2003 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
2006 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
2007 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
2009 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Adelaide Fringe Festival
Al Murray
Alan Bennett
Alan Davies
Amnesty International
Andy Borowitz
Apex Hotels
Arts festival
Assembly Rooms (Edinburgh)#Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Battersea Arts Centre
Bedlam Theatre
Beyond the Fringe
Bill Bailey
C venues
Cambridge Footlights
Christian Slater
Complicite
Craig Ferguson
Derek Jacobi
Dudley Moore
Edinburgh Castle
Edinburgh Festival
Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Edinburgh International Festival
Edinburgh Tattoo
Edmonton International Fringe Festival
Emma Thompson
Event programme
Fascinating Aida
Fest Magazine
Forest Café
Free Edinburgh Fringe Festival
Free Fringe
Fringe Review
Fringe Theatre
Fringe theatre
Fringe theatre#List of Fringe Festivals
GB£
Hamlet
Henry Fonda
Holyrood Park
Hugh Laurie
Inchcolm
Intelligent Finance
James Haynes
Jenny Eclair
John Calder
Jonathan Miller
List of Total Theatre Award winners
List of if.comedy and Perrier comedy award winners
Macmillan Cancer Support
Main Page
Malcolm Hardee
Metro (Associated Metro Limited)
Monty Python
Moscow-Petushki
National Arts Festival
National Theatre of Brent
Neil Simon
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (play)
Owen O'Neill
Perrier
Perrier Award
Peter Cook
Phil Nichol
Reduced Shakespeare Company
Reggie Watts
Rich Hall
Richard Demarco
Ricky Gervais
Robert Kemp (playwright)
Rory Bremner
Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead
Rowan Atkinson
Royal Mile
Samuel Beckett
Satire
Scotland on Sunday
Sixth-form
Stage Awards for Acting Excellence
Stephen Frost
Stephen Fry
Steve Coogan
Sunday Herald
Terry Johnson (dramatist)
The Famous Spiegeltent
The Forest (social centre)
The Guardian
The Herald (Glasgow)
The Independent
The League of Gentlemen
The List (magazine)
The New York Times
The Odd Couple
The Scotsman
2006 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
2007 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
2009 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Adelaide Fringe Festival
Al Murray
Alan Bennett
Alan Davies
Amnesty International
Andy Borowitz
Apex Hotels
Arts festival
Assembly Rooms (Edinburgh)#Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Battersea Arts Centre
Bedlam Theatre
Beyond the Fringe
Bill Bailey
C venues
Cambridge Footlights
Christian Slater
Complicite
Craig Ferguson
Derek Jacobi
Dudley Moore
Edinburgh Castle
Edinburgh Festival
Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Edinburgh International Festival
Edinburgh Tattoo
Edmonton International Fringe Festival
Emma Thompson
Event programme
Fascinating Aida
Fest Magazine
Forest Café
Free Edinburgh Fringe Festival
Free Fringe
Fringe Review
Fringe Theatre
Fringe theatre
Fringe theatre#List of Fringe Festivals
GB£
Hamlet
Henry Fonda
Holyrood Park
Hugh Laurie
Inchcolm
Intelligent Finance
James Haynes
Jenny Eclair
John Calder
Jonathan Miller
List of Total Theatre Award winners
List of if.comedy and Perrier comedy award winners
Macmillan Cancer Support
Main Page
Malcolm Hardee
Metro (Associated Metro Limited)
Monty Python
Moscow-Petushki
National Arts Festival
National Theatre of Brent
Neil Simon
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (play)
Owen O'Neill
Perrier
Perrier Award
Peter Cook
Phil Nichol
Reduced Shakespeare Company
Reggie Watts
Rich Hall
Richard Demarco
Ricky Gervais
Robert Kemp (playwright)
Rory Bremner
Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead
Rowan Atkinson
Royal Mile
Samuel Beckett
Satire
Scotland on Sunday
Sixth-form
Stage Awards for Acting Excellence
Stephen Frost
Stephen Fry
Steve Coogan
Sunday Herald
Terry Johnson (dramatist)
The Famous Spiegeltent
The Forest (social centre)
The Guardian
The Herald (Glasgow)
The Independent
The League of Gentlemen
The List (magazine)
The New York Times
The Odd Couple
The Scotsman
This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. You can assist by editing it. (June 2010)
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The gate for the street fair portion of the festival on the Royal Mile, in August 2007.
