
XQUENDA by Teatro Glam & Roll
A young indigenous woman from Oaxaca is searching for truth after the disappearance of her friend. Based on a true story, using letters found in Mexico, ancestry and myth, this show is a poetic, musical journey around a narrative that repeats all over the world: A woman is silenced after speaking up, demanding justice.
Winner of the 2025 Thessaloniki Fringe X Voila Festival Exchange Award.

The Window Project by Amalia Paschalidi and Nikos Lekakis
The Window Project: Intimate, exposed and a little bit broken.
Two strangers, one game and too many windows. There’s romance, humour, a touch of existential crisis and somewhere in all of it, maybe there’s you.
Sharp, electric and uncomfortably tender.

Strange Tails, Fauxx Lores
by Florian Lim
Born from rumours in Chinese folklore and the present-day hellscape of London, Fauxx (“fox”) shapeshifts between the divine and ungodly. They disrupt tales of duality by dancing through transness, migration, and power, with a feral hybrid of burlesque, glove puppetry, poetics, and video projection.

Tanikō by dispositif.
Inside a gentrified wine bar in Athens, three young women try to balance the attacks they face by the locals with their personal lives. Their mother’s health worsens, their brother is inexplicably missing, and a mezzo soprano arrives in order to sing an aria that sounds eerily familiar.

Be Gay, For God’s Sake by Oh My My
Be Gay, For God’s Sake is a sharp, time-bending queer new-writing drama told with a dose of satirical mischief. When a Christian mother fails to accept her daughter’s gay relationship, divine intervention digs up her forgotten queer past in a small town in Inner Mongolia. Inspired by real events.

Naran Ja by logica picnic
Three figures emerge, lost for words & strangely out of context. Awkward and in eternal contradiction, they navigate a landscape of faulty toys, simple gadgets and homemade mechanisms.
Tenderly, absurdly, Naran Ja shed’s light on the haunting incompleteness of objects and stories.

Imprints by The Palimpsest Project
At a hometown party, Charlie confronts fragmented memories and the mystery: who is Max? Inspired by lived experience, Imprints explores memory loss, queer identity, and reconstructing the past. Through live‑cinema, puppetry, and dreamlike soundscapes, the Palimpsest Project weaves a haunting coming‑of‑age story about nostalgia, identity, and rediscovering self amid uncertainty.

The Uncontainable Nausea of Alec Baldwin by TG WORKS
Alec Baldwin is not a superstar. He is not really famous. He wasn’t born in 1958 and does not have eight children. Alec Baldwin has never had sex with Kim Basinger and never ever shot and killed a woman by mistake.
I am Alec Baldwin.
But not THE Alec Baldwin.

Comfort by Giannine Tan
Comfort shares the untold stories of Filipino “Comfort Women” forced into sexual slavery during World War II. This fictional retelling honours their resilience, exploring the human cost of war beyond the battlefield. It invites audiences to witness a story about survival, humanity, and the quiet power of hope in the face of devastation.

Hansal & Geetal by Two2Mango (Shreya Parashar, Sachin Sharma)
Toronto-based touring comedians bring Hansal & Geetal- an interactive comedy show. Watch two class clowns face their greatest fear: sharing the joke with everybody. Be accomplices and experience the backbenchers’ journey of being mischievous as the artists switch between English, Hindi and Clownspeak to create comedy. Because there is no class teacher today!

If I Were To Say it in English by Thea Ioana Lungu
An intense, funny, spoken word journey about the one word that cannot be translated into English. This performative piece follows the story of a migrant girl constructing her own mix of languages to explore themes of love, violence and longing, jumping between stories of romance and significant moments from Romania’s recent harsh history.

Superstar in Therapy by Rania Kurdi
Breaking the Silence Around Fame, Feelings, and Cultural Conditioning.
A dark comedy exploring the universal female experience through a personal lens shaped by life between two cultures. This candid one-woman show dives into the tension between public persona and private truth—woven with bursts of Arab pop and raw, unfiltered storytelling.

Hecuba: Why Am I In Your Country? by Arwa Omaren with Refuge Media Productions CIC
Arwa Omaren’s brilliant one women show about life as a double refugee. Raised in the stifling chaos of Yarmouk City, a Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus, she escapes the Syrian war to Lebanon, and then the UK. She relates her life and journeys, suffused by her experience playing the soon to be exiled Hecuba, Queen of Troy, in Euripides’ The Trojan Women.

Copla: A Spanish Cabaret by HisPanic
A celebration of Spain’s vibrant cultural and political history, brought to life with a queer twist. Practically unknown abroad, Copla is the dramatic, heartfelt music that shaped a Spanish generation. A journey of exile, passion, defiance and reinvention, blending storytelling and song. Laugh, cry, and sing along as Copla is reimagined in English!

