do everything together, love the good bits, laugh about the others. They are having the time of their lives. Meanwhile a Swiss businessman is selling timers to Libya. A bomb blows up a discotheque in Berlin. President Regan authorises retaliatory air strikes on Libya. Frankfurt airport employs a criminal as its security manager. An investigation notes numerous security lapses at the airport; a screening scanner is found to be malfunctioning but is kept in use. Pan Am prioritises its profits and refuses to hire more security staff, while charging each of its passengers a $5 'security surcharge'. The Syracuse students know nothing about any of this. It's Christmas, they put up decorations and hang earrings on a spindly tree. They and their friends apply to spend the Fall semester in London. Annie starts to have nightmares about planes crashing and airports catching fire. They terrify her. Is she going to die on a plane? There is a tremendous warmth around all three of these excellent actors. The close friendship between the students is totally convincing. The optimism and energy of youth radiates from them as they bounce from one thing to the next, hardly pausing for breath. Theo is especially lively, always up for anything, taking any chances that come her way, and already very successful in her field. There are so many poignant moments, small details that will later form such precious memories. Annie and Theo's adventures in Greece, the group's weekend in Paris and Christmas shopping in London. Annie's nightmares continue. Image: Giao Nguyen On 21 December Theo and friends head for Heathrow, squashed into two taxis. A few hours later their plane falls out of the sky. In present time, Annie meets Colin and his neighbour Josephine. Josephine was one of a group of women who washed, ironed and stored every scrap of clothing recovered from the scene. The humanity and kindness shown by the people of Lockerbie, even in the midst of their own tragedy, will never be forgotten. Personal possessions were scattered over the town – handbags, cards, Christmas presents. And by now the audience feels it knows the young people who packed those bags, wrapped those gifts. The detail of Annie's writing has made them real for us. These are the people who danced together, stayed up all night together, hanging their earrings on a Christmas tree. The aftermath of the bombing is a further hell for Annie. Syracuse's London office asks her to go through their list of students and mark the names of anyone whom she knows to have been on the flight. The press hounds her. She has an agonising call with Theo's mother. She is consumed by guilt. Her relationships with men become toxic; she wants them to hurt her, to take away the greater pain. It has taken her many years to recover from 'a deep-seated self-hatred'. Fuselage ends on a note of cautious hope. Annie and Geoffrey are still friends; their lives are intertwined. When Annie finally opens Theo's box in the Pan Am archive at Syracuse, she finds an earring she had lent to her friend as she left for the airport, 'A little bit of me had been with her through the sky, the fire, and the silence.' I am sure that there were few dry eyes in the house at the end of Sunday's performance. All three actors in Fuselage are outstanding, but it is the strength of Annie Lareau's writing, and the immense courage and personal commitment she shows on stage, that elevate this play to stellar heights. 'The victims are names, barely acknowledged. They belonged to us…' By writing and performing this stunning play, Annie has honoured her friends and shown them to be so much more than victims; she has celebrated their lives, and invited us to celebrate them with her. As someone who remembers Lockerbie, I was far more affected by Fuselage than by all the news reports at the time. Then, everything seemed somehow distant; now at last it is real, and our hearts break for all those lost lives, and for the people they left behind. Fuselage is at Pleasance Courtyard (Above), 60 Pleasance (Venue 33) at 3.45pm every day until 25 August. Please note that there are no shows on Wednesday 13 and Tuesday 19 August. Tickets here Like this: Like Related


Edinburgh Reporter
3 hours ago
- Edinburgh Reporter
Fringe 2025 – ANGLE OF THE NORTH: NATALIE DURKIN ⭐⭐⭐⭐
The way the performers interact during the initial stages is often a very good sign of what is to come. As Fringe-goers entered the pub for Angle of the North and were greeted by an effervescent Natalie Durkin, it was clear that this was going to be an enjoyable show. So it proved. The real essence of the Fringe The atmosphere was warm, with about 25 people crammed in the small back room of the Southsider pub ('let me warn you, it's going to get f***ing warm in here!). This is the real essence of the Fringe. As the audience waited, they were 'treated' to a series of 'bad Eighties tunes'. Though primarily stand-up comedy, music was going to play a role in the show – Durkin's singing was unexpected and impressive. There was a nice mix of ages in the room, so the tunes would have been familiar to many. Again this added to the sense of ease in the room. The audience seemed to sense that they were in good hands and would not have to battle through 'Fringe Cringe'. The show proved to be far from that. Collective, collaborative atmosphere Durkin did a great great job of creating and maintaining a nice collective, collaborative atmosphere. This was