Full programme for Edinburgh International Festival is announced
The Edinburgh International Festival with 133 performances including seven world premieres, eight UK and Scottish premieres and two European premieres will run from 1 to 24 August 2025
Edinburgh International Festival announces its full programme for summer 2025 today.
Tickets will go on sale to Friends on 25 March, and on general sale on 27 March.
When the Creative Scotland (CS) funding round was announced in January the Edinburgh International Festival (EIF) had a lot to celebrate.
The CS Multi Year Funding Programme, which gives creative and cultural organisations funding for three years at a time supporting their core costs and work programmes, awarded £3.92 million annually for the next three years to the "festival where it all began".
This funding was welcome news - and came two months after some of the programme from 1 to 25 August was announced. The fear that the CS funding would not be enough has affected the size of this year's festival which is smaller than before. There is no mention of closing fireworks, and no big opening event.
The EIF's level of core funding had not increased since 2008, and the organisation said this funding would "benefit the thousands of artists, freelancers, organisations, audiences, and communities that the Festival employs and serves".
At the time the funding was announced Francesca Hegyi, Chief Executive, EIF said: “It’s a good day for culture and creativity in Scotland. We welcome this increased investment in the Scottish cultural sector, which will help to showcase the enormous talent of this country. We are grateful for the International Festival’s uplift in funding, which recognises the unique role we play in connecting Scotland to the world, and gives us a firm foundation from which to build. The return of multi-year funding allows us all to plan ahead with greater confidence.”
Festival Theme - The Truth We Seek
This year EIF presents a relatable theme in the days of questionable facts presented as the truth on social media and elsewhere in the media all over the world. The Festival suggests that the search for truth is "precarious, fractured and abused". The programme will have contemporary reflections and well-known tales "where fact meets faith and fiction".
2025 programme announced
Although some parts of the programme on the theme of The Truth We Seek have already been trailed ahead of today, the full programme has been freshly announced on Thursday.
Nicola Benedetti, Festival Director, Edinburgh International Festival said: “Our 2025 Edinburgh International Festival invites you to explore The Truth We Seek—a journey into the elusive nature of truth, in our personal and public lives. In an era of ‘alternative facts’ and manipulated narratives, the arts offer us something deeper: a poetic and metaphorical wisdom that is both more nuanced and more precise.
"This Festival - born in the city of the Enlightenment - has championed artistic expression as a means of discovery, insight, and mutual understanding. This year, we proudly present seven world premieres, exceptional international and Scottish artists, and celebrate 60 years of our Festival Chorus as well as the brightest emerging talent.
"Join us this summer as we seek and find truth together. Your curiosity will be rewarded with thought-provoking, and potentially transformational, experiences that you simply won't find anywhere else."
There are, as usual in the EIF programme, far too many concerts, plays and performances to cover in just one article, and we recommend a hearty session reading it to find the events you will not want to miss.
Instead we have picked out only a few here.
The Edinburgh Reporter choices
Opening weekend in Princes Street Gardens
The International Festival’s opening weekend welcomes all to a free event in Princes Street Gardens at the Ross Bandstand for The Big Singalong, led by Stephen Deazley, artistic director of Edinburgh’s Love Music Community Choir.
The following day, Norwegian folk ensemble Barokksolistene returns to lead The Ceilidh Sessions, an afternoon of music and storytelling inspired by the Gaelic ceilidh tradition.
Mary Queen of Scots
This is a new production presented by Scottish Ballet and the first full length story ballet from the resident choreographer, Sophie Laplane. The tale is told by Queen Elizabeth I, and is a story of what her relationship with the beauty that was Mary Queen of Scots might have been. There is some history intertwined with stories and legend. Elizabeth through the years will be played by a variety of members of the company. The costumes will be designed by Soutra Gilmour who has won awards for her work on &Juliet.
Opening Concert = John Tavener - The Veil of the Temple
This is an eight hour long performance during which the audience will be free to come and go. The magnum opus will take place at Usher Hall when all the seating will be replaced by bean bags, making it a more comfortable experience for those who last the distance.
The Monteverdi Choir will join the Edinburgh Festival Chorus and National Youth Choir of Scotland.
Orpheus and Eurydice
Opera Queensland will present the European Premiere of a reworking of an 18th century opera featuring musicians performers and the Australian contemporary circus company Circa, the same group of acrobats who presented the festival grand opening event at Murrayfield Stadium, MACRO, in 2022.
The story explores the meaning of true love and the challenges to our inner beliefs - a continuing mystery.
The production will feature the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, a chorus from Scottish Opera and video projections to capture the woeful love story.
Make it Happen
The world premiere of Make it Happen with Brian Cox, CBE, at Festival Theatre, is the festival's big news this summer, and will run from 1 to 9 August. Where better to stage a fictionalised version of the woes of RBS than in Edinburgh where it all happened?
This is James Graham's new play, brought to life by National Theatre of Scotland, EIF and Dundee Rep Theatre, telling the story of the Royal Bank of Scotland in the 2008 financial crash, and it offers Brian Cox the opportunity to come back to the stage, after a decade during which he was on our small screens in Succession. Cox plays Adam Smith whose capitalist beliefs Fred Goodwin one time CEO of RBS followed religiously.
