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North Bay’s Fringe Festival back with in-person and live events

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North Bay’s ON THE EDGE Fringe Festival is returning to live and in-person events this summer.

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The festival’s ninth edition features a line-up with 12 unique shows performing daily.

The ON THE EDGE Fringe Festival will run from August 9 to 13 at the Capitol Centre, located at 150 Main St E.

The Capitol Centre’s Martini Lounge will also be transformed into an eclectic “Fringe-tini Lounge” where patrons can discuss their favourite performances while enjoying a hot or cold beverage and a snack before catching the next act.

Organizers said the line-up for this year’s festival can be found on the official ON THE EDGE Fringe website www.fringenorth.com along with the schedule of events.

“Audiences can enjoy performances from a variety of local and travelling artists spanning across many different styles and disciplines of art. Whether you are looking to laugh, cry, or sit on the edge of your seat, ON THE EDGE Fringe guarantees there is something for everyone to enjoy,” according to festival organizers.

The productions participating in the 2022 Fringe are: Attainable Goals by Tristen Watts; Banjoker by Tony Molesworth and GVI Productions; Check, Please! By First Gig Productions; Discovery Town by The Ringos; MINE! by Chasing Shadows Productions; The Elvis in Her by Big Red Productions and Hannah Kast Art; The Inevitable Frankie Green by Bird on Stage Productions; OOPS! A Nuclear Fallout by the Fringe Summer Students; The Way of the Eye by The Way of the Eye Productions; Theatre is Dead by Paradox Repertory Company, and To Torture a Prince by Porticullis on Stage.

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“There will be a whole bushel of other Fringe events all week long; including Fringe-Trivia Night, a Friday Night Fringe Warehouse Party, multiple Duality Arts events, the annual On The Edge Fringe Awards ceremony and of course a closing night Fringe party,” according to a media release issued Monday.

Tickets to the performances range from $10 – $15 and may be purchased through the Capitol Centre Box Office or at the door of each venue.

Festival Passes, which provide access to all shows, are also available for $120.

Don’t miss out on the most creative and lively event of the summer! Join us at the Capitol Centre from August 9th-13th and BE FRINGEY.

ON THE EDGE fringe acknowledges the generous support of the Ontario Arts Council (www.arts.on.ca), the Canada Council for the Arts (www.canadacouncil.ca), the Government of Canada (www.canada.ca) and Theatre Ontario’s Youth Theatre Training Program (www.theatreontario.org) for this year’s festival.

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Global Edmonton supports: 3rd Annual Fringe Theatre Telethon – GlobalNews Events

Global Edmonton supports: 3rd Annual Fringe Theatre Telethon - GlobalNews Events

Join us July 27 from 12 pm – 8 pm for the 3rd Annual Fringe Theatre Telethon, LIVE on FringeTV!

Enjoy live performances, Festival sneak peeks, artist interviews, and more, all in support of the Edmonton International Fringe Theatre Festival. The generosity of individual donors supports essential Fringe Theatre operations so that they can continue to amplify and illuminate artist stories.

Phone lines will be open to accept your gifts from 12 pm to 8 pm at 780-448-9000 or donate online 24/7 at fringetheatre.ca/donate.

Give Now, Fringe Forever!

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Hamilton Fringe Festival returns to in-person events after two-year hiatus – Hamilton | Globalnews.ca

Hamilton Fringe Festival returns to in-person events after two-year hiatus - Hamilton | Globalnews.ca

The director of Hamilton’s Fringe Festival says there’s “nothing like the real thing” with in-person shows returning after a two year hiatus due to the pandemic.

“Being in a theater with real people, seeing the same show together and … that rush, there’s nothing like it,” Christopher Stanton told 900 CHML’s Good Morning Hamilton.

The festival kicked off Wednesday and boasts 14 stages across Hamilton with more than 350 performances on tap from more than 60 artistic companies.

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An outdoor stage at Theatre Aquarius was the starting point with a preview event highlighting performances during the 12-day long festival.

Writer and performer Carly Anna Billings who stars in the “storytelling, culinary” production ‘Meat(less) Loaf’ says the online-only digital fringe offered last year paled in comparison to standing on a stage with live audience.

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“Just doing tech the other day (before the show) I was getting teary eyed,” said Billings. “Standing in the light, you know, waiting for my next cue … I was like, ‘this is the thing.’


Porch Light Theatre and Industry.

Stanton says the entire festival is a “monster’ when it comes to planning, a year-round exercise requiring a core of five executives.

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“The other piece of it is ‘be flexible’ because stuff is going to happen,” Stanton said.

“At the kickoff, we had to stop mid-show because of thunder and lightning. We had to shelter in place, which felt so very fringy.”

The festival includes a family hub at the Bridgeworks event space with family-friendly shows and kids workshops during the weekdays.

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The Family Fringe Carnival Day happens July 30, between 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m., under a big tent. The kids craft event will take place during the same hours on Sunday July 31.