through the character of her interactions with the audience. She was never harsh and no one was put on the spot. We all felt included. This encouraged people to contribute, including a couple on the front row whose entertaining interactions with Durkin really added to the show. Durkin's off the cuff remarks and reactions demonstrated a performer that was relaxed and sharp. There were no awkward silences. The relaxed feel of the show meant she could go with the flow when things didn't go quite as planned ('that was clearly not meant to happen – but let's just go for it'). She carried the audience through it all. She even made the setting up of the mic stand into a feature of the show! Am I becoming middle class? Her main focus was on the questions of culture and class. More specifically, of her own unease – having moved to a rather posh area of North London from the North East of England. Trips to the Hampstead Heath bathing pool still made her feel uneasy given her working class roots. 'Am I becoming middle class?'. Her new life was at odds with her upbringing and some of her preferences, much preferring kebabs to avocados. There are familiar themes in British comedy but were done well, not hackneyed. The show was fast-paced, with engagement maintained right throughout. Nice changes of pace and tone helped, as did the shifts into song; songs which were humorous and well performed. The themes also shifted, from very light to quite dark at times. This all gave the performance a nice texture. Though she described it as a work in progress show, it's clearly progressing well. The shows 40 minutes passed quickly and highly enjoyably. An excellent advert for the Free Fringe The performance was very much in tune with the principles of PBH's Free Fringe. The whole setup was very minimal (a black sheet, a synthesizer and a microphone); all rather different from the more 'professional' rooms at the big venues, where the lighting and flow of air may be better. Durkin's 'bucket speech' was spot on; not begging for money, but paying tribute to the Free Fringe, outlining that working through it was the 'only reason' she could perform in Edinburgh. This highly engaging show was an excellent advert for the Free Fringe. A good reason to explore the Fringe outwith the big venues. ANGLE OF THE NORTH: NATALIE DURKIN is part of PBH's Free Fringe. No booking required – just turn up. It runs at the Southsider – Side Lounge (venue 148) from 16:30 – 17:10, until August 24th Like this: Like Related


Edinburgh Reporter
7 hours ago
- Edinburgh Reporter
Fringe 2025 – Nancy's Philosopher
The play Nancy's Philosopher being staged by the Arkle Theatre Company, with Nicole Burnett Smith as Nancy Ord is on daily until 16 August at The Royal Scots Club. (not 10th) The story centres on a young woman who scandalised Edinburgh society by falling in love with the much older David Hume, historian and philosopher. David Black, the former journalist who write the play lives and works in Edinburgh. He said: 'In 2006 I was busy preparing an academic paper for a scholarly conference in London on a little known incident in the life of David Hume – his passionate relationship with Nancy Ord, daughter of Robert Ord, Baron of the Scottish Exchequer, whose Adam designed town house at 8 Queen Street still exists. Listen to our interview with David Black here Mr Black said: 'I thought this is a fantastic story, much too good for a bunch of academics. And I had seen an actress at the Edinburgh Fringe perform a play she'd written herself about Zelda Fitzgerald, and I was blown away by her skill. So I got in touch with her and asked, if she would you like me to write a play for her on the love life of the 18th century philosopher David Hume and his love life. And she was delighted to help out. 'So we had a play premiered at Summerhall initially, and it was pretty successful. It got a very good reviews. And then I let it lie for a while, and we revived it in 2019 and there were thoughts of it going over to New York, but covid came, and that was that. And then recently, I was approached by friend of mine with the Arkle Theatre Company, and they wanted to put it on. 'Now their production, in a way, has nothing to do with me, but they've been very kind consulting me, and he actually found an actress who was prepared to consider playing the part. It'll be a very different production. 'Unfortunately at around that time Hume's reputation was seriously impugned because, although he supported the abolition of slavery, he voiced a suspicion in a footnote which some have interpreted as racist. Edinburgh University then contentiously removed his name from the David Hume Tower in George Square. 'I had discussed writing a radio version of the play, but unfortunately the subject had become too toxic, so that was that – until this year as the play is on the Fringe.' The play is a love story although David Hume was already in his sixties when he met Nancy Ord daughter of the Baron of the Exchequer who lived at 8 Queen Street. A letter from David Hume to Nancy is used verbatim in the play and the writer is very pleased to have written the play in the voice of a woman. David Black said: 'In history we rarely get the voice of the woman apart from the odd one – such as Abigail Adams. It is very much a male preserve – so I thought I would write it in the voice of the woman.' Tickets here. Journalist David Black who wrote the play Like this: Like Related