Thursday, July 31, 2025

Fringe 2025 - Returning Favorites - an alleged Theatre Company - The Temporary Tattoo Trio


Another entry in the “I missed their show last year, but everybody loved it” category, the gents of an alleged Theatre Company - Jake Mierva and Danylo Loutchko, who both wrote and are performing in this year’s offering:

The Temporary Tattoo Trio
an alleged Theatre Company
Written by Jake Mierva & Danylo Loutchko
Venue: Rarig Arena
 
Show Description:
Minnesota Fringe favorite and three-time “Spirit of the Fringe” award-winner, an alleged Theatre Company returns in 2025 with “The Temporary Tattoo Trio, an absurdist comedy/melodrama.

Three best friends, all named Tyler, work in a traveling show applying temporary tattoos. Their friendship is tested when Tyler realizes that Tyler and Tyler might be hiding something BIG. In this show, not only do audience members get REAL temporary tattoos, but the play also explores how friendships develop as we grow older, and what happens when we feel limited by those we feel closest to.

 
Genre & Content: Comedy, Drama, Audience Participation
Warnings: Adult Language

These folks landed on my pre-Fringe Top 20 list back in 2019, which was a very weird year for me, but thankfully they had a very weird 5-star show to match, Which Middle Name of Philip Seymour Hoffman Are You?  Right after the pandemic pause they were back with 3 Guys On Stage Who Get Hit With Hot Dogs, Snow Cones, Etc., (which I saw), then 2023’s A Swimming Lesson in a Theatre Without a Lifeguard (which I missed, so I’m two for four) and last year they racked up the Golden Lanyard Awards again with A First-Class Comedic Revue Featuring the Reanimated Corpse of a Wright Brother.

The Fringe preview they did was quite charming.  The three friends all named Tyler had quite the task at hand as there were far more people who wanted a temporary tattoo in the audience than they had time for in just a three minute preview (thankfully they have almost a full hour for their show’s actual run-time).  It was fun watching them balance the random element of audience participation, applying tattoos to the willing volunteers, while also interacting across the stage space with one another.

As Jake said when he reached out by email, “our plays are fun, strange, and experimental in the best possible way.”  That sums it up better than me rambling on :)

Also, all the bios of the cast and crew are deeply strange and not really bios at all, so if you need a laugh, you could start there on their Fringe show page, and then go see the show. 


Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

As I’m sure many artists are, I find myself struggling with the idea of just “taking time off” (what a luxury) and submerging myself in a whole lot of theater for 11 days while the world is on fire so… I’m going to put some phrases and links down here (and at the end of each post going forward) and if you find yourself compelled to explore one or more of them, so much the better.  There’s a lot going on, and it can be easy to get overwhelmed and tune out, but as Congresswoman Sarah McBride recently said, “If everybody shows a little courage, nobody needs to be a hero.”  I freely admit this list and these links are hardly exhaustive.  It's just something to get started.  Do what you can, where you can, however you can.  Let’s help one another get through this.

Contacting your elected officials about the issues that matter to you (and protesting as necessary)
Starvation in the Gaza Strip
Immigration raids around the United States
Ukraine fighting off invasion by Russia
Trans rights
Climate change action
Housing shortage and the unhoused
Reproductive Rights
Voting rights, and running for office
The courts, from the Supreme Court on down to the local level
Don’t forget to laugh - even gallows humor is still humor 

 

 

 

Fringe 2025 - Returning Favorites - Jackdonkey Productions - 503


Last year, I missed Jackdonkey’s presentation of Pinter’s The Dumb Waiter (though they got a Golden Lanyard Award for Audience Favorite) (of course they did; they didn't make my pre-Fringe Top 10 back in 2023 for nothing :).  This year, in addition to the Fringe, they’re presenting Shakespeare’s Henry V over at TRP right after the Fringe closes, so they have a very busy August ahead of them.  First up, though, it’s…

503
Jackdonkey Productions
Venue: Rarig Thrust
 
Show Description:
Based on the novel WE by Yevgeny Zamyatin
A spacecraft engineer lives in the One State. 
A nation constructed almost entirely of glass.
Written and performed by Jeffrey Nolan
Directed by Zach Christensen

 
Genre & Content:
Sci-Fi, Physical Theater, Literary Adaptation, Original Music, Political Content, Drama, Audience Participation
Warnings:
Adult Language, Drug Content, Loud Noises, Sexual Content, Flashing Lights, Violence, Gun/Weapon Usage, Abuse/Physical Violence
 
The source material, WE by Yevgeny Zamyatin (written in Russia in the early 1920s), is kind of the original dystopian future novel, inspiring everything from 1984, Animal Farm, and Brave New World to the countless, countless, countless entries in the dystopian literary genre (and movies and TV) that we have today.  So I’m expecting a lot of it to feel very familiar, even though I haven’t read the book, or seen an adaptation before.  I have seen and read many of its children.  The description is fascinating, and apparently live music is also involved so I’m intrigued to see how the story manifests itself onstage.


Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

As I’m sure many artists are, I find myself struggling with the idea of just “taking time off” (what a luxury) and submerging myself in a whole lot of theater for 11 days while the world is on fire so… I’m going to put some phrases and links down here (and at the end of each post going forward) and if you find yourself compelled to explore one or more of them, so much the better.  There’s a lot going on, and it can be easy to get overwhelmed and tune out, but as Congresswoman Sarah McBride recently said, “If everybody shows a little courage, nobody needs to be a hero.”  I freely admit this list and these links are hardly exhaustive.  It's just something to get started.  Do what you can, where you can, however you can.  Let’s help one another get through this.

Contacting your elected officials about the issues that matter to you (and protesting as necessary)
Starvation in the Gaza Strip
Immigration raids around the United States
Ukraine fighting off invasion by Russia
Trans rights
Climate change action
Housing shortage and the unhoused
Reproductive Rights
Voting rights, and running for office
The courts, from the Supreme Court on down to the local level
Don’t forget to laugh - even gallows humor is still humor 

 

 

Fringe 2025 - Cognitive Dissonance

At the Fringe previews last night I got a chance to catch up briefly with a friend who works for Planned Parenthood.  They’d just come from work and were feeling like things were pretty bleak, rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic kind of bleak.  I, too, had just come from work at my primary day job, which is in fundraising for higher education, also not a favorite sector for the current administration.  The bulk of the morning today was spent sitting down with the bank account and paying the monthly bills, something I feel fortunate to be able to do.


In fact, just getting up in the morning, I’m reminded of how fortunate I am to have a roof over my head, clothes on my back, food in the kitchen, running water, electricity, internet, the possibility of either air conditioning or heat depending on the season, employment, transportation, etc.

As I’m sure many artists are, I find myself struggling with the idea of just “taking time off” (what a luxury) and submerging myself in a whole lot of theater for 11 days while the world is on fire so… I’m going to put some phrases and links down here (and at the end of each post going forward) and if you find yourself compelled to explore one or more of them, so much the better.  There’s a lot going on, and it can be easy to get overwhelmed and tune out, but as Congresswoman Sarah McBride recently said, “If everybody shows a little courage, nobody needs to be a hero.”  I freely admit this list and these links are hardly exhaustive.  It's just something to get started.  Do what you can, where you can, however you can.  Let’s help one another get through this.

Contacting your elected officials about the issues that matter to you (and protesting as necessary)

Starvation in the Gaza Strip

Immigration raids around the United States

Ukraine fighting off invasion by Russia

Trans rights

Climate change action

Housing shortage and the unhoused

Reproductive Rights

Voting rights, and running for office

The courts, from the Supreme Court on down to the local level

Don’t forget to laugh - even gallows humor is still humor


(photo of earth courtesy of NASA)

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Fringe 2025 Returning Favorites - Kyle B. Dekker - A Completely Serious and Not At All Comedic Review of Farts, Flatus, and Flatulence, aka The Fart Show


Putting together my Fringe schedule has been a more challenging puzzle in recent years, partly because my brain still thinks it’s planning for two.  But I don’t have to take into account the distance between venues in quite the same way anymore, because I’m not taking my mother’s rate of speed walking into the equation anymore.  Or rather, I shouldn’t be.  Because I’m on my own.  So I think part of my brain is also stalling, not wanting to engage.  But the festival is upon us, so I need to get planning (and have been, nearly done plotting out the opening weekend at least).

Opening night on Thursday 7/31 actually turned out to be simpler than expected.  Even though literally every slot holds a brand new show because I’ve seen nothing yet, I did have a show I wanted to anchor the evening on.  I really wanted to see A Good Cancer To Have.  And then it turned out, oh, I want to see all the other shows at that same venue that night, so why don’t I just stay put?  Ease into the Fringe, and save the running around for Saturday and Sunday, when I’ve got my Fringe legs under me.

A Good Cancer To Have is at Mixed Blood at 7pm on Thursday 7/31 - first on my returning favorites list.
I’ve already mentioned two other new pre-Fringe Top 10 shows, both of which also happen to be at Mixed Blood and take place right after A Good Cancer To Have:
8:30pm - The Kendra Plant Variety Hour: Good Things Edition! with Special Guests (#4 out of 10)
10pm - La Tunda: A Reimagining of a Colombian Folklore (#7 out of 10)

But what starts the night, you ask?

How am I beginning the Fringe theater marathon of the next 11 days at 5:30pm on Thursday 7/31 at Mixed Blood Theater?

Why, with farts, of course.

A Completely Serious and Not At All Comedic Review of Farts, Flatus, and Flatulence, aka The Fart Show
Kyle B. Dekker
Created by A Sixth Grader
Venue: Mixed Blood
 
Show Description:
Professors Poot and Toot, who are completely serious and not at all comedic scientists welcome you to a completely serious and factual presentation of flatulence in both biology and its practical uses.

Malcom Dekker has long watched his father create shows for the Minnesota Fringe and beyond. After viewing a series of shows one staurday afternoon, young Malcom asked his father if they could create a show for Fringe about the history of farts. This has been brewing for a while and it's about to erupt.
 
Physical comedy and immature humor created by a 6th grade child. Fartastic fun for all ages.