The Edinburgh Festival Fringe (The Fringe) is the world’s largest arts festival.1 Established in 1946 as an alternative to the Edinburgh International Festival, it takes place in Scotland's capital during four weeks every August alongside several other arts and cultural festivals, collectively known as the Edinburgh Festival, of which the Fringe is by far the largest.1
The Fringe mostly attracts events from the performing arts, particularly theater and comedy (which has seen substantial growth in recent years,) although dance and music also figure significantly: in 2009 35% of shows were comedy and 28% were theater.1 Theater events can range from the classics of ancient Greece, William Shakespeare and Samuel Beckett, to modern works, and in 2009 37% of shows were world premieres.1 However, there is no selection committee to approve the entries – it is an unjuried festival – so any type of event is possible: the Fringe often showcases experimental works which might not be admitted to a more formal festival. In addition to ticketed events (included in the programme), there is an ongoing street fair, particularly on the Royal Mile. The organizers are the Festival Fringe Society: they publish the programme, sell tickets and offer advice to performers from the Fringe office on the Royal Mile.
By way of scale, Fringe 2009 sold 1,859,235 tickets2 for 34,265 performances of 2,098 shows in 265 venues, over 25 days,1 for an average of over 74,000 admissions and 1,300 performances per day. There were an estimated 18,901 performers, from 60 countries.
Contents
1 History
1.1 Early years
1.2 The Fringe today
1.2.1 Venues
1.2.2 Computerised box office
1.2.2.1 2008 problems
1.3 Notable shows
2 Fringe legacy
3 Criticism
3.1 Unjuried festival
3.2 Quality
3.3 Ticket prices
3.4 Costs to performers
3.5 Costs to venues
3.6 Fringe of the Fringe
4 Reviews and awards
4.1 Sources of reviews
4.2 Awards
5 See also
6 References
7 Further reading
8 External links
History
Typical Fringe Scene
Early years
The Fringe started life when eight theater companies turned up uninvited to the inaugural Edinburgh International Festival in 1947. Seven performed in Edinburgh, one undertook a version of the medieval morality play "Everyman" in Dunfermline Cathedral about 20 miles north across the river Forth in Fife. These groups aimed to take advantage of the large theater crowds expected and showcase their own, more alternative, theater. The Fringe got its name in the following year (1948) after Robert Kemp, a Scottish playwright and journalist, wrote during the second Edinburgh International Festival: ‘Round the fringe of official Festival drama, there seems to be more private enterprise than before … I am afraid some of us are not going to be at home during the evenings!’.
There was no organization initially until students of the University of Edinburgh set up a drop-in center in 1951 in the YMCA where cheap food and a bed for the night were made available to participating groups. It was 1955 before the first attempt was made to provide a central booking service.3
The advent of the Fringe was not warmly greeted by some sections of the International Festival (and the Edinburgh establishment), leading to outbursts of animosity between the two festivals. This lasted well into the 1970s.
In 1959 there came the first signs of organization with the formation of the "Festival Fringe Society". A constitution was drawn up in which the policy of not vetting or censoring shows was set out and the Society produced the first guide to all Fringe shows. 19 companies attended the Fringe in that year.
The artistic credentials of the Fringe were established by the creators of the Traverse Theatre, John Calder, Jim Haynes and Richard Demarco in 1963. While their original objective was to maintain something of the Festival atmosphere in Edinburgh all year round, the Traverse Theatre quickly and regularly presented cutting edge drama to an international audience on both the Edinburgh International Festival and on the Fringe during August. It set a standard to which other companies on the Fringe aspired. The Traverse is occasionally referred to as 'The Fringe venue that got away', reflecting its current status as a permanent and integral part of the Edinburgh arts scene.
