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Melbourne Fringe Festival

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Trades Hall, base of the Melbourne Fringe Festival

The Melbourne Fringe Festival is an annual independent arts festival in Melbourne, Australia, usually over three weeks from late September to early October. Held since 1982, the Festival includes a wide variety of art forms, including theatre, comedy, music, performance art, design, film, cabaret, digital art, and circus. Over 300 shows are held at over 100 venues from bars, clubs and independent theatres to high-profile locations.

The festival is open-access and artists produce shows independently. Melbourne Fringe also funds and produces its own free events.

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Transcription

History

The Fringe Arts Network was formed in 1982, aiming to raise public and government awareness of alternative arts in Melbourne. The Network offered support such as venue advice, shared resources and advocacy.

Fringe Arts Network's inaugural event was a mini-festival, followed in 1983 by a week-long event coinciding with Moomba and presenting 120 artists at some 25 locations across Melbourne.

In 1984, the Spoleto Festival of Two Worlds expanded to include Melbourne, and Melbourne's Fringe Arts Network became the Melbourne Piccolo Spoleto Fringe Festival. The Melbourne International Festival of the Arts emerged from the Spoleto Festival as a result, and in 1986, the Fringe Arts Network reclaimed its independence from Spoleto and reoriented itself as Melbourne Fringe.

In 2002, the Melbourne Fringe began a Fringe Hub model which programmed a number of closely located venues and offered artists and audiences a central place to gather and network: the Fringe Club at the North Melbourne Town Hall. In 2006, the Melbourne Fringe Club moved upstairs into the North Melbourne Town Hall's Main Hall, with a free nightly Fringe Club program. The Fringe Hub also grew to the nearby Lithuanian Club.

In 2019, the Fringe Hub moved to the renovated Trades Hall in Carlton.[1] Melbourne Fringe also established a year-round program at its Trades Hall venue.

2021 saw the festival go virtual.

Notable shows

See also

External links

  • Official site
  • Fringe Dwellers
  • "Brief History of Melbourne Fringe". Archived from the original on 21 January 2012.

References

  1. ^ Francis, Hannah (9 August 2019). "Melbourne Fringe spruiks people power and truth at new Trades Hall hub". The Age. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
  2. ^ "Oh, you inscrutable doll". The Age. 20 September 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  3. ^ Brinker, Jay. "The Funny Side Of Computers at Melbourne Fringe". The Conversation.
This page was last edited on 30 November 2023, at 23:48
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