 
Genre & Content:
Clowning, Comedy, Physical Theater, Audience Participation
Warnings:
Crude Humor, Loud Noises
 
According to the bios on their Fringe show page:

Malcolm Dekker, creator of the show, aka Professor Toot, has been attending shows at the Minnesota Fringe since he was 18 months old. He loves physical theater and comedy so much his giggles have been heard from the audience many times at Fringe Venues. After seeing three shows one Saturday at the 2023 Fringe said he wanted to do his own show about "The History of Farts, and it should have classical music in it." Two years of pitching ideas and two shots at the Fringe Lottery and Malcom's vision has arrived on stage! This is Malcolm's stage debut. Malcolm loves Lego, physics, and video games. He will be a 7th grader in the Saint Paul Public School system this fall.  

Kyle B. Dekker, Malcolm’s father, was on my pre-Fringe Top 20 list in 2023 after impressing the hell out of me (pardon the pun) with his fantastic solo show the year before, He-Man Is The Devil and Other Satanic Panic Tales.  Kyle, aka Professor Poot, gets a ton of extra points in the parenting department for encouraging the creativity of the next generation.

As an example of their show’s fervor for the classics, for their Fringe preview, Professors Poot and Toot accompanied Richard Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathustra, Op. 30 (which most of us just know as “that song from the film 2001: A Space Odyssey, and the countless parodies that followed) on whoopee cushions:

 


(I love that the spellcheck function on my computer insisted, “You’re spelling whoopee cushion incorrectly, it’s whoopee, not whoopie.”)

This show will be a delightful way to begin my Fringing adventure this year.

Good luck following the fart show, Sam Sweere.

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

Monday, July 28, 2025

Fringe 2025 Top 11 to 20 - #20 - Hamluke - Nightfall Productions


This show is one of the reasons I always hang back on completing the Top 20 list until I watch some of the previews.  Because the preview of this show sold me on the concept.

I am WAY behind the normal audience curve on this one.  I had a bunch of options to see this play before now, even in the Fringe back in 2011, and for whatever reason, often scheduling-related, I just didn’t.

But the preview got me.  It reminded me, “Oh yeah, I grew up on this story, both of these stories. And the actors are good, and committed to the bit.  And there’s live music.”

This preview worked on me, where another show I was anticipating putting on this list did not.  So that other show dropped off, and Hamluke took its place.

Sometimes it’s as simple as “Oh, I get the joke here” vs. “Oh, a lot of other people are getting the joke here, but I very much am not so… maybe I’m not the audience for this play that I thought I was.”  Hamluke happily fell into that first category, and won me over.

Hamluke
Nightfall Productions
Venue: Rarig Thrust
 
Show Description:
A long time ago in a castle far, far away... young Hamluke is thrust into a tragic tale of betrayal and revenge in this "Star Wars" version of "Hamlet" as told by Ewoks, droids, and Jedi Knights!

Hamluke is written/directed by local playwright/director Brad Erickson and has been performed previously for the Minnesota Fringe, the One Act Competition for the Minnesota State High School League, and for international audiences at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

 
Genre & Content:
Comedy, Drama, Puppetry, Shakespearian Elements, Literary Adaptation, Kid Friendly
Warnings:
Flashing Lights, Gun/Weapon Usage
 
In the preview, Clarence Wethern, who was himself back in the day quite literally the best Hamlet I’ve ever seen on stage, this time played this show’s version of Obi-Wan Kenobi, and Wethern was doing a killer Alec Guiness impression, which I very much appreciated.

Since you can’t swing a dead cat in this town without running into a production of Hamlet, I’ve seen my fair share of Hamlets over the years and that script is hardwired into my brain whether I want it to be or not.

And I’m actually old enough that I was a teenager when the original Star Wars trilogy came out, so A New Hope was just “Star Wars” for me.  My brother and friends and I saw it a total of eleven times in the movie theaters when it first came out, including one memorable outing at a drive-in with my dad, who did not really know what he was getting himself into with the movie on that very big outdoor screen.  So that script is also hardwired into my brain - hence the appreciation for Wethern channeling Guiness.

The character names are delightfully ridiculous, starting with Hamluke and Darthius, and continuing on through Queen Gertrudala and Opheleia, Horeepio and R2-Datio.

There’s also a fun, epic history of Hamluke on the More Information tab of their Fringe show page, so I’ll link to that here, if like me you enjoy behind the scenes content.

It’s wild how something as simple as hearing those themes again, played live by musicians, just kind of gets me where I live.

Update 7/29/2025 - I neglected to post the video of the preview I've been talking about:

 

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

Fringe 2025 Top 10 - # 10A/B - Director’s Cut: Where Play Becomes Magic (Deconstructing Directing) / Final Dress (MDV Productions)


We have bunch of mirror images in the Fringe this year for some reason.  As an example, here’s another two-fer, built around the idea of directing.

One has the same director for every performance, but a different script and a different cast, all working together to create a scene on the spot through the collaborative director/actor relationship.

One has the same two actors for every performance, but a different director each time, and it’s all built off of improvisation.

In both instances, it will be wildly different for every performance, but one is digging into the guts of the creative rehearsal process, and the other is just taking random suggestions and creating a play out of thin air.

In both cases, it could end up being great, or a train wreck, or a combination of the two.  (Live theater!)

