Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Looks like it'll be Edmonton in fringe festival photo finish
It looks like Edmonton is poised to keep the title of best-selling fringe festival in Canada.
"At the moment we are 10,000 ahead of last year's sales to date," says Julian Mayne, executive director of Edmonton's Fringe Theatre Adventures. "As I look back at the historical data I see that in 2000 the Edmonton festival sold 81,000 tickets, so I would be thrilled to top that number."
Last month, the Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival saw its paid attendance jump almost 9,000 admissions to a record high 81,565 ticket sales. That surpassed Edmonton's 2008 paid attendance total of 77,800.
After a slow start to this year's festival due to cool, rainy weather in the Alberta capital, throngs of fringers returned last weekend. On Saturday more than 10,000 tickets were sold, the largest single day total in the festival's 28-year history. Winnipeg also set a one-day record on its opening Saturday when paid attendance topped 8,000 for the first time. Top ticket in Edmonton is $14 while Winnipeg is $9.
It won't take much for Edmonton to pass the 80,000 mark and then some.
"I think it will be close," Winnipeg's fringe executive director Chuck McEwen says about whether Edmonton will again reign as the Canadian fringe festival box-office champ. "For the next few years Edmonton and Winnipeg will be neck and neck."
Both fringe honchos believe their festivals have benefited this year from the economic doldrums.
"I believe the recession is keeping people home and the stay-vacation is in effect for both Winnipeg and Edmonton," says Mayne, who is in the fourth year at the Edmonton helm.
The Edmonton festival, boasting the theme "Stage a Revolution," wraps tomorrow and has also profited from the strong growth in the number of BYOVs (bring-your-own venues). There are 46 shows, as compared to 33 in 2008, being staged in churches, restaurants, bars, a hotel, shops, a library and a school. Winnipeg had 31 BYOVs this year.
"We maxed out in the lottery venues and artists took it upon themselves to do the BYOV route," Mayne says. "We accepted all BYOV applications this year, and some are right across the city."
McEwen was in Edmonton last weekend to monitor how they do things.
"It's good to see how they operate," says McEwen. "We're looking a lot at their outdoor site. Our outdoor site is good but we probably could use it a bit more effectively to bring more first-timers to the festival."
Edmonton is still by far a bigger event with about 500,000 people turning out on the outdoor site. Last month attendance at the MTS Outdoor Stage in Old Market Square dipped to 70,000 from last year's total of 88,000.
Perhaps, many of the Edmonton fringe festival patrons this week are tourists lured by the $400,000 Ottawa gave it to woo out-of-towners. The cash, administered through the federal Department of Small Business and Tourism, is part of the Conservative government's new two-year, $100-million program for Canada's "marquee festivals" to enhance Canadian tourism during the economic slowdown.
The event was one of eight high-profile Canadian festivals (attendance each exceeding 250,000) chosen for the first round of federal aid to encourage international tourism. Other recipients were the Montreal Jazz Festival, Calgary Stampede, Stratford and Shaw festivals, the Charlottetown Festival, Summer Festival in Quebec City and the Toronto International Film Festival.
The Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival applied but by the time McEwen was informed the event was under consideration there wasn't enough time to actually spend the cash.
"We didn't get any money this year but we will apply again next year," he says.
He would earmark any funds to marketing the festival in Grand Forks, Fargo and Minneapolis although he thinks it would be better invested in talent.
"With Americans not travelling as much these days because of the passport issue I don't know if the money would help overall or not," says McEwen. "I would hope we could use the money to put together some good acts on the outdoor stage or other things that would help draw people to the festival."
"ö "ö "ö
For the record, the heavenly boy band musical spoof Altar Boyz was Winnipeg's top selling fringe show.
It sold 2,988 tickets, a measly 12 tickets from a 10-show sellout at the 300-seat Prairie Theatre Exchange mainstage.
"Three thousand is more than a whole season at WJT when I was there," says the show's director Kayla Gordon, former WJT artistic director. "Typically I remember if we had 1,500 to a show we were doing well.
"People were lining up 2-21/2 hours before to get into the show and I had no idea it would have that kind of hype."
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition August 22, 2009 C5
The comment period for this story has ended.
-
Breaking News Alerts
Sign up for our new Breaking News Alerts
-
Editor's Bulletin
Sign up for daily bulletins
-
Winnipeg road closures
Check if your commute is affected
-
Blogs to Watch
We pick our favourite local blogs for you to follow
-
Breaking News Widget
Create and embed a Winnipeg Free Press breaking news widget on your site or blog
-
Twitter
Follow our reporters and news feeds on Twitter
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to The Arts
Poll
Most Popular
- Hells clubhouse seized
- Bombers stamp out fun: fans
- City family's return from vacation turns tragic
- Corydon bar employee charged in man's death
- Second son dies after Kenora crash
- Hydro picks its west side route
- Happy hubby loves wife's nudity
- Girl tries to kill self at MYC
- Cost jump could change stadium design
- River Rouge runs aground
- Victims of deadly crash are from Winnipeg
- Tornado touches down near Oakbank
- City family's return from vacation turns tragic
- Man killed in motorcycle crash with car
- Night storms jar Manitoba with tornado, washed out roads and hail
- Man drowns in Whiteshell
- Monarch migration mystery solved by Canadian researchers
- Ice Edge loses exclusivity edge in Coyote deal
- Meat Loaf taken off MTS Centre’s menu
- Grandparent scam becoming more common in city
- What's 2204355? It's the latest unexplainable web trend
- Lundar resident faces charges over 911 calls
- Victims of deadly crash are from Winnipeg
- Katz dating younger woman -- but that shouldn't matter
- Teen takes own life after alleged assault
- Have the province and city gone too far in naming a lake and community centre after Jonathan Toews?