Writer, James Graham, said: "Like many writers, an Edinburgh stage is the first place ever I dared put a full play in front of an audience. To be invited to join the prestigious Edinburgh International Festival programme this summer is an honour and a thrill. And to work with the National Theatre of Scotland, the Dundee Rep, and of course - Brian Cox, whom I’ve been desperate to write for for as long as I can remember.
"We still live in the long shadow of the 2008 financial crash and our inability to reset from that inheritance and its divisive legacies, so it feels right to be interrogating it artistically. But we hope to do so in a show full of music and story, larger-than-life characters, cheeky humour, and some ghosts from Scotland's centuries' long past thrown in as well"
Andrew Panton, director, said ”It’s a personal honour and huge responsibility to tell what became a global story that started in the city close to where I grew up. Working with an exceptionally talented cast, creative and production teams, I’m excited to be directing this new play, bringing it to audiences at Dundee Rep Theatre and Edinburgh International Festival stages.”
Actor Brian Cox, said: “I'm excited to be doing a play written by James Graham who is such a great writer. It's been a long time since I played in Scotland - it's good to be back.”
Nicola Benedetti, Edinburgh International Festival Director, said: “We are extremely proud to present a brand-new play by James Graham, 'Make It Happen’, which will open the 2025 International Festival in August. This co-commission with the National Theatre of Scotland and Dundee Rep demonstrates our ongoing commitment to bringing vital Scottish stories to the world stage, and invites us to examine events that took place in Edinburgh but rippled across the globe.
"Illuminating this year’s festival theme ‘The Truth We Seek’, 'Make it Happen' exemplifies the level of ambition and thought-provoking work that defines the Edinburgh International Festival. We cannot wait to see you there.”
Keynote talks
Under Festival Director, Nicola Benedetti, the International Festival has a renewed focus on dialogue and debate, with keynote talks from leading voices calling for change.
University of Edinburgh rector Simon Fanshawe will tackle the 2025 theme, The Truth We Seek. He was a co-founder of the LGBTQ+ charity Stonewall and a Perrier Award for Comedy winner, and Fanshawe’s debut appearance at the International Festival will no doubt spark fresh debate, fuelled by his signature wit.
Art and cultural historian Sarah Lewis leads a gripping exploration of the role of art in shaping history, and how it might yet transform the future. A professor at Harvard University, Lewis’ recent book The Unseen Truth confronts the falsehoods that have upheld systemic inequality in the United States, offering a razor-sharp reassessment of the nation’s racial regime.
At Talbot Rice Gallery
At Talbot Rice Gallery, Egyptian artist Wael Shawky presents a striking solo exhibition exposing the falsehoods of colonial histories. This landmark exhibition includes Drama 1882, an operatic film interrogating the 1882 Urabi revolution, sculptures and drawings. It also pays tribute to David Talbot Rice – the Byzantine and Islamic art historian who gave the gallery its name 50 years ago – bridging past and present.
Collaboration with Space @ The Broomhouse Hub
EIF have for some years now worked in areas of the city where the festival is a distant concept and often unattainable. This year young people from southwest Edinburgh are already enrolled on an eight week course working alongside teams from EIF, helping the young team learn new skills and gain confidence to enter work.
This is run in conjunction with Space @ The Broomhouse Hub (Wellbeing Onto Work) project and supports 10 young people aged 16 to 24.
Training is held at The Broomhouse Hub and the EIF Hub on The Royal Mile.
Esther Kuperji, Youth Participation Worker at Space, said:“This is a wonderful opportunity for our WOW! Project participants to gain an amazing insight into what is required to put on one of the biggest and best cultural festivals anywhere in the world.
“By working closely with the specialists at Edinburgh International Festival, as well as our team, to build friendships, network, and enhance wider skills, we are sure this will be an incredible experience for those taking part. We are delighted to put on this exciting, educational project in partnership with Edinburgh International Festival, and it shows the wider impact they have on our local communities.”
Caroline Donald, Head of Discovery and Participation at Edinburgh International Festival said: “This is a great chance to see behind the scenes at what makes the festival come together and the different types of performances the International Festival puts on including Music, Theatre, and Dance. Anyone taking part in the WOW! Project will meet lots of different International Festival staff members, learn more about their jobs and how they got them, and demonstrate there’s multiple routes to employment.
“We’re proud to be able to offer paid work experience during the 2025 International Festival too, which will bring all the elements of the project together in a truly practical way.”
The best way to get EIF tickets
Our best recommendation is to become a Friend of the Festival which is the best way to ensure you get early access to tickets. Threre are several tiers, some of which are expensive, but the first starts at £60 per year.
Members enjoy priority booking for International Festival performances, get access to exclusive members-only events, insider updates.
The full programme for the 2025 Edinburgh International Festival is announced on Thursday 13 March. Priority booking for the 2025 Festival opens by membership level:
Friends: Tuesday 25 March
Silver Friends & Gold Friends: Monday 24 March
Ambassadors & Silver Ambassadors: Friday 21 March
Gold Ambassadors: Thursday 20 March
Tickets go on sale to the public on Thursday 27 March.