Calgary Fringe Festival

The Calgary Fringe Festival is an annual fringe theatre festival in Calgary, Alberta.[1]

History

The earliest Fringe-type drama festival in Calgary was the Plan B Festival, held in 2000 at a variety of locations in both Calgary's downtown and the neighbouring community of Inglewood. The Plan B Festival arose after the 2000 Calgary Fringe Festival was cancelled due to administrative difficulties, and involved (and was organized by) many of the same artists that were originally planning on partaking in the aborted Fringe. Calgary Artist/Activist Patricia Anne Duquette, on behalf of Green Fools Physical Theatre Co., coordinated a massive community effort to rescue the festival with the additional aims of setting a precedent for future fundraising efforts. Approximately 5,000 people attended the adhoc presentations and events over the course of five days, establishing an overwhelming show of interest among Calgarians. The first official Fringe festivals in Calgary took place in 2001 and 2002, organized primarily by the Loose Moose Theatre company, and based entirely in the inner-city neighbourhood of Inglewood. These were short, three-day festivals, held the weekend after the Edmonton International Fringe Festival. However, after the completion of the 2002 festival, Loose Moose lost their lease on the Garry Theatre, and were thus unable to produce the Fringe in subsequent years.

Reestablishment

A new license to produce a Fringe in Calgary was secured from the Canadian Association of Fringe Festivals[2] in 2005 by a new team headed by Blair Gallant and Jason Rothery, and a new Fringe was held in the summer of 2006. Many elements have changed from the earlier Fringes, including time, scope and locations. The Fringe is now a full-length 8-day Fringe: 2016 dates are Fri. July 29--Sat. Aug. 6, almost the same time as Saskatoon Fringe, and just before the Aug. 11 start of the Edmonton Fringe. [3] In previous years when they overlapped, a number of shows were performed at both Fringes, either closing in Calgary early or opening in Edmonton late. In addition to the theatrical performances (greatly increased to 36 from the roughly dozen in the 01 and 02 Fringes), the 2006 Calgary Fringe included street performances and vendors (typical for a Fringe) as well as a film festival, visual arts displays and live music (less common). The 2006 Calgary Fringe was held at a number of venues; the festival elements, film, visual art and music were held on 17th Avenue in the Beltline district, with the theatrical performances split between the nearby Calgary Opera rehearsal hall and the more distant EPCOR Centre for the Performing Arts, located in the downtown.

Present

The festival is currently held in the Inglewood neighbourhood of Calgary.[1] Michele Gallant is the festival Director and Producer.[4] Compared to other fringe festivals, the Calgary Fringe is classified as a smaller festival, averaging about 30 shows a year.[1][5]

Tickets

Audiences must make a one-time purchase of a Fringe Button to gain admittance to all festival events, including shows[5]. Tickets to individual shows can then be purchased on the festival website[5]. To gain entrance to a show, audiences must have a button for the festival and a ticket for the event.[5]

Artists receive 100% of the ticket price[6], minus fees.

Festival Events

Lottery Draw

The artist draw for the Calgary Fringe happens at the beginning of December. The 2019 draw was held December 5th, at Village Brewery. It was hosted by Calgary improv group, The Kinkonauts.[7] The event was also live-streamed on Facebook.[8]

Venues

There are two kinds of venues in the Calgary Fringe: Lottery and BYOV (Bring Your Own Venue). Lottery venues are run by the festival and are assigned to artists drawn in the festival lottery. BYOV venues are run by artists who were not drawn in the lottery and are therefore arranging their own venue. BYOV venues that are outside the festival neighbourhood of Inglewood are sometimes also referred to as "satellite" venues.[9]

Lottery Venues

  • 2018
    • Lantern Church (2 venues: the Sanctuary and the Basement), Festival Hall, The Artpoint Gallery, Alexandra Centre[9]

BYOV Venues

  • 2018
    • Gravity Espresso & Wine Bar, Inglewood Fine Arts Gallery, Lolita’s Lounge, Lunchbox Theatre[9]

Awards

The Calgary Fringe Festival awards the following each year:

Best of Fest Venue Series

One show per lottery venue is selected for this award. Selected shows are given an extra performance on the last Saturday of the festival. This award is determined by a special festival committee and patron feedback.[4]

See also

  • Fringe Theatre
  • Festivals in Alberta

References

  1. Aug 02, CBC News · Posted; August 3, 2018 6:31 PM MT | Last Updated; 2018. "Fringe Fest, Sunfest and free family entertainment: what's happening in Calgary this weekend | CBC News". CBC. Retrieved 2019-01-03.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. Canadian Association of Fringe Festivals
  3. "Fringe Festivals | Canadian Association of Fringe Festivals".
  4. August 10, Louis B. Hobson Updated; 2018 (2018-08-10). "How the Fringe Festival is beating the heat on its final weekend | Calgary Herald". Retrieved 2019-01-03.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. August 1, Louis Hobson Updated; 2017 (2017-08-02). "Three to see at the Calgary Fringe Festival | Calgary Herald". Retrieved 2019-01-03.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. May 18, Swerve Updated; 2018 (2018-05-18). "Swerve Festival Guide 2018: August | Calgary Herald". Retrieved 2019-01-03.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. Staff, DH Calgary (2018-12-05). "5 things to do in Calgary today: Wednesday, December 5". Daily Hive. Retrieved 2019-01-03.
  8. "Calgary Fringe Festival". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2019-01-03.
  9. July 14, Louis B. Hobson Updated; 2018 (2018-07-14). "Calgary Fringe Festival draws in traditional theatre and the unconventional | Calgary Herald". Retrieved 2019-01-03.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)


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