I find both ideas fascinating, so I’m recommending them both.  Your own level of interest and entertainment may vary, as is true with this entire list of suggestions…

#10A – Director’s Cut: Where Play Becomes Magic
Deconstructing Directing (Andrew Roblyer)
Venue: Rarig Arena

Show Description:
Director's Cut pulls back the curtain on live theatre with bold choices, raw moments, and real-time directing. 
See the sparks fly as scenes transform before your eyes. 
No script is safe!

A Visionary Director
A Dynamo Cast
A Scene Picked By You
One Hour To Make It Unforgettable

It’s not improv.  It’s not a play.  It’s something else.
Improv is made up on the spot. We start with a real script (chosen by the audience), then break it apart, rebuild it, and find something new.
A director. A cast. A single scene.
Cut. Rework. Blow it up. Try again.
Brilliant or disastrous? You decide.
Every night, a different show. No do-overs.
It’s theatre on the operating table - mid-surgery.
You think you know how theatre is made? Think again.
This isn’t a rehearsal. This is the art of directing, unleashed.
 
Director’s Cut is raw, high-stakes theatre in real time.
Watch a director and cast rip apart a real script and rebuild it live: bold choices, wild risks, no safety net. 
Each night is a one-of-a-kind dive into the creative chaos behind the scenes. 


Genre & Content:
Comedy, Drama, Improv, Storytelling, Audience Participation
Warnings: Adult Language

For a bit more context:
  
Produced by Deconstructing Directing, a free resource for artists and educators in community and educational theatre. 
This is the rehearsal room like you’ve never seen it before.
 
Deconstructing Directing was launched in 2024 by Andrew Roblyer, a queer, nonbinary, and neurodivergent storyteller and theatre artist based in Houston, TX. Andrew first began acting in 1995 and (if you don’t count the neighborhood “play” he organized in second grade) began directing, coaching, and teaching in 2005. Over the years Andrew has developed a penchant for creating new theatrical opportunities and organizations that are based in accessibility, kindness, and innovation. Andrew has produced, directed, and/or designed for over 50 full-length shows, including musicals, plays, and immersive theatre, covering almost every staging configuration possible, casts ranging in size from 1 to 50+, and budgets ranging from $0 to over $35,000.


 
#10B – Final Dress
MDV Productions
Created by Michael DallaValle & Sean Dillon
Venue: Open Eye Theatre

Show Description:
"Actors" Sean and Michael are opening their show tomorrow. Tonight is their final dress rehearsal, under the skillful directorial eye of a TC legend. Surely nothing will go wrong. Absolutely nothing. *improv

Final Dress is a completely improvised play, based on the vision of our guest director. 
Each show will feature a guest director, who will give us the name of a fake play they wrote and will be directing. 
Sean Dillon and Michael DallaValle will act out this play, with the director interrupting them (and the actors interrupting each other) with notes and criticism, so we can do the scene "correctly".
 
The show photo has a number of post-its on it, some saying:
Guys – wtf, new headshots PLEASE??
You hired 5 directors??? Are you out of your minds??

Those five directors are, in order of listed performance:
Shanan Custer, Isabella Dunsieth, John Heimbuch, Mike Fotis, and Duck Washington.

 
Genre & Content: Comedy, Improv
Warnings: Adult Language, Crude Humor
 
Michael DallaValle, among other things, teaches and serves as Education Director at Strike Theater.
Sean Dillon, among other things, is the founder of Oncoming Productions, co-founder of the Improv Movement Project, co-director of Off Book (which is a lot of fun, I’ve had a couple of scenes from plays of mine used as part of it in the past), and on the Board of the Twin Cities Horror Festival.
So these guys know their improv, and theater in general.
If you’re looking for a pair to pull off something as nutty as this, I’d go with these two.
And their guest directors are all people I’d love to watch doing this, so any performance will also be a winner on that score.

So, directing and “directing.”
Scripts and script-less.
I’m am, unsurprisingly, a huge theater nerd, so shows like this are fun for me from whichever angle they choose to tackle it. 

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

 

Fringe 2025 Returning Favorites - Sam Landman (LandmanLand) - A Sad Carousel 2: The Timely Death of Herschel Douscheburg


Sam Landman is such a good (and hilarious) writer and actor that it’s doubly fun whenever he’s doing both jobs at once.  That was true of the original, profane, deeply offensive and very entertaining edition of A Sad Carousel back in 2010 (which was why it was in my pre-Fringe Top 10 in the #2 spot that year), and I trust that will hold true yet again in the standalone sequel.

As my dear late mother said of the torrent of foul language in the original when she saw it, 
“A couple of fucks go a long way with me.” 
(She then immediately realized that could be misinterpreted and couldn’t stop laughing, so it’s in the review.)

A Sad Carousel 2: The Timely Death of Herschel Douscheburg
LandmanLand (Sam Landman)
Venue: Rarig Thrust
 
Show Description:
America's #7 insult comic awakens from a 15-year coma. Now, GenZ-led Komedy Kidz are out to cancel him. If you didn’t see 2010’s “A Sad Carousel,” you’ll still enjoy this satirical smackdown of "safe" comedy.
 
