Tag Archives: Emily Lipscombe

DEREK MITCHELL: GOBLIN

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

DEREK MITCHELL: GOBLIN

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“a performer in such complete control of his character that he improvises and embellishes his act with ease”

Derek Mitchell: Goblin, a one-man show performed by actor Derek Mitchell with Impatient Productions, kicks off as a vivid 2000s period piece, replete with heavy eyeliner, wristbands, O.G Queer Eye and overt homophobia. Eliot is a 15 year-old emo kid, bullied, earnest and anxious to be loved – a wish that will set him on a dark path under the manipulative influence of Max, a British Reality TV star and controlling older man.

Not only is the show laugh-out-loud funny despite its darker themes of grooming and coercion, Mitchell’s performance is so incredibly controlled and maintained: he embodies the giggling, cringing teenaged Eliot even when he improvises with audience interaction. And there is a lot of interaction with the audience- we are Eliot’s ‘Goblin’, an imaginary creature from whom he seeks confidence and counsel. He entrusts us with his precious belongings and looks to us for advice when he is tempted by a Christian camp counsellor with a penchant for poppers and teenaged campers. It’s a great moment that makes the audience feel that their intervention can help steer Eliot away from harm, which makes the show’s subsequent series of events even more tragic.

The other area where Mitchell really excels are physically comedic moments, from feigning a long, asparagus-fuelled piss to deep throating a cucumber with look of such distorted exertion you feel you have to look away. These moments are helped by well chosen and well timed sound effects that fit into the act seamlessly, including the menacing voice of Max who manipulates Eliot into moving with him to Florida, discovering the equally noxious pastimes of fitness influencing and smoking meth.

There is significant character shift that Eliot, now going by ‘Elio’, undergoes in the second half of the show, where, as joint proprietor of a spin shop, he sheds his former eager-to-please naivete and becomes a waxy, bitter 30-something with a ballooning, infected Brazilian butt lift (impressively rendered by an air pump). Mitchell leans even further into the tragedy of the character, with missed calls for redemption in encounters with former friends and an expression of deranged emotional exhaustion from the now smudged eyeliner of Eliot’s youth.

There are plenty of pithy observations about the vapidity of fitness influencers, miserable walks on Brighton beach, and being under house arrest – Eliot becomes a shallower character, and perhaps less compelling, but Mitchell isn’t interested in straightforward resolution or a fairytale ending. This can make the end of the show feel a little abrupt or unfinished, but it’s also a sign that Mitchell is bringing to the surface the dark undercurrent that has run through all of the show’s moments of crude humour and the younger Eliot’s more endearing character traits.

Overall, this is a flawlessly constructed show, and a performer in such complete control of his character that he improvises and embellishes his act with ease. Just don’t let the nostalgia and the teenaged hijinks mislead you- this is a dark, bleak story of innocence exploited and an audience helpless to intervene.



DEREK MITCHELL: GOBLIN

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 15th August 2025 at Former Gents Locker Room at Summerhall

by Emily Lipscombe

Photography by Dylan Woodley

 

 

 

 

 

DEREK MITCHELL

DEREK MITCHELL

DEREK MITCHELL

PLANETARIUM LATES: PINK FLOYD’S DARK SIDE OF THE MOON

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

PLANETARIUM LATES: PINK FLOYD’S DARK SIDE OF THE MOON

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“it really is a hidden gem of the fringe”

Planetarium Lates: Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon is an experience well worth the walk to Edinburgh’s Dynamic Earth space museum. The 45-minute show pairs a play-through of the renowned concept album with soaring visuals of planets, shuttles and satellites on the planetarium’s dome-shaped screen overhead. It’s an experience that feels worthy of one of progressive rock’s most iconic albums.

If you’re looking for a blissed-out break from the business of The Mile, you’re not alone- all of the Planetarium’s cinema-style seating was full, and drinks from the bar are also permitted inside. That being said, I would refrain from heavy drinking before the show – and the venue staff give fair warning – certain graphics, and the immersive nature of the planetarium itself can cause nausea- and there are some fast spinning visuals that can cause a bit of dizziness if you’re too well lubricated.

The show begins with three of the album cover’s iconic prisms looming overhead, as the ‘Speak To Me’ overture plays, before collapsing into ‘Breathe (In The Air)’ and we begin floating through space, past winking stars, planets and their asteroid belts. We see celestial visuals reflected in the helmet of an astronaut, who blinks back at us as they float in space. Later, planets swoop and spin above the rows of tilted seating, and a pockmarked moon rears up to the transcendent wailing of ‘The Great Gig In The Sky.’

A personal favourite visual was an Orrey- a model solar system – ticking away above, with each mechanical planet looped by its own satellite of shuttle, powered by whirring cogs below. In another instant, we see a space shuttle penetrate the earth’s atmosphere, detaching and reattaching, disappearing deeper into space before a pod comes roaring back through the atmosphere and towards the ocean.

Also particularly effective, set to the percussive counting machine, falling change and tangy bassline of ‘Money’, we breeze past television screens displaying cascading coins, conveyor belts and poverty-stricken visuals from the original music video, a stark reminder of society’s lifeblood back on earth. As ‘Any Colour You Like’ strikes a different tone, we see different coloured, luminescent organisms gently pulse through a hazy atmosphere like jellyfish.

The venue staff recommended sitting in the middle or the back rows of the planetarium’s seating, and I did find that sitting at the front, with the dome’s cutoff within my line of sight, did affect immersion somewhat, so I’d recommend getting there early for the best seating. Regardless, it really is a hidden gem of the fringe, and well worth a slightly stiff neck. Just prepare to come crashing back down to earth once it’s over.

 

PLANETARIUM LATES: PINK FLOYD’S DARK SIDE OF THE MOON

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 15th August 2025 at Planetarium at Dynamic Earth

by Emily Lipscombe

 

 

 

 

 

PLANETARIUM LATES

PLANETARIUM LATES

PLANETARIUM LATES