Edmonton International Fringe Festival
The Edmonton International Fringe Theatre Festival is an annual arts festival held every August in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Produced by the, it is the oldest and largest fringe theatre festival in North America. The Edmonton Fringe is a founding member of the Canadian Association of Fringe Festivals.
Fringe Theatre is a charitable arts organization, Fringe Theatre brings community together through the power of storytelling. Fringe supports Artists by giving them the tools and platform they need to put on their productions and reach audiences.
In 2014, 118,280 tickets were sold, up from 117,000 in 2013. The 2014 event had over 210 shows and 1,600 performances, with an estimated outdoor site attendance of 665,750. In 2016, the attendance rate reached a record-breaking high of 850,000+ attendees. In 2017 there was a record-breaking 130,000 tickets sold and $1.2 million in box office sales during the festival, which held performances from over 1,500 artists in 220 shows.
In 2023, 114,632 tickets were sold. The 2023 event had 161 indoor theatre shows and over 1,400 performances with an estimated outdoor site attendance of ~550,000 and $1.2 million in ticket sales directly into the pockets of Fringe Artists.
History
In 1982, Chinook Theatre's artistic director Brian Paisley received $50,000 from Edmonton's Summerfest to put together "A Fringe Theatre Event" in Edmonton's Old Strathcona District. Inspired by the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Scotland, the Edmonton Fringe offered 200 live performances in five theatre venues.The 2020 Edmonton International Fringe Festival was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the only time the festival has been cancelled since its inception.
The Edmonton International Fringe Theatre Festival celebrated its 40th anniversary in 2021; it also marked the return of the Festival in a scaled-down capacity in order to meet the arts community where they were at amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Venues
The festival itself largely takes place in Old Strathcona which has a number of permanent theatres and a number of other venues which are converted by FTA or independent artists into temporary theatre venues. During the festival, the streets and alleys of the neighbourhood are also filled with street performers and masked or costumed actors promoting their plays.Unlike the Edinburgh Festivals, where artists are responsible for finding and running their own venues, the Edmonton Fringe implements a system in which for an application fee, the festival provides some artists with a venue, a set number of performances, two technicians, and front-of-house and ticketing services and general festival marketing. In recent years, there have been more performances than venues available directly through the Edmonton Fringe, so a random lottery selection is used to choose which performances will be held in those venues. Artists may also arrange for their own performance space independently as a "Bring Your Own Venue" or BYOV, similar to the Edinburgh Fringe model. These venues may be found throughout Edmonton, with one concentration of such venues near the Faculté Saint-Jean in an area known as "The French Quarter".