Genre & Content:
Comedy, Drama, Physical Theater
Warnings (unsurprisingly, nearly all of them):
Adult Language, Crude Humor, Sexual Content, Violence, Loud Noises, Flashing Lights, Gun/Weapon Usage, Drug Content, Abuse/Physical Violence, Other Divisive Content
 
There is, of course, a hilarious fake backstory for the press (well, partially fake, there was indeed a first edition of “A Sad Carousel” and it was quite out there and enjoyable and popular):
 
When "A Sad Carousel" premiered at the Minnesota Fringe in 2010, it was the most provocative, meta show in the history of the festival (except for that year when Edison electrocuted that elephant). The breakneck speed of the show's brash, profane comedy actually caused audience members to emit a strange, heretofore unheard-of sound, a simultaneous combination of laughing & groaning, which later coined a term that Webster's added to its dictionary: graughing (pronounced "groff-ing"). 
 
The result? Its reluctant star, insult comic Herschel Douscheburg, became a household name because of it. His status as #7 insult comic in the world was climbing to a respectable #6. Fringe goers were constantly quoting "A Sad Carousel" to him on the street. Late in his life, Herschel was finally hitting the "big time" (well, as big as a Fringe hit can be, that is).
 
Then, the unthinkable happened. On "A Sad Carousel's" encore performance, the venue he was performing in (Rarig Arena) exploded, which is why it was converted from a "theater in the round" to whatever the hell it is now. 
 
Thankfully, no one was killed. But the explosion sent Herschel Douscheburg into a coma.
 
Now, 15 years later, he's awakened to find himself in the Tyler Michaels King Memorial Hospital, trapped in a world where his style of comedy is considered "old hat." While he's hustling to hit as many open mics & Fringe festivals as he can to get back on top, a new generation of comics (the Komedy Kidz) are using all their GenZ wiles and sanitized comedy chops to cancel him with extreme prejudice. And hot on their heels is the mysterious Matriarch, who has even more devious plans for him. 
 
Is the world ready for the biting, offensive comedy of Herschel Douscheburg once again? 
 
Or, as the title suggests, could this be the end of not only his comedy, but Douscheburg himself?
 
We hope to offer the same silliness to audiences in 2025 as we did in the original production, along with a few new things sprinkled in: 
Despicable characters
Uncalled-for gallows humor
Audience taunting
Good-natured ribbing of safe comedy
Poorly rehearsed sight gags & fight choreo
Reggae horns
A pantsing of 2025's foibles
Ribald & cringey humor (including a potential glory hole or plate job joke)
Sporadic titillations 
Unlicensed usage of "Powerhouse" by Raymond Scott


He did a Fringe preview as well, just so we can’t say we weren’t thoroughly warned:


 
The word “bracing” was invented for such shows as “A Sad Carousel 2: The Timely Death of Herschel Douscheburg,” so I’m very much looking forward to it.

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

Sunday, July 27, 2025

Fringe 2025 Top 11 to 20 - #19 - The Jaws That Bite, The Claws That Catch! - Joking Apart Theater


This one just seems like an egregious oversight on my part.  I thought, “I must have had Edwin Strout and Joking Apart Theater on my Top 20 list at some point already in the past.”  Nope.  I’ve seen lots of Edwin’s work, and Joking Apart’s, outside the Fringe over the years but apparently it never intersected with my Fringe viewing, until now.

I’m noticing that with Simone Weil in the #9 slot, and Jabberwocky here in the #19 slot, the penultimate entries in the first and second chunks of ten on this list are pretty nerdy, and more instinct than something I can clearly articulate.

The Jaws That Bite, The Claws That Catch!
Joking Apart Theater
Venue: TRP

Press pitch:
Edwin Strout’s previous play, “That’s MISTER Benchley To You, Mrs. Parker,” was voted Audience Pick for Best Show Of The Fringe at the 2003 Minnesota Fringe Festival. Returning to a literary theme, Edwin has written a show about one man's deep dive down the rabbit hole of Lewis Carroll's "Jabberwocky.”  His perception of reality, time, and the people around him warps, stretches and threatens to break altogether, as he dives deeper and deeper down the rabbit hole in search of the meaning of the poem.  Edwin is billing it as  “The Worst TED Talk Ever!”
 
Genre & Content: Drama, Horror, Literary Adaptation
Warnings: Mental Illness

Frankly, anyone that combines John Hurt (just ignore Charlie Rose), the Muppets and Jabberjaw in their promotional materials is OK by me.

 

 

 

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

 

Fringe 2025 Top 10 - #9 - simone weil and the (insufferable) existentialist breakfast club - burnt ghost collective


I will freely admit that I have no idea what is going on here.  Just the tiniest journey down the research rabbit hole about Simone Weil has been fascinating, and was probably completely unnecessary for engaging with this Fringe show.  Still, I do enjoy being prodded to learn things I didn’t know before by theater.  Here we go again…

simone weil and the (insufferable) existentialist breakfast club
burnt ghost collective
Venue: TRP

Show Description:
philosopher simone weil never reached the popularity (or notoriety) of her existentialist contemporaries. she did however scare the jesus out of them and go on to shoot fascists in spain. a surreal fever dream of a show starring weil and puppets of jean-paul sartre, simone debeauvoir, and albert camus. by the end we'll hopefully have learned something about the meaning of life and what it means to show up for your community.
 
