ALAN Cumming is set to play Robert Burns in a new solo show at this year’s Edinburgh Festival, which is set to welcome more than 2300 artists to Scotland's capital.
Burn, inspired by the life of the poet, is likely to be one of the highlights of the three-week festival in August.
The festival is returning to a scale not seen since before the pandemic, with 14 venues hosting 87 events and more than 160 performances.
Fergus Linehan, who will be serving as its director for the final time before handing over the reigns to Nicola Benedetti, said this is a “special year for the festival”.
READ MORE: Dark comedy about Hibs 2016 Scottish Cup win set to be performed at Easter Road
“We hope that it will mark the turning point in the pandemic that has changed all our lives over the past two years,” he said.
“Edinburgh is more than a collection of performances, it is the great annual meeting point for artists and all those who love music, theatre, dance, and literature.”
Marco will open the Edinburgh International Festival (Edinburgh International Festival/Darcy Grant/PA)
Cumming previously welcomed Benedetti's new role, telling The National it was a microcosm of the need for independence.
He added that he was happy to see a strong Scottish women leading the way, and compared her to Nicola Sturgeon.
At the festival this year, Marco, a free opening event at Murrayfield stadium, will feature contemporary circus Gravity & Other Myths alongside first nations dance company Djuki Mala, and the National Youth Choir of Scotland alongside a roster of Scottish musicians.
READ MORE: Alan Cumming tells Nicola Sturgeon about his plans to move back to Scotland
Jazz legend Herbie Hancock will be making his festival debut, while Akram Khan’s Jungle Book Reimagined will reinvent the journey of Mowgli though the eyes of a climate refugee, and there will be the world premiere of Scottish Ballet’s Coppelia.
The 2022 Edinburgh International Festival programme is here 🎉
— edintfest (@edintfest) March 30, 2022
We celebrate 75 years of #EdIntFest this August with world premieres, bold collaborations & world-class artists in Edinburgh's iconic theatres & concert halls.
Discover the programme now: https://t.co/i57h87Jy3k pic.twitter.com/Xz8BT1wdp2
Refuge, a season of contemporary theatre, dance, visual art, film and conversation created in collaboration with the Scottish Refugee Council, will explore themes of refugeehood, migration, identity and inclusion.
Ian Munro, chief executive of Creative Scotland, said the 75th festival anniversary programme “represents an important moment, bringing people together to celebrate creativity through an inspirational line-up of world-class music, opera, dance and theatre”.
He added: “Seventy-five years on from the festival’s founding in the shadow of the Second World War, we find ourselves again turning to culture to lift spirits and provide inspiration in uncertain and challenging times.”
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