Problems began to arise as the Fringe became too big for students and volunteers to deal with. Eventually in 1969 the Society became a constituted body, and in 1970 it employed its first administrator, John Milligan, who left in 1976. 3
Between 1976 and 1981, the number of companies performing rose from 182 to 494, thus achieving its position of the largest arts festival in the world. At this point, the Fringe operated on only two full-time members of staff. In 1988 the Society moved from 170 High Street to its current expanded headquarters on the Royal Mile. Since then the Society has increased the amount of technology used by introducing computerised ticketing and in 2000 the Fringe became the first arts organisation in the world to sell tickets online in real time.3
The Fringe today
A street performer on the Royal Mile, with volunteer (2004).
The Fringe has grown dramatically since its inception. Statistics for 2009 Edinburgh Festival Fringe concluded that it was the largest on record: there were 34,265 performances of 2,098 different shows in 265 venues. Ticket sales amounted to around 1.8 million. There are now 12 full-time members of staff.
Of the 2000+ shows, theatre was the largest genre in terms of number of shows until 2008, when it was overtaken by comedy, which has been the major growth area over the last 20 years. The other genres are, in order of number of shows: Music, Dance & Physical Theatre, Musicals & Opera, and Children's Shows, in addition to assorted Events and Exhibitions.
It is possible to sample shows before committing to a full performance. For many years, the Fringe Club (variously in the High Street from 1971 and at Teviot Row Student Union from 1981) provided nightly showcases of Fringe fare to allow audiences to sample shows. The Fringe Club closed down in 2004, and various venues still provide "the Best of the Fest" and similar. The best opportunity used to be afforded by "Fringe Sunday", started in the High Street in 1981 and moved through pressure of popularity to Holyrood Park in 1983. Fringe Sunday was held on the second Sunday of the Fringe when companies performed for free. Having outgrown even Holyrood Park, this took place on The Meadows until 2008. Alternatively, on any day during the Fringe the pedestrianised area of the High Street around St. Giles Cathedral and the Fringe Office becomes the focal point for theatre companies to hand out flyers, perform scenes from their shows, and attempt to sell tickets. Many shows are "2 for 1" on the opening weekend of the Festival.
Venues
The Pleasance Courtyard during the 2006 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
According to the Fringe Society there were 265 venues in 2009, although over 80 of them housed event(s) or exhibition(s) which are not part of the main performing art genres that the Fringe is generally known for.
Over the first 20 years each performing group had its own performing space, or venue. However, by around 1970 the concept of sharing a venue became popular, principally as a means of cutting costs. It soon became possible to host up to 6 or 7 different shows per day in a hall. The obvious next step was to partition a venue into two or more performing spaces; the majority of today's venues fit into this category. This approach was taken a stage further by the early 1980s with the arrival of the "super-venue" – a location that contains multiple performing spaces. The Assembly Rooms started the trend in 1981, taking over the empty Georgian building that had once hosted the International Festival Club, and the following year The Circuit was prominent; it was in fact a "tented village”, that was situated on a piece of empty ground, popularly known as “The Hole in The Ground”, once the site of a snooker club (Pool's), where the Saltire complex was subsequently built in the early 1990s. The new Traverse Theatre opened here in 1993.
Nowadays, venues come in all shapes and sizes, with use being made of every conceivable space from proper theatres (e.g. Traverse or Bedlam Theatre), custom-made theatres (e.g. Music Hall in the Assembly Rooms), historic castles (C venues), to lecture theatres (Pleasance, George Square Theatre and Sweet ECA), conference centres, other university rooms and spaces, temporary structures (The Famous Spiegeltent and the Udderbelly ), churches and church halls, schools, a public toilet, the back of a taxi, and even in the audience's own homes.
The groups that operate the venues are also very diverse: some are commercial and others not-for-profit; some operate year-round, while others exist only to run venues at the Fringe. Many are based in London.