Genre & Content:
Comedy, Drama, Puppetry, Historical Content, Kid Friendly, Political Content
Warnings: Adult Language, Suicidal Ideation/Self-Harm
 
Is it the lack of capital letters?

Is it the promise of more puppets?

Is it the strange title?

Is it oddly compelling YouTube videos like this brief overview of her life with wild accompanying artwork and a foreign accent?



Or an even briefer video where two professors just talk WAY over my head for six minutes about a woman who died in her early thirties, over eighty years ago, who managed to pack so much of the written word and bold action into her short life that people are STILL talking about her?



There’s zero information on the other tabs of their Fringe page, just the show description, the genre, content and warning tags, the pastel colors of the poster and their tiny little green-eyed black cat mascot.

Just taking a wild swing with this one.  I’ve been pleasantly surprised before by odd concepts.  This might be another one.  We shall see.

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

 

Fringe 2025 Returning Favorites - Third Space Theater (Alex Church) - Breach


Last year, Alex Church wrote a script (Dutch: Made In America) in which he portrayed a young Ronald Reagan who, among other things, got into a losing fight with a sock puppet of FDR in a mini-cardboard wheelchair so… anything’s possible.

In fact, the thing I most admire and sometimes find challenging about Alex’s work is that it is quite literally never the same twice - there was the rock musical about alcoholism where Whiskey and basic human emotions were characters alongside members of a very dysfunctional family; there was the two-person play where a man is trapped in a repeating personal hellscape with the woman he abused in life now tormenting him in return; there was a dark comedy about a politician’s family coming unglued overnight when her bid for re-election goes south; and the aforementioned trippy Ronald Reagan play.  And now, we take to the high seas, with menacing crab puppets in the mix.  And when I say challenging, I don’t mean that in a bad way, just that I’m never at ease.  I don’t walk in thinking “Ah yes, another Alex Church production.  I know exactly what I’m in for with this one.”

Breach
Third Space Theater (Alex Church)
Written by Mariabella Sorini and Alex Church
Venue: TRP
 
Show Description:
The crew aboard The Shrike must fight for their lives and sanity in a thrilling, surrealist voyage through the pulse-pounding hostility of the Bering Sea. Portion of proceeds donated to The Freshwater Society
 
Third Space Theater is a new theater company dedicated to exploring an activist artistic practice in order to create art that outlives itself. Each production pairs with a quality, thematically-relevant local non-profit making tangible change in the Twin Cities and provides them with free advertising, amplification of their events/trainings, and a portion of ticket sales as a donation. 

Third Space Theater is proud to be partnering with Freshwater Society on this production. Freshwater is a Minnesota nonprofit whose mission is to inspire and empower people to value and preserve water. They do this through community education and engagement, research projects, and policy efforts across the state and region. To get involved, check out their Adopt a River and Minnesota Water Stewards programs!


Genre & Content:
Comedy, Drama, Original Music, Physical Theater, Puppetry
Warnings:
Adult Language, Loud Noises, Flashing Lights, Violence, Other Divisive Content
 
So join me, as we try to figure out what the heck Alex and his collaborators are up to this time.

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

Saturday, July 26, 2025

Fringe 2025 Top 11 to 20 - #18A/B - Tapeze (Twin Cities Trapeze Center) and husk/vessel (KAIROS Dance Theater)


Here’s another one where I kept going back and forth on which dance show to pick and they’re honestly both so interesting to me that I can’t decide so I’m just going to list them both in another two-for.

First, there’s the local collaboration of the heads of Twin Cities Trapeze Center and Keane Sense of Rhythm Tap Company:

#18A - Tapeze
Twin Cities Trapeze Center
Created by Cathy Wind and Katie Kimball
Venue: TRP

Show Description:
What happens when you blend tap shoes and a trapeze? This fusion turns the stage into a dynamic playground where rhythm meets flight. A high flying symphony of movement, music and momentum.
 
Genre & Content: Dance
Warnings: None
 
The press pitch was:
Two local arts institutions, who have never worked together before, walk into a theater...

Don’t ask me how a trapeze is going to work in the TRP space but for that reason alone I’m super curious.

Also, the bios of the three artists involved (two tap dancers, one trapeze artist) are wild.

Precious little detail but I’m intrigued by the concept.



Then there’s the opposite in terms of detail from a nationally touring dance company based out of Boston, who are very chatty about their art and their process.  And I do love a dancer who can make their art accessible to the clumsy and bewildered, such as myself:


#18B - husk/vessel
KAIROS Dance Theater
Created by Paula Josa-Jones and DeAnna Pellecchia in collaboration with the dancers
Venue: Southern Theatre

Show Description:
husk/vessel is a raw, physical reckoning with memory and identity—a visceral dance-theater work where the body becomes both container and storyteller.
 
Genre & Content:
Dance, Dance-Modern, Improv, Original Music, Physical Theater, Storytelling, Non-Verbal
Warnings: None

First up, there’s a video trailer, so you can see for yourself if this is your kind of dance:




Then there’s the name:

WHAT IS 'KAIROS'?


KAI•ROS | pronounced [KAHY-ROHS]

The ancient Greeks had two distinct words for time: chronos and kairos.

