Indianapolis Theatre Fringe Festival

The Indianapolis Theatre Fringe Festival, nicknamed "IndyFringe," is a 10-day showcase of traditional and non-traditional theatre, dance, music, improvisation and a wide range of other performance and visual arts, performed and created by local, national and international artists. The festival features performances by 64 adult performance groups.

Indianapolis Theatre Fringe Festival
StatusActive
GenreFestival
FrequencyAnnually
Inaugurated2005 (2005)
Previous eventAugust 17–September 3, 2023
Websiteindyfringe.org

History

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Based on the Fringe Festival that began in Edinburgh, Scotland, when rogue theater groups set up on the edges of the Edinburgh International Festival in 1947,[1] IndyFringe's roots are found in Mayor Bart Peterson's Cultural Tourism Initiative in 2001. A group of experts and citizens met for "Theatre City Indianapolis 2012" and came up with the idea for an Indianapolis Theatre Fringe Festival. Central Indiana Community foundation donated seed money and IndyFringe was born.[2]

The first year for the festival was 2005. The festival drew 4,775 patrons in its inaugural year. In 2006, a substantial increase in publicity and media coverage resulted in attendance doubling, with 9,677 patrons.[3] In 2010, there were 11,214 attendees.[4]

Schedule

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The festival is typically presented in mid August. The 2017 festival is scheduled for August 17–27, 2017.

Performance groups are invited to apply for a place in the festival in November each year. Sixty-four groups perform on eight different stages. Approximately half of the groups are local and half are national and international.

Performances are presented at eight Indianapolis area venues: the Phoenix Theatre, ComedySportz Theatre, Theatre on the Square, IndyFringe Basile Theatre, Indy Eleven Theatre and the Fireman's Union Hall. All are located in the Massachusetts Avenue Arts and Cultural District Archived 2020-11-14 at the Wayback Machine within easy walking distance of one another.

Past performers

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Crews, Nick (August 21, 2006). "IndyFringe goes mainstream", Indianapolis Business Journal 27 (24): 3.
  2. ^ Lieber, Tammy (August 15, 2005). "Festival prepares to kick off with help from friends", Indianapolis Business Journal 26 (23): 9.
  3. ^ "Indy Biz Now > IBJ Articles". Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
  4. ^ Harry, Lou (August 31, 2010). "IndyFringe by the numbers", Indianapolis Business Journal. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
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