From the performers' perspective, the decision on where to perform is typically based on a mixture of cost, location (close proximity to other venues is seen as a plus), and the philosophy of the venue – some of whom specialise in amateur, school or college productions, some of whom are semi or wholly professional.
The professionalism of venues and of organisations has increased hugely. The church hall at Lauriston Place used by Edinburgh University Theatre Company as Bedlam Theatre was taken over by Richard Crane and Faynia Williams from Bradford University in 1975 to house "Satan's Ball". This was an ambitious benchmark production which inspired others.citation needed By 1980 when William Burdett-Coutts set up Assembly Theatre in the Assembly Rooms on George Street (formerly the EIF Festival Club), the investment in staging, lighting and sound meant that the original amateur or student theatricals had been left behind. There was still theatre done on a shoestring, but several cultural entrepreneurs had raised the stakes to the point where a venue like Aurora (St Stephen's Church, Stockbridge) could hold its head up in any major world festival.
Computerised box office
A computerised booking system was first installed in the early 1990s, allowing tickets to be bought at a number of locations around the city. The Internet arrived in 2000 with the launching of its official website, which sold over half a million tickets online by 2005. In the following year, a Half Price Ticket Tent was added in association with Metro, offering special ticket prices for different shows each day, selling 45,000 tickets in its first year.
Several venues use their own ticketing systems; this is partly due to issues of commissions and how ticket revenue is distributed,4 and was reinforced by the 2008 failure of the main box office.
2008 problems
In 2008 the Fringe faced the biggest crisis in its history when the computerised ticketing system failed. The director of the Fringe resigned and the Board decided that the post of "Director" (invented in 1992 after years of being called "Fringe Administrator") would be abolished and replaced by a Chief Executive, thus reinforcing the Fringe chief's basic administrative function. A report into the failure was commissioned from accountancy firm Scott-Moncrieff.4
The events surrounding the failed box office software led to the resignation of Fringe Director Jon Morgan after only one full year in post. The resultant financial loss suffered by the Fringe Society has been estimated at £300,000 which it was forced to meet from its reserves.citation needed These events attracted much comment from the UK and world media. More debts emerged as the year went on, and an independent report criticised the Board and the current and previous Fringe Directors for a failure of management and an inability to provide the basic service.citation needed To make matters worse, Fringe Sunday – a vast free showcase of events held on the Meadows – was cancelled as a sponsor could not be secured.5 After an interim period where Tim Hawkins from Brighton held the reins, established Edinburgh Book Festival and Fringe manager Kath Mainland was appointed in February 2009 to stabilise the situation and became the Fringe's first Chief Executive.
On 15 June 2009 the Fringe Box Office opened with £275,873 being taken for 35,350 tickets by the end of the first day of trading to the general public.6 While these were record sales and declared a success by Mainland, initial lengthy queues and delays were experienced by those seeking tickets on the Royal Mile.7
Notable shows
Edinburgh has spawned many notable original shows and helped kickstart the careers of many writers and performers.
In 1960 Alan Bennett, Dudley Moore, Peter Cook and Jonathan Miller performed at the Royal Lyceum theatre in Beyond the Fringe, introducing a new wave of British satire and heralding a change in attitudes towards politicians and the establishment. Ironically, this show was put together by the Edinburgh International Festival as a rebuff to the emerging Fringe. But its title alone helped publicise "the Fringe", especially when it went on to London's West End and New York's Broadway for the next 12 months. 8
Tom Stoppard's play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead was first performed in its full version at the 1966 Fringe.