Chronos—the root of chronological—refers to quantitative, linear time. It is the time of clocks, calendars, aging, and deadlines. It marches forward in steady ticks, measured by the hands of a watch or the phases of the moon.
But time does not begin—or end—there.

Kairos, the lesser-known but far more profound counterpart, is what many philosophers and mystics refer to as deep time. It is qualitative rather than quantitative. It lives in long exhales, in laughter with old friends, in the quiet awe of watching a breathtaking sunset. Kairos is presence: a moment outside of measurement, where something meaningful can occur—something sacred, transformative, or simply true.

In kairos time, we lose track of chronos. A state of flow is activated—one that cannot be measured, only felt.

Mining this deep time is at the heart of all KAIROS Dance Theater’s creative projects. Our performances are designed to suspend forward-moving time, creating visceral, fully felt experiences that open a space—outside of clocks, beyond distraction—where something real can happen.

In these moments, audience and performers are invited to enter a shared rhythm, a collective breath. KAIROS is where the world softens, presence expands, and we are reminded—just for a moment—of the beauty of the world, the potential of our shared humanity, and the simple, profound truth that none of us are alone.

 
OK, I’m down for all of that.  Then there’s the process that birthed the show they’ve been touring and now bring to Minneapolis.  Per artistic director DeAnna Pellecchia:

“husk/vessel was created mostly during the Covid-19 pandemic. In the early days of this project, the dancers and I were crammed into my 16 x 18 home studio—separated from each other by boxes taped on the floor, and from Paula by a computer screen and hundreds of miles. From September 2020 to May 2021, we met twice a week, masked up, doing our best to stay healthy and keep dancing.

I’ve always aimed to make work that’s real and vulnerable, as does Paula—but the rawness present in those rehearsals was something else. The uncertainty of the world hung over the room, and all we could do was show up and surrender to it. We made the work for you—the audience we knew we’d be reunited with eventually—but with no clear sense of when, we danced for each other. Creating husk/vessel became a reason to keep going in a time when we didn’t know where we were headed, and a way to stay connected, despite the isolation.

Through improvisation and shared readings, poetic imagery began to surface: archetypal figures washing, weaving, carrying, praying, playing, fighting, surrendering. These images felt universal, timeless—fleeting glimpses of humanity’s essence, even as the world around us unraveled. We let ourselves be physically consumed by giant swaths of fabric—hiding, revealing, holding our smiles, tears, and fears in plain sight. That fabric became a true partner, cradling each of us through the darkness (I now understand why “blankies” are so comforting to children).

When we finally came together in person with Paula in June 2021, after nearly a year of virtual rehearsals, the piece took on a new dimension. We had room to MOVE—to fully carve out the expansive, 45-minute performance you’ll see today. But the intimacy, vulnerability, trust, and deep connection that shaped this work in its earliest days—they’re still there. They’re stitched into the very guts of this piece.

The pandemic revealed so many hard truths—so many lessons we still need to learn. One of the biggest is this: there’s far less separating us than we think. Masks, clothing, body size, race, gender, space, time—these things may appear to define us, but underneath, we are all just skin, fascia, muscle, and bone—reaching for one another, finding our way forward, through what’s heavy, toward what’s human.
If nothing else, I hope that’s what you feel as you watch…”


They’re also really great about acknowledging the musicians who created the music they’re using, and the other artists in the company who helped in the development of the show.  You can see all that on the Cast and Crew, and More Information tabs of their Fringe show page.

And lastly there’s just, well, everything else:

“husk/vessel is part of The RISE Tour, KAIROS Dance Theater’s first national tour, bringing our raw, physically intense, and emotionally-driven work to communities across the U.S. in 2025. From Boston to Minneapolis, Atlanta to NYC, and San Diego, we carry with us the stories, questions, and connections born in the rehearsal rooms during the height of the pandemic. 

Each stop on the tour offers an opportunity to deepen conversation, build community, and affirm the transformative power of live performance. 

At a time when democracy is under threat, social divisions are deepening, and the fight for equity and justice continues, 

The RISE Tour serves as a powerful call to action. 

Through movement, storytelling, and community engagement, RISE amplifies voices of resistance and resilience, reminding us all of the power of collective action in shaping a more just and inclusive world. 

At its heart, husk/vessel is rooted in the belief that presence and vulnerability are radical acts—forms of resistance—and essential to healing a fractured world. We are so grateful to share this leg of the journey with you.”


And I do mean everything else:

“Known for its immersive, multi-sensory performances that transcend traditional boundaries, KAIROS has emerged as a nationally touring company with work presented across New England, New York, California, Georgia, and Minnesota. Internationally, the company’s bold, interdisciplinary projects have been featured in Korea, France, and Russia—bringing its distinct blend of dance, theater, and visual storytelling to diverse communities and spaces around the world.

Founded in 2012, KAIROS creates visceral, socially engaged performance works that fuse physical rigor with emotional depth, bringing audiences into intimate encounters with pressing cultural, political, and universal questions about identity, purpose, and belonging. Through immersive dance-theater, interdisciplinary collaboration, and a deep commitment to community, KAIROS engages the body as a site of memory, resistance, and transformation.

