Edinburgh Fringe festival takes on Donald Trump

By Renee Graham, The Associated Press

EDINBURGH, Scotland – Donald Trump may not be planning to visit the United Kingdom this year but he’s become a very popular figure in Scotland’s capital.

Performers at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe festival — an annual buffet of hundreds of standup, theatre and musical offerings — are roasting the U.S. president in several shows, including “Trumpageddon,” ”Trumpus Interruptus: The Impeachment of Donald J Trump,” ”Locker Room Talk” and “Trump’d.”

In “Trump’d,” a singing, dancing Trump, still in power in 2030, is being sought by a Mexican resistance group that’s pleading to be deported. “It is really important to poke fun,” said Adam Woolf, the show’s writer.

“When Trump is making really incendiary comments that could genuinely pose a threat to everyone on the planet, I think it is easy to be overwhelmed. It is important to have some sort of respite from that,” he said.

Zach Tomasovic wrote and stars in “Trumpus Interruptus,” which portrays the U.S. president as a soft drink addict heavily under the influence of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Tomasovic said the sound of laughter is one of the most powerful tools that artists have at their disposal.

The festival, which runs until Aug. 28, has often included shows with a biting, satirical bent, tackling everything from the Lockerbie bombing, the death of Princess Diana or Brexit. In 2012, “Clinton: The Musical” was nominated for best new musical and made it off-Broadway in 2015.

The theatre community has been quick to respond to the new president, including Robert Schenkkan’s play “Building the Wall,” a production of “Julius Caesar” in New York City with the title character portrayed as an ego-driven populist with fluffy blond hair and a gold bathtub, and the jokey “Me The People: The Trump America Musical,” now playing in Manhattan. Even before the new administration took office, Trump criticized the Broadway actors in “Hamilton” after they had pointed words for his vice-president.

At the Fringe, which began in 1947 as a democratic alternative to the high-toned Edinburgh International Festival, Trump may be a draw — but not for everyone. Patrick Wilson, director of “Trump’d,” said he was recently handing out flyers to his show when an American visitor balked.

“She took it and then came back and handed it back to me and very properly said, ‘I will not be mocking my president thank you very much,'” he said. “I said, ‘Well that is absolutely fine, but we will be, so do something else with your evening — just don’t come and see this.'”

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