- Body found at The Forks tentatively identified
- Human head found at The Forks
- Body found near Grant Park
- Churches crumble across U.S.
- Hells clubhouse seized
- Bombers stamp out fun: fans
- Hydro picks its west side route
- Cost jump could change stadium design
- Cost flap delays start on stadium
- Housing project future of infill
- Three dozen neglected dogs destroyed
- Winnipeg police unveil new decal, motto
- Hey, hey, my, my... why do some fans behave like boors?
- Montana officials trap grizzly, 2 of her 3 cubs, after campground mauling that killed man
- The Oxy dilemma
- Cruisers curse police checks
- Winnipeg police unveil new decal, motto
- Hells clubhouse seized
- Bombers stamp out fun: fans
- Hydro picks its west side route
- Nursing students' careers put on hold
- Program to train aboriginal railway conductors
- Cost jump could change stadium design
- Core chaos shuts eatery's doors
- Katz dating younger woman -- but that shouldn't matter
- The Oxy dilemma
- Bombers boot beer snake
- More than 100 motorists charged under cellphone law
- Cruisers curse police checks
- Winnipeggers demonstrate against G20 protesters' treatment
- Winnipeg police unveil new decal, motto
- Hells clubhouse seized
- 'Dream home' lost, family devastated
- Bombers stamp out fun: fans
- WWII Lancaster Bomber flies into Winnipeg today
- Hydro picks its west side route
- Girl tries to kill self at MYC
- School staffer faces charges for sex crimes
- Province cautious on trials for multiple sclerosis therapy
- Corydon bar employee charged in man's death
- Housing project future of infill
- River Rouge runs aground
- Unfair to students
- Montana officials trap grizzly, 2 of her 3 cubs, after campground mauling that killed man
- Nasty, poisonous plant causes burns, blindness
- Night storms jar Manitoba with tornado, washed out roads and hail
- Nursing students' careers put on hold
- Old, new songs forever Young
- Woman who survived bear attack in US says she played dead to get the animal to leave her
- Saskatchewan premier calls for clinical trials of controversial MS treatment
- Liquid calories
- Tornado touches down near Oakbank
- Computer wiz's alter ego: Sir Lance-a-Lot
- WWII Lancaster Bomber flies into Winnipeg today
- Lundar resident faces charges over 911 calls
- Protection or peril?
- Nasty, poisonous plant causes burns, blindness
- Night storms jar Manitoba with tornado, washed out roads and hail
- Osteoporosis Canada issues updated vitamin D guidelines for bone health
- Nursing students' careers put on hold
- Last Grapes restaurant out of business
- A Royal whirlwind: The Queen's day in Winnipeg
- Bombers boot beer snake
- Katz dating younger woman -- but that shouldn't matter
Events
July 30, 2010
Gavins Chance for Change
Golf Tournament Fundraiser includes 18 holes of golf, cart, smokie or hamburger for lunch and banquet dinner. Registration at 8:30 a.m. Shotgun start at 10 a.m. ...

1 Comments
You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Posted by: HLamar
August 23, 2009 at 11:31 PM
As a proud Edmontonian, I have this to say for the Winnipeg Fringe organisers, volunteers, artists, and most of all, patrons: thank you.
Thanks to the success of your Fringe, ours and all the others are getting better too. Between us we've created viable summer jobs for hundreds of formerly starving artists, giving them motivation, money, and purpose to impress.
I remember the old days when Edmonton was going it alone, and the hit/miss ratio was disappointingly weak. Now with artists beginning to make a serious living on the emerging Fringe circuit, "the stinkers" (bad shows) have begun to be determined only by one's personal taste. Gone are the shows with weak acting, or weak directing, or pathetically unmotivated cast. I welcome this new era of Fringe with open arms, but I know we couldn't have come by this quality in Edmonton alone.
The day will come when Toronto and Montreal and no doubt New York will threaten with their overwhelming populations, but it too will only make the average show that much better. Live theatre is alive in the North of this continent now, and that Winnipeg indeed is helping to lead the way, far ahead of larger, closer Calgary is no surprise.
The seed of the Fringe needs fertile ground, and clearly Winnipeg proves it has it in spades. You have a long history as a cultured city, and thus too a suave future.
Good luck passing us next year, although we won't make it easy, and know, truthfully by proportion, you're already there.
Respects