It has also launched or advanced the careers of a number of noted actors, such as Derek Jacobi, who starred in a sixth-form production of Hamlet, which was very well-regarded.9
The 1986 Fringe saw the breakout performance of Craig Ferguson as "Bing Hitler", a "parody of all the über-patriotic native folk singers who seemed to infect every public performance in Scotland."10
2003 saw a production of 12 Angry Men staged at the Assembly Rooms using established comedians in the roles of the twelve jurors. It starred Owen O'Neill in the role made famous by Henry Fonda, Juror #8. Stephen Frost, Phil Nichol and Bill Bailey also featured.11
A 2004 version of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was beset by problems, including the lead actor Christian Slater contracting chicken pox and the original director, Guy Masterson, quitting the project before it opened. Masterson was replaced by Terry Johnson.12
In 2005, a production of Neil Simon's The Odd Couple starring Bill Bailey and Alan Davies was staged at the Assembly Hall, the meeting place on the Mound of the Church of Scotland. This had been taken over by Assembly Theatre and transformed into an 840-seat theatre.13
The Tattoo set-up at Edinburgh Castle served as the 6,000-seat venue for a one-off performance by Ricky Gervais of his latest stand-up show Fame in 2007. Gervais was accused of greed14 and taking audiences away from smaller shows. Gervais donated the profits from the show to Macmillan Cancer Support.15
Fringe legacy
The concept of Fringe Theatre has been copied around the world. The largest and most celebrated of these spawned festivals are Adelaide Fringe Festival, National Arts Festival in Grahamstown, South Africa, and Edmonton International Fringe Festival. The number of such events continues to grow, particularly in the USA and Canada. In the case of Edinburgh (est 1947) the Fringe is an addition to the Festival proper. Hence the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. But where there is no actual Festival to be added to – such as New York (est 1997) – or where the festival is more "fringe" than anything else, the word comes before the word "festival", thus the "Adelaide Fringe Festival." (est 1979).
In the field of drama, the Edinburgh Fringe has premièred several plays, most notably Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead by Tom Stoppard (1966) and Moscow Stations (1994) which starred Tom Courtenay. Over the years, it has attracted a number of companies that have made repeated visits to the Fringe, and in doing so helped to set high artistic standards. They have included: the London Club Theatre Group (1950s), 7:84 Scotland (1970s), the Children's Music Theatre, later the National Youth Music Theatre under Jeremy James Taylor, the National Student Theatre Company (from the 1970s), Communicado (1980s and 1990s), Red Shift (1990s), and Grid Iron. The Fringe is also the staging ground of the American High School Theatre Festival.
In the field of comedy, the Fringe has provided a platform that has allowed the careers of many performers to bloom. In the 1960s, various members of the Monty Python team appeared in student productions, as subsequently did Rowan Atkinson, Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie and Emma Thompson, the latter three with the 1981 Cambridge Footlights. Atkinson was at Oxford. Notable companies in the 1980s have included Complicite and the National Theatre of Brent. More recent comedy performers to have been 'discovered' include Rory Bremner, Fascinating Aida, Reduced Shakespeare Company, Steve Coogan, Jenny Eclair, The League of Gentlemen, Al Murray and Rich Hall.
Criticism
Unjuried festival
The role of the Fringe Society is to facilitate the festival, concentrating mainly on the challenging logistics of organising such a large event. Alistair Moffat (Fringe administrator 1976–1981) summarised the role of the Society when he said, “As a direct result of the wishes of the participants, the Society had been set up to help the performers that come to Edinburgh and to promote them collectively to the public. It did not come together so that groups could be invited, or in some way artistically vetted. What was performed and how it was done was left entirely to each Fringe group”. This approach is now sometimes referred to as an unjuried festival or a fringe festival.
Quality
Over the years this approach has led to adverse criticism about the quality of the Fringe. Much of this criticism comes from individual arts critics in national newspapers, hard-line aficionados of the Edinburgh International Festival, and occasionally from the Edinburgh International Festival itself.
The Fringe's own position on this debate may be summed up by Michael Dale (Fringe Administrator 1982–1986) in his book Sore Throats & Overdrafts, "No-one can say what the quality will be like overall. It does not much matter, actually, for that is not the point of the Fringe ... The Fringe is a forum for ideas and achievement unique in the UK, and in the whole world ... Where else could all this be attempted, let alone work?". Views from the middle ground of this perennial debate point out that the Fringe is not complete artistic anarchy. Some venues do influence or decide on the content of their programme, such as the Traverse and the now defunct Aurora Nova.
