Wednesday, 5 Aug 2026
King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
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King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
Saturday, 29 Aug 2026
King Dome - Pleasance Dome, Edinburgh
Before she was serving immortal lines as viral icon Charity Shop Sue, Selina Mosinski was Randy Cain: an 18-year-old stripper from Derby with a big personality, bigger ambition, and zero intention of staying small-town.
Determined to be a star – and egged on by her guardian angel, Sylvia –Randy hitchhikes to London, ready to take almost any chance she can get for a stab at fame. But her plans are quickly derailed by an audition at a working men’s club off the A52, where “showbiz” looks a lot like a baroque, human-sized birdcage, stag parties dressed as Papa Smurf, and Garry: a sleazy casting agent who swears he can make her famous. She lands the gig, and with it her first real taste of show business: sticky floors, feral crowds, and dreams held together with body glitter and tampons.
Part confessional memoir, part riotous surreal character comedy, the show dives into a decade when celebrity culture was gloriously unfiltered – when Jodie Marsh turned underwear into headlines, Gail Porter was projected onto Big Ben, and Monica Lewinsky became global news thanks to Bill Clinton. It was also the boom era of Britain’s strip-club circuit – and Randy was right in the thick of it at Terry and Barbara’s Midlands “titty bar,” a gloriously shoddy knock-off of Stringfellows.
A darkly funny, glitter-stained confession about how far we’ll go – and how low we’ll sink – in the name of fame and fortune.