Categories: News

Countdown to the Melbourne Fringe Festival

 The Melbourne Fringe launched its 29th program this week and the countdown begins to the 19-day celebration of independent, feisty and don’t-take-your-nanna art.

The Melbourne Fringe launched its 29th program this week and the countdown begins to the 19-day celebration of independent, feisty and don’t-take-your-nanna art.
Running from 21 September to 9 October, this year’s program is as diverse as ever with over 320 events including theatre, cabaret, circus, comedy, mime, dance, music, puppetry and visual art.
Choosing what shows to see remains a challenging and difficult task.  Fringes are open access events. This means that anyone who pays the registration fee can put on a show. 
For audiences, this means that we can see the newest and most experimental work from established artists or sit through something that may convince the artist that a life in the theatre isn’t as easy as it looks.
Fringe is risk, and it’s a risk always worth taking because the next show you see may be sublime, which will make up for the one that left you writing your will on your program because you didn’t think you were going to make it out alive.
If you don’t like what you see, please remember that no one is being paid to entertain you, so the only way these artists get beer at the end of each show is if we buy tickets to see them. Sure you might get a dud, but tickets are about the same cost of a movie and even bad theatre is better than an Australian film about beautiful druggies in the Cross.
What to see?
Every registered act has 50 words to convince you of their wonderfulness. You can read this in the printed guide (all over place), on line (www.melbournefringe.com.au) or download the app. Some will tell the truth, but beware of false promises, and it’s been known for entrepreneurial writes to use their mum’s “Most talented individual ever” as a review quote.
You can wait for the event to start and read reviews (and the AussieTheatre.com team will be there), but I wouldn’t trust anyone else’s opinion to choose my festival program.
See whatever takes your fancy. Choose the best picture in the guide. Choose the shows nearest to your tram stop or just head out to the Fringe Hub at the Melbourne Town Hall and see whatever is about to start.
You might strike gold and even if it wasn’t a show that changes your life, at least you know that your ticket will give an artist their much-needed end-of-night beer.

2011 Fringe Launch. Photo courtesy of Melbourne Fringe.

Erin James

Erin James is AussieTheatre.com's former Editor in Chief and a performer on both stage and screen. Credits include My Fair Lady, South Pacific and The King and I (Opera Australia), Love Never Dies and Cats (Really Useful Group), Blood Brothers (Enda Markey Presents), A Place To Call Home (Foxtel/Channel 7) and the feature film The Little Death (written and directed by Josh Lawson).

Recent Posts

Brisbane Festival reveals 2026 program

Brisbane Festival has today unveiled its 2026 program – the inaugural vision of new Artistic…

7 hours ago

Broadway League President Reveals Why P!NK Was The Perfect Choice To Host The 2026 Tony Awards

P!NK’s first turn as Tony Awards host may have seemed like a bold choice on…

11 hours ago

World Premiere of Bennelong in London by Jane Harrison at STC

The World Premiere of Muruwari playwright Jane Harrison’s Bennelong in London comes to Sydney Theatre…

11 hours ago

A curse reawakened – Opera Australia unleashes the iconic Rigoletto

One of Opera Australia’s (OA) most popular and enduring productions, Elijah Moshinsky’s highly acclaimed Rigoletto,…

11 hours ago

Ticket Pre-Sales Commence Today for the Sydney Season of A BEAUTIFUL NOISE: THE NEIL DIAMOND MUSICAL

Ticket pre-sales for the highly anticipated Sydney season of A BEAUTIFUL NOISE: THE NEIL DIAMOND…

11 hours ago

For The First Time In The World, South Australians Are Shaping The Opera Of The Future

State Opera South Australia has launched the first phase of a world-first initiative, Our Opera,…

12 hours ago