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FESTIVAL CITY:
EDINBURGH
by Andrew Mersmann


Tens of thousands of artists and millions of audience members invade this Scottish city each year during Edinburgh's Festival Season, when seven simultaneous festivals blend and provide counterpoint to one another in a frenetic dance, providing the largest arts experience in the world.

There are twelve major annual festivals in Edinburgh, and most of them take place in the summer. From late June through mid-September, visitors can enjoy events like the International Film Festival (two weeks in June), Jazz & Blues Festival (first week of August), Art Festival (end of July through first week of September), Mela Festival (first weekend of August), Festival Fringe (last three weeks of August), Military Tattoo (last three weeks of August), International Festival (mid August through beginning of September), and the International Book Festival (second half of August). During other times of year, travelers to Edinburgh take part in the International Science Festival (spring), International Storytelling Festival (late October), and Hogmanay, the largest New Year's celebration in the world.

When I was a theatre student in college, the Festival Fringe was the Holy Grail. We spoke of it in reverent church tones - it was international, it was socially vibrant, it was all about creation and freedom of expression, and there were no rules. There's lots of down and dirty art making here, also refined lyrical beauty, and everything in between. From one-person shows to huge ensembles, it is circus, ballet, guerilla, agitprop, stand-up comedy, classical and contemporary drama, commedia and comedy, tragedy and history, kabuki and noh, all wrapped up in a burrito of sharing. You might see a midnight performance filled with rage and angst in a public restroom, then go to the pub to share pints with a quartet of kittens still wearing their leotards with tails and whisker face paint. The festival sensibility that absolutely anything is not only possible but downright likely, permeates every experience you will have during an Edinburgh summer.

I've visited Edinburgh before, during other times of year, but am always surprised at how steep the side streets and narrow closes are. Each lane and alley splits off the main drag, the Royal Mile that runs from the clifftop Edinburgh Castle down the slope to the Palace of Holyrood House (home of the Queen when she's in town), like veins of a leaf. Walking up or down from this spine of the city takes a considerable amount of leaning forward or aft for balance and some chugging thighs to get where you're going (watch for uneven cobbles). While the Royal Mile is home to too many silly t-shirt and kilt shops, it is the beating heart of festival time, and the parade of characters promenades here morning, noon, and night.

Last time I was in town, I stayed at The Glasshouse hotel, one of my favorite spots in the UK and a super-modern mix of airy, bright spaces and artful interiors contrasted with an older façade that seems to break open with glass additions. The result in the guestrooms is spacious and luxurious, a real magnet for savvy travelers. The hotel is not as close to the festival action as I would like, but it is quite close to the Pink Triangle area of concentrated gay bars and clubs.

I've always been intrigued by The Witchery by the Castle, an intimate guesthouse and romantic restaurant, hidden in plain sight right near the castle gates. You have to know it's there, and with only seven gothic, over-the-top suites, often booked by celebrities, you'll need reservations well in advance if you want to stay here. The restaurant, too, drips in lavishness like the set of a vampire film, and the atmosphere is bewitching (pun intended). This is for special occasions or bottomless wallets, but the locally sourced foods (venison, pork three ways, and especially Scottish seafood platter with oysters, langoustines, clams, mussels, East Lothian crab, and salmon) are, indeed, something to write home about.

This visit, I'm staying at designer-driven Hotel Missoni, perfectly located right on the Royal Mile and George IV Bridge. This swanky but simple hotel pops with telltale Missoni fabrics and color palette, with huge, glossy walls of purple or chartreuse, groovy, swoovy, multi-colored stripes, black-and-white patterns of bold line and design like 70s Doodle-Art waiting to be painted, and color-saturated lighting making it all glow. The bar is a welcoming spot for Italianesque afternoon espresso or designer drinks of a fruitier variety than other pubs in town offer. The rooms are small but make up for it in pizzazz, equally vibrant in design with signature patterns and fabrics. Besides, during festival season, because so little time will be spent in your room, size matters little. It is a nice and super-stylish place to come home to (ask for a room in the rear, overlooking a peaceful courtyard, to avoid Royal Mile volume day and night).

CLICK FOR SLIDESHOW OF EDINBURGH
Food during festival season can be catch-as-catch-can as you tend to always be running from one performance venue to the next, or queuing up outside. Right around the corner from the Hotel Missoni is one of my favorite spots for a nice, traditional meal, The Grain Store. On the second floor in tight quarters with stone arches and vaults, the former storage rooms are now intimate dining rooms. The menu is based on the freshest local produce with lots of options for traditional Scottish favorites: haggis, black pudding, neeps and tatties, ox tongue—and it is uniformly fantastic. There is a sophisticated twist in sauces and presentation making hearty country fare quite elegant, and the service and setting are both magnificent.

On the same stretch of side road is one of my favorite shops, Demijohn. Self-described as a “liquid deli,” balsamic vinegars, olive oils, and especially their hand-infused liquors and single-batch whiskies are all in giant, Italian glass, spigoted bottles. You choose a blown-glass bottle to fill with anything from elderflower vodka to redcurrant gin or decades-old single malt Scotch, and draw your fill. They are well-practiced at sealing bottles for travel.

It is fun to tuck into massive portions of simple but sophisticated cuisine at Tony's Table, a casual bistro with a menu that changes daily. There are always plenty of meats and game on offer, but veggie options also get star billing around a large communal table downstairs or in the upstairs bistro. There is no artifice to hearty comfort foods like enormous pot pies (with varying meat options), curries, and a filling specialty: Chili Pig Pie (a pot pie filled with stewy, slow-cooked pork belly chili and beans). You won't leave hungry, guaranteed.

It is also easy to grab a bite and a pint at any of the city's famous pubs. Fish and chips are almost always a good bet if calories don't matter. While it is on every tourist map and often crowded, I still get a kick each time I go to Greyfriars Bobby's Bar, just outside the gates to the Greyfriars Cemetery and famous for the Skye terrier named Bobby who waited by his owner's grave for 14 years, hoping for his return. The black lacquered tables and hail-fellow-well-met energy makes it a bustling spot for camaraderie and haggis (or less adventuresome, stick-to-your-ribs pub fare).

The Edinburgh Festival itself also has a beer garden area called the Underbelly with booths offering foods and beer on tap. Later in the evenings there are lots of music acts taking a turn on Underbelly's stage. Food vendors at the Mela Festival (celebrating Edinburgh's minority ethnic communities) provide a wide array of international flavors, and the curries I tried were fantastic.

Oddly, Edinburgh's gay bars are particularly quiet during these hedonistic days and nights. I could almost hear crickets when the bartender at normally crowded CC Blooms told me, “Everybody is queer during festival, and none of the locals are left in town anyway. They take holiday so you lot can invade, and every pub in town is a gay bar, or not, or all of the above.” There is a pansexual acceptance of everyone, and flamboyant behavior is the norm instead of the extreme, so no one bats an eye at amorous pairings…or groupings…of every variety.

I love a place drenched in history where you can walk around the corner to find a man balanced on his head with a bucket attached to his ass, or enormous-bellied, bearded fairy godmothers in tutus, and every pedestal or pylon topped with foul-mouthed nuns, princesses with makeup leprosy, and ghosts…always the ghosts (some things about Edinburgh are consistent all year).

Continued


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