A frequent criticism, well-aired in the media over the last 20 years, has been that "stand-up comedy is taking over" the Fringe, that a large proportion of newer audiences are drawn almost exclusively to stand-up comics (particularly to television comedy stars in famous venues), and that they are starting to regard non-comedy events as "peripheral". The 2008 Fringe marked the first time that comedy has made up the largest category of entertainment.16
The freedom to put on any show has led periodically to controversy when individual tastes in sexual explicitness or religion have been contravened. This has brought some into conflict with local city councillors. Needless to say, there have been the occasional performing groups who have deliberately tried to provoke controversy as a means of advertising their shows.
Ticket prices
In the mid 1990s only the occasional top show charged £10 per seat, while the average price was £5–£7; in 2006, prices were frequently £10+ and £20 was reached for the first time in 2006 for a show that lasted 1 hour. Some of the reasons that are put forward for the increases include: the increasing costs associated with hiring large venues; theatre licences and related costs; plus the price of accommodation during the Edinburgh Festival which is expensive for performers as well as for audiences.
In recent years a different business model has been adopted by two organisations; The Free Fringe and The Laughing Horse Free Edinburgh Fringe Festival have introduced the concept of the free entry show, though there are collections at the end of each performance. There were 22 shows that came under this banner in 2005, growing to 69 in 2006 and 320 in 2007. There is also the "pay what you can" model of the Forest Fringe, discussed below.
Costs to performers
Conversely, putting on a show at the Fringe is costly to performers,17 due to registration fees, venue hire, cost of accommodations, and travel to Edinburgh. There are graduated registration fees, inexpensive venues, and inexpensive accommodations, but despite this, few shows even break even.citation needed Instead, the festival is touted as a networking opportunity, training ground or springboard for future career advancement, and exciting and fun for performers as well as spectators.18
Costs to venues
Putting on shows is costly to venues as well, due to theatre license fees which by 2009 had risen 800% in the preceding three years, and were eight times as high as fees in English cities, starting at £824 for a venue of up to 200 people and rising to £2,472 for a venue of up to 5,000 people.19 These fees have been cited as punitive to smaller venues and site-specific performances by such figures as Julian Caddy of Sweet Venues[1], which in 2009 featured site-specific shows in such venues as Inchcolm island and a swimming pool at the Apex International Hotel. Further, since fees are charged per postal address, they are cited as discriminating against smaller venues by such figure as Anthony Alderson, well-established singer and director of Pleasance, one of the largest venues.
Fringe of the Fringe
The Fringe at times itself sprouts a fringe. While the festival is unjuried, participating in the Fringe requires registration, payment of a registration fee,17 and use of a Fringe venue. For example, the 2008 registration fee was £289.05.20 Some outdoor spaces also require registration, notably the Royal Mile.2122 Thus some artists perform outside of the auspices of the Fringe, either individually or as part of a festival or in association with a venue, either outdoors or in non-Fringe venues. Starting in 2007, and continuing in 2008 and 2009 and 2010, a primary "Fringe of the Fringe" festival is the Forest Fringe,23 at The Forest, in association with the Battersea Arts Centre (BAC). The aim is to encourage experimentation by reducing costs to performers – not charging for space, and providing accommodation. The same applied to audiences: all shows being "pay what you can".24
Reviews and awards
Sources of reviews
For many groups at the Fringe the ultimate goal is a favourable review which, apart from the welcome kudos, may help to minimise any financial losses that are suffered in putting on the show.
Edinburgh based newspaper The Scotsman, often seen as the 'bible' of the Edinburgh Festival for its comprehensive coveragecitation needed, originally aimed to review every show on the Fringe. They now have to be more selective, as there are simply too many shows to cover, although they do see more or less every new play being staged as part of the Fringe's theatre programme because of their Fringe First awards.
Other Scottish media outlets that provide coverage include: The Herald, Scotland on Sunday, Sunday Herald and the Scottish edition of Metro. Scottish arts and entertainment magazines The List and Fest Magazine – also provide extensive coverage.