Artists Eve Beauchamp and Caity Smyck, on the fringe circuit across Ontario, will bring their comedy Unmatched to the Bridgeworks stage Sunday night.

The duo, from Ottawa’s Levity Theatre Company, are first-timers to Hamilton’s festival and say they were originally scheduled for last year’s festival but were halted by the pandemic.

In 2022, the two have once again resumed in-person shows hitting festivals in Ottawa, Toronto and Hamilton before heading over to the west coast for more performances.

Read more:

Dave Chappelle show abruptly cancelled by venue after online backlash

Unmatched tells seven unsuccessful first date stories the pair once heard from friends, colleagues and family.

“So the different dates we portray on stage, they run the gamut of lighthearted and quirky, to just bizarre and like potentially dangerous,” Smyck said.

The shows title stems from dating app terminology describing an action from a subscriber when facing a “no go” scenario.

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“It’s also kind of like a play on … combinations of people that just are not working out for whatever reason,” Beauchamp said.

Tickets to in-person shows can be bought on the festival’s website or at the main box office just outside of Theatre Aquarius at 191 King William St.

Most advance tickets can be purchased until one hour prior to showtime.

Every fringe patron over the age of 12 will require a Fringe Backer Button to access paid in-person shows. The Backer Button is a one-time purchase of $5.

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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“Tango, to the Pointe” at the Regina Fringe Festival – GlobalNews Events

“Tango, to the Pointe” at the Regina Fringe Festival - GlobalNews Events

PointeTango Presents: “Tango, to the Pointe” PointeTango heats up the stage with tango…on Pointe! What happens when ballet meets tango? Don’t miss this unique performance that will keep you on your toes. Award-winning dance company, PointeTango, returns to the stage with a spectacular new show where ballet and tango coalesce. With powerful lifts and fiery footwork, audiences will be mesmerized by PointeTango’s sultry duo as they pirouette, leap and bourrée across the stage with the passion of Argentine tango…on Pointe! “It’s flirty. It’s funny. It’s excellent.” “Smoking hot” “Wow. Just wow.” -Rachel Levine (Montreal Rampage) “This piece rises like a phoenix out of the ashes of ballet and the rubble of tango.”  -Shuman Zhang (Montreal Rampage) Where: SaskExpress Theatre, 2272 Pasqua St, Regina, SK S4T 4M4, Canada When: 6 July 5pm / 7 July 6:30pm / 8 July 5pm / 9 July 7pm / 10 July 2:30pm -show run time: 55 minutes

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Weekly Fringe: Art events are here and ready to alleviate some of your stress | Fringe Arts

Weekly Fringe: Art events are here and ready to alleviate some of your stress | Fringe Arts

Take advantage of the concerts, exhibitions, and films Montreal has to offer!



Graphic Breea Kobernick

Finals are on the way and school stress may seriously be starting to sink in. Take a break, you deserve it! Check out some of the neat art going on this week. 

Monday, March 28

Concordia’s Leonard & Bina Ellen Art Gallery is hosting “Local Records: Andrée Lévesque & Archives Passe-Mémoire.” The creative writing workshop is free and will run from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. It will focus on the power of personal journals and autobiographical writing. The event goes hand-in-hand with the gallery’s current exhibition Moyra Davey: The Faithful. 

Tuesday, March 29

Break up your stressful week preparing for finals with a walk through the McCord Museum. Their latest exhibition is Piqutiapiit, by multidisciplinary artist Niap.The exhibition showcases objects and photographs that pay tribute to the work of Inuit women. 

Wednesday, March 30

Dance company Agora is presenting La disparition des choses, a dance performance that questions ‘what if nature ceased to exist?’ The dancers perform in a way to keep the memory of the environment alive. The show starts at 7 p.m., don’t forget your tickets!

Thursday, March 31

Who says you can’t party the night away on a Thursday? Swedish-Canadian indie band Thus Owls will be performing at Sala Rossa at 8:30 p.m. with doors opening at  8:00 p.m. The band is touring after the release of their fifth album Who Would Hold You If The Sky Betrayed Us? 

Friday, April 1

Concordia’s Soundwalk Symposium is hosting a soundwalk every Friday in April at 11 a.m. The soundwalks are led by local artists and aim to “explore postcolonial perspectives and power dynamics that shape the perspectives of listening to our environment.” 

Saturday, April 2

The visual arts venue Fonderie Darling is offering a few exhibitions. Currently being showcased is Feedback #6: Marshall McLuhan and the arts, an exhibition part of Marshall McLuhan’s series that looks at media and technology in a revolutionary way. 

Read more: Lebanese-Montreal artist Nayla Dabaji explores memory and migration in latest work

Sunday, April 3

Cuddle up this Sunday and take it easy by watching Evan’s Drum. Available for free by the National Film Board of Canada, the film follows a young boy and his mother and their passion to share Inuit drumming. The film is directed by Montreal-based Ossie Michelin, award-winning Inuk freelance journalist and filmmaker.