Free Edinburgh Fringe Festival
The Free Festival is an organisation that promotes free shows of all genres at the annual Edinburgh Festival Fringe in Scotland. Free Festival venues are commonly independently run bars and nightclubs which create performance spaces in their premises for the duration of the Fringe Festival. Performers are allocated timeslots for free on the condition that they do not charge audiences an entry fee to watch the show.[1] Although audience members are asked to make voluntary contributions at the end of the shows to help pay the performers expenses.[2]
Generally, Edinburgh Fringe shows are self-financing and the average run at the fringe can cost a performer £5000 in venue hire fees, publicity and accommodation. The aim of The Free Festival is to provide performers and festival goers with a cheaper alternative.
Predominantly the shows are stand up comedy and sketch comedy but in recent years there has been an increase in theatre, cabaret, music, storytelling and children’s shows.
In 2010 the Fringe office created controversy after being accused of inflating its box office figures by including an arbitrary number for audiences attending free shows[3] and had to defend its position.[4]
Free Festival programme
The Free Festival promotes comedy, theatre, music, cabaret, opera, musicals, film, children’s shows, events and art displays – programmed by experienced producers in each area. Award winning performers and full runs of shows from the likes of Pappy’s Fun Club, John Gordillo, Lewis Schaffer, Nick Wilty, Sol Bernstein, Steve Day, Bob Slayer, Nik Coppin and Ivor Dembina have appeared in previous years, plus guest appearances in compilation shows from well known performers such as Alan Carr, Scott Capurro, Richard Herring, Brendan Burns, Marcus Brigstocke, Reg D. Hunter, Dan Antopolski and Paul Foot.
Critical acclaim
The Free Festival has earned a good reputation through coverage from Sky News, BBC, Culture Show, The Guardian, The Times, The Scotsman, The List, Metro, Chortle and many other local publications. In 2009 75% of Free Festival shows were reviewed 3 star and above, with thirty 4-star and 20 5-star reviews.[5][6][7][8]
2010 facts
In 2010 the Free Festival produced over 300 shows at the fringe.
Imran Yusuf's Free Festival show became the first non-ticketed show at the Edinburgh Festival to be nominated for a main Comedy Award for Best Newcomer[9]
2009 facts
In 2009 there were a total of 2,098 shows at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and 235 of these (over 11%) were part of the Free Festival making it the largest promoter of free events at the Fringe, and after the Edinburgh Comedy Festival the second largest promoter of Comedy).
- 22 stages across 14 Venues
- Venue capacities from 50 to 150
- 235 shows (Over 11% of all shows at Edinburgh Fringe)
- 3,500 performances (140 per day)
- 50,000 Free Festival brochures
- 100,000 website visitors (over 500,000 page impressions)
- 180,000 free tickets (7,200 per day)
- 1,175,000 flyers (average of 5000 per show)
Previous accolades
In 2007 the BBC produced a radio comedy pilot based on Ian Fox's 2006 Free Fringe Show The Butterfly Effect[10]
Free fringe venues
Edinburgh venues that are part of the Free Edinburgh Fringe Festival:
New Venues in 2010
- The Metropole Cafe (Venue 141)
- The Reverie (Venue 270)
- Three Sisters (venue 272)
- Laughing Horse Online (venue 194)
Other Venues
- The Argyle Bar (venue 353)
- The Counting House (venue 170)
- Cafe Renroc (venue 84)
- The City Cafe (venue 85)
- Edinburgh City Football Club (venue 164)
- Espionage (venue 185)
- The Hive (venue 313)
- Jekyll & Hyde (venue 259)
- The Meadow Bar (venue 264)
- The National Museum of Scotland
- The Newsroom (venue 93)
- The Pear Tree
- St. Martins Church
Previous venues
- Berlin
- Ego
- Hillside
- Linsay's
- Meridian
- The Outhouse
Free festival history
The Free Festival was set up by Alex Petty of Laughing Horse Comedy, who has organised free venues at the Edinburgh Fringe since 2004, originally in a partnership with The Free Fringe founded by Peter Buckley Hill, splitting away from that organisation in 2006.
Heroes of Fringe
In 2011 Bob Slayer, a performer and previous booker for the Free Festival set up independent fringe promoter Heroes of Fringe in a former Free Festival venue: Heroes @ The Hive. The move was amicable and the two organisations maintain a working relationship. In 2013 Heroes added a second venue Heroes @ Bob & Miss Behave's Bookshop. Heroes shows have won three Malcolm Hardee Awards and been nominated for several other awards. In 2013 Adrienne Truscott won the Edinburgh Fringe Awards (formerly the Perrier) panel prize for spirit of the Fringe.
See also
References
- ↑ "About The Free Festival".
- ↑ Bishop, Tom (April 5, 2005). "Fringe 'too expensive' for comics". BBC News.
- ↑ "Fringe Faked Box Office Figures".
- ↑ "Edinburgh Fringe defends ticket sales total". BBC News. September 3, 2010.
- ↑ "Free Festival Press Coverage 2009".
- ↑ Kettle, James (August 8, 2009). "Free Fringe, Free Festival in The Guardian". London.
- ↑ McCalmont, Lucy (August 18, 2008). "Free Festival on the BBC". BBC News.
- ↑ Mollison, Hazel (August 28, 2009). "Free Festival and Fringe Scotsman Article". The Scotsman (Edinburgh).
- ↑ "Free show nominated for best newcomer award".
- ↑ "Stand Up Comedian Ian Fox records radio Pilot".