Several organisations have appeared in recent years who freely offer a comprehensive mixture of printed and web-based reviews. They aim to cover shows that are missed by the larger organisations. They include: Edinburghguide.com, ThreeWeeks; Broadway Baby Fringe Review, and Fringe Guru, to name but a few. Garden Sessions are an internet based outlet which provides coverage on its weekly radio show, as well as reviews on folk music and the more traditional aspects of the festival. ThreeWeeks, Broadway Baby, Fringe Review, and Fringe Guru have collaborated for the 2009 Festival to produce iFringe, an iPhone application that collates all of their reviews and allows for reading on the go.
Most of the London based broadsheets also review, in particular The Guardian and The Independent, while arts industry weekly The Stage publish a large number of Edinburgh reviews, especially of the drama programme.
In addition, journalists / reviewers from all over the world are in Edinburgh during the festival, and their reports and reviews appear in media outlets around the globe.
Awards
Gabriel Byrne holding his Herald Angel
There are a growing number of awards for Fringe shows, particularly in the field of drama:
The Scotsman introduced the prestigious Fringe First awards in 1973. These awards were established by Scotsman arts editor Allen Wright to encourage new theatre writing, and are given only to new plays (or new translations), and several are awarded for each of the three weeks of the Fringe – usually by a celebrity at a prestigious ceremony.
Herald Angels are awarded by the team of arts writers of The Herald to performers or shows who are deemed worthy of recognition. Similar to Fringe Firsts, they are given each week of the Fringe.
The Stage has awarded the Stage Awards for Acting Excellence since 1995. There are currently four categories: best actor, actress, ensemble and solo show.
Total Theatre Awards has presented their Total Theatre Awards for excellence in the field of physical and visual theatre since 1997. The categories under which these awards are given vary from year to year. A notable addition in 2007 was the inclusion of a 'Wild Card' award chosen by the festival-going public.
Amnesty International introduced the Amnesty Freedom of Expression Award in 2002.25
The Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh Award for best drama was introduced in 2004. To be eligible for this award a show must have received a four or five star rating in The Scotsman and must not have previously played in New York, as the prize is to put the show on in New York.
The ThreeWeeks Editors' Awards26 was introduced in 2005 and are given to the ten things that have most excited the ThreeWeeks editors each year.
The Terrier Awards (hosted by The Scotsman Piano Bar) joined The Tap Water Awards (hosted by the Holyrood Tavern) as alternative awards in 2006.
The Edinburgh Musical Theatre Awards were introduced in 2007 by Musical Theatre Matters, to encourage the writing and production of new musicals on the Fringe.
The Holden Street Theatres Edinburgh Award – presented at The Scotsman Fringe Awards Ceremony. The Award offers an outstanding production the opportunity to tour as the headline act for Holden Street Theatres in its Adelaide Fringe Program in the following year.citation needed
Purely for comedy:
The Malcolm Hardee Award
The Perrier Awards for Comedy came into existence in 1981 when the award was won by the Cambridge Footlights. (Two further award categories have since been added.) Perrier, the mineral water manufacturer ended its long association in 2006 and was succeeded by the Scottish-based company Intelligent Finance. In 2009 IF also withdrew and could not be replaced so the awards are now temporarily being funded by promoter Nica Burns and rebranded as the Edinburgh Comedy awards, or "Eddies".
The Malcolm Hardee Award "for comic originality of thought or performance"27 is to be presented for ten years, 2008–2017.2829 An initial one-off Malcolm Hardee Award had been made at the Fringe in 2005, the year of Hardee's death, to American musical comic Reggie Watts.30
See also
Fringe theatre
List of Fringe Festivals
List of if.comedy and Perrier comedy award winners
References
^ a b c d e "Edinburgh festival fringe 2010 programme unveiled". The Edinburgh Festival fringe. http://www.edfringe.com/news/edinburgh-festival-fringe-2010-programme-unveiled. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
^ Fringe 2009 Ends on a High Note
^ a b c "History of the Edinburgh Festivals". Edinburgh Festival. http://www.edinburghfestivalpunter.co.uk/HistoryOfFestivals.html#_The_Fringe. Retrieved 2 April 2008.
