70 years of Fringe Festivals

Happy Birthday to Fringe Festivals everywhere, you make dreams happen!

By Holly Lombardo, Managing Director, World Fringe July 2017

http://howlround.com/seventy-years-of-fringe-festivals

 

The Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society has a significant milestone birthday this year, it is 70 years old and this means that ‘Fringe’ is 70 too. Where there was one Fringe Festival in 1947 now over 200 Fringe Festivals across the globe, facilitate hundreds of thousands of artists and performers to reach a staggering number of people every year.

On World Fringe Day, 11 July 2017, we are celebrating the birth of the Fringe Festival. Gathering together, virtually and physically, to share Fringe memories, the opportunities Fringe Festivals have given us and how they have influenced our lives. World Fringe day will highlight the importance of Fringe within the cultural landscape as a development platform that reacts to political and economic change.

There clear trends and reasons for new Fringe Festivals starting, which demonstrate the reactive nature of this sector of festival. Where there is a void, in pours a Fringe Festival to fill it. They start as a response to something. This can be lack of access to the Arts in an area, an economic recession, cuts to Arts Funding, a lack of venue space, a reaction to political agendas or a need to change the way audiences consume and interact with culture. They begin with a few like-minded, committed, entrepreneurial, forward thinking communicators who want to encourage, share and see creativity experienced by the many. Research shows that in the 33 years after the Birth of the Edinburgh Fringe in 1947, less than 10 Fringe Festivals opened. From 1980 to the millennium about 20 more popped up.

Since then there has been a sharp steady increase, which shows over 200 Fringe Festivals launching over the last 17 years. This is an extortionary expansion, which reflects cuts in funding for the arts alongside cheaper travel and the growth of digital technologies.

Fringe can’t be defined by belief or structure alone. The fundamental difference between a Fringe and a programmed Festival is mainly understood by risk & who takes it, as well as financial and the direction of the money streams. In a Fringe, there’s a shared risk, artists will often invest in their own Festival attendance and with support of the Fringe Festival administrative body, pay themselves via fundraising and ticket sales. On the flipside, a programmed Festival will hold a large pot of money and invite an artist or group to perform and pay them directly for their attendance; the Festival will then take the box office revenue.

Fringe Festivals break the rules, even their own.

Often thought of as a Fringe to a programmed festival, of which Edinburgh Fringe was the inaugural example, they are now much less definable. This is a source of continued debate as they now come in a range of models. Many are open access, meaning anyone can take part; if a performing company has a venue booked in the area within the festival dates they can register and are in the programme regardless of quality or subject of the work. Some Fringe Festivals run a lottery and literally pull names out of a hat to create the programme. This can normally be watched live online beamed out from a pub or venue with the festival staff and performers celebrating the start of the Fringe year. A few Fringe festivals are completely open air, mainly in warmer climates, they reside in parks with day long activities and markets. I know of one Fringe set up to try and change the culture of arts consumption in a whole country where currently there is only an appetite for re-runs of the classics and not for new work and writing.

The challenge is to understand why, if they are so different are they all Fringe Festivals? What brings them together is the support of creatives minds, artists and performers. It is also an ethos and a vision for change, exploration and ‘doing things different’. Consider that each Fringe Festival has its own identity, political agenda, unique structure and spirit, it is rather difficult to encapsulate what Fringe means when one size does not fit all. Some people believed that if Fringe is defined it is not a Fringe anymore as by its very nature it defies definition.

Fringes are good at testing audiences who are encouraged to take a risk on seeing something new. With generally low-ticket prices and shorter time slots, spectators don’t have much to lose but an hour of their lives and a few quid. The likelihood is they will come away having seen something ground breaking, met a few people and been inspired to take a punt on another unknown. They open the door to wider acceptance of diverse artforms and topics. No two Fringe Festivals are the same and they never repeat themselves.

With a critical lack of financial support for development within the Arts these festivals are essential to the state of culture in our societies. Without them we would see a drop in new writing and the emergence of new skills, for this reason they are vital. Fringes are accessible to all social and economic backgrounds, ages and genres and allow performers and artist to experiment, discover and be discovered They represent and encourage community cohesion, economic growth, diversity, employment, acceptance and fun. Through various touring and award networks Fringe performers can travel the world, touring to different continents, countries, cities and towns. What they carry with them is work from a vast variety of culture, inspiring the masses to take part in art. Fringe Festivals are an essential development platform supporting all levels of ability form amateur to professional; a beginning to the creative food chain, launching the stars of the future.

Constituted through innovation of creative expression, the Fringe ethos is, ‘If you want to do it you can, Fringes offer an alternative.

“This piece, “70 years of Fringe Festivals” by Holly Lombardo was originally published on HowlRound (http://howlround.com/seventy-years-of-fringe-festivals), a knowledge commons by and for the theatre community, 06/07/2017.”

 

Holly Lombardo, Managing Director

World Fringe

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