^ a b Review of the Box Office System Project
^ Edinburgh Fringe may seek £600,000 bail-out, Severin Carrell, The Guardian, 10 January 2009
^ Phew! Fringe's new box office holds up
^ Ticketing system is new but it's same old problems for Fringe, 16 June 2009, by Brian Ferguson, The Scotsman
^ Leonard, Nicholas. "50 years on from Beyond the Fringe: Pete, Dud, Alan, Jon & me". Scotsman.com. http://www.edinburgh-festivals.com/viewnews.aspx?id=1960. Retrieved 2010-08-23.
^ First knight of nerves for Derek Jacobi and A Bunch of Amateurs
^ Andy Borowitz (1 October 2009). "The Scotsman". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/04/books/review/Borowitz-t.html. Retrieved 6 November 2009.
^ "Twelve Angry Men's description". Chortle. http://www.chortle.co.uk/shows/edinburgh_fringe_2003/t/873/twelve_angry_men. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
^ One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Lyn Gardner, The Guardian, 19 August 2004
^ For Odd's Sake
^ Ferguson, Brian (16 April 2009). "Ticket touts are greedy scum, rages Ricky Gervais". The Scotsman. http://news.scotsman.com/latestnews/Ticket-touts-are-greedy-scum.5174786.jp. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
^ Fraser, Gemma (28 August 2007). "Going wild and giving it up for a good cause". Edinburgh Evening News. http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/festival2007/Going-wild-and-giving-it.3321740.jp. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
^ Dibdin, Thom (5 June 2008). "Comedy overtakes theatre in Edinburgh Festival Fringe first". The Staged. http://thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/20913/comedy-overtakes-theatre-in-edinburgh. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
^ a b "Costs & Deadlines". http://www.edfringe.com/story.html?id=2157&area_id=45.
^ Why should I bring my show to Edinburgh?
^ 'Pure greed' of 800% rise in venue fees, by Tim Cornwell, The Scotsman, 12 August 2009
^ "How much will it cost?". 8 February 2008. Archived from the original on 7 February 2008. http://web.archive.org/web/20080207011349/http://www.edfringe.com/story.html?id=345&area_id=27.
^ "High Street Information". http://www.edfringe.com/area.html?r_menu=global&id=223.
^ "Performers". http://www.edfringe.com/story.html?id=2764&area_id=223.
^ Gardner, Lyn (21 May 2008). "A loss and a gain for Edinburgh's audiences: The Fringe will be a poorer place without Aurora Nova this year, but Forest Fringe could step into its shoes". The Guardian. London. http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/theatreblog/2008/may/21/edinburgh. Retrieved 1 May 2010.
^ Forest Fringe: About Us
^ Scotland: Freedom of Expression Award shortlist announced, Amnesty International, 21 August 2006
^ ThreeWeeks Editors' Awards 2006
^ "The Malcolm Hardee Awards". The Malcolm Hardee. http://www.malcolmhardee.co.uk/award. Retrieved 15 June 2008.
^ "In Malc's memory: New Fringe award set up". Chortle. 2 June 2008. http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/2008/06/02/6853/in_malcs_memory. Retrieved 2 June 2008.
^ Wolf, Ian (2 June 2008). "New Fringe award dedicated to Malcolm Hardee". British Sitcom Guide. http://www.sitcom.co.uk/news/news.php?story=000457. Retrieved 2 June 2008.
^ "Irish Independent, 28 September 2007, retrieved 15 June 2008". http://www.independent.ie/entertainment/arts/and-now-for-something-completely--different-1091538.html.
Further reading
Bain, A., The Fringe: 50 Years of the Greatest Show on Earth, The Scotsman Publications Ltd, 1996
Dale, M., Sore Throats and Overdrafts: An illustrated story of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Precedent Publications Ltd, Edinburgh, 1988
McMillan, J., Carnegie, J., The Traverse Theatre Story 1963–1988, Methuen Publishing, London, 1988
External links
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