The company’s work lives at the intersection of dance, theater, visual art, and multimedia. KAIROS often partners with composers, filmmakers, designers, and writers to create layered, immersive environments that transcend traditional performance formats. Signature works explore themes of grief, resilience, and collective healing—not merely telling stories, but offering rituals of reckoning, spaces for reflection, and invitations to rise together.

In addition to its performance work, KAIROS is dedicated to broadening access to the arts through year-round community programming. The company offers artist talks, open rehearsals, workshops, and cultural events designed to engage diverse audiences and deepen understanding of dance as a tool for connection and transformation. Each season, KAIROS produces 2–3 original productions, building bridges between artists and communities across the United States and beyond.”

I am very often a sucker for an artist who can hold forth and just talk about their art.  These folks are that.  Just reading all that made me feel better, and those moments are rare.  So if seeing the dance tops the written presentation, I’m going to enjoy a lot of dance this year at the Fringe.

Maybe you didn’t need to nerd out and read all that to know that you wanted to see it, or it wasn’t your thing, but I appreciated the artists laying it all out there, so I thought it was worth sharing in a slightly longer post.

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

Fringe 2025 Top 10 - #8 - Mind Reader - Steven Nicholas


I fully expect this show to freak me out a little.  Mind-reading is right up there with hypnosis, magic, tarot cards, and zombies (yeah, that last one is random, and fully a “me” thing, I get it).  In all cases though, those are experiences that unsettle me because I am very much out of my depth and not in control (that would apply to actually being undead as well as being chased by the undead and yet, vampires, for some reason, no problem, probably because they don’t look like they’re rotting even though they’re corpses, too.)

Back to mind-reading…


Mind Reader
Steven Nicholas
Venue: Rarig Xperimental

Show Description:
Mind Reader is not a show to simply watch, it’s an experience to be a part of. 
You will experience incredible feats of memory, discovery of new abilities, and of course, unbelievable mind reading.

Mind Reader is an interactive theatrical experience that revolves around themes of uncommon abilities and overcoming obstacles.
While many shows incorporate interaction with the audience, few and far between are shows where the audience are truly the stars.
Over the course of the performance, audience members will discover new abilities they never could have imagined they might possess, and every attendee will have a first hand experience of mysterious phenomena.  
Mind Reader shares a true story, an incredible memory, and a finale that will twist your reality.

 
Genre & Content:
Magic, Mystery, Solo Show, Storytelling, Audience Participation
Warnings:
Adult Language
 
So, audience participation.  (Recoils)
The audience are truly the stars.  (Recoils)
Regardless of whether I volunteer or not, every attendee will have a first hand experience of mysterious phenomena.  (Recoils)
A finale that will twist your reality.  (Recoils from this perhaps most of all.)

So why am I still ranking this so high on my list and really working hard to fit it into my schedule?

Part of me thinks it won’t really be a Fringe if I don’t see at least one show that completely baffles me.

Another part of me wants to go see it, and be relieved, that it wasn’t that unsettling after all, and I totally get how the trick works, and there’s a completely normal explanation for everything.

(But that second part of me is going to be disappointed, and so I’m just bracing to be a bit rattled by something I don’t fully understand.)

Also, it’s another solo, out of town artist who could probably use a boost.

He’s got a website with its own little trailer, to give you a taste of what’s going on here (seems less spooky, more approachable).

And judging by his bio, he seems to know what he’s doing.  He’s been rattling the cages of skeptical folks like me for a few years now, and this is his second touring show doing that, and he’s already been touring it for a bit, so it’s no doubt got the kinks worked out of it by now:


“Steven Nicholas grew up in Northeast Ohio where he began performing more than thirty years ago. He studied theater at UNLV and then moved to Los Angeles to enter the world of professional entertainment. After appearing in a number of national commercials and independent films he began to find his niche performing his own unique brand of mind reading entertainment. Steven has performed for Fortune 500 companies, Hollywood’s elite, and events from coast to coast. He began touring his first one man show ExperiMENTAL in 2021. The show won multiple awards, sold out performances, and garnered rave reviews at festivals around the country. Steven premiered his second show Mind Reader in 2023 and looks forward to touring this show for several years to come. When not on stage, Steven enjoys collecting stone lithographs, playing the marimba, and eating sushi, but not all at the same time.”


Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

Fringe 2025 - Returning Favorites - Timothy Mooney - Breakneck Twelfth Night


Timothy Mooney’s back and he’s speeding through Shakespeare again.

I quite enjoyed his online Breakneck Comedy of Errors back in 2021 (5 stars), and the random goodness of Lot o’ Shakespeare in 2022 (5 stars again), so it’s nice to see him tackling one of my favorite Shakespearen romantic comedies, Twelfth Night.  Honestly, that’s all I need to know.

Breakneck Twelfth Night
Timothy Mooney Repertory Theatre
Venue: Barker Center
 
Show Description:
TWELFTH NIGHT the Elizabethan “Mardi Gras,” finds men playing women, servants playing masters and a good many more dirty jokes than were traditionally allowed! Tim Mooney plays the twins and EVERYBODY ELSE!
 
Genre & Content:
Drama, Solo Show, Musical Theater, Original Music, Physical Theater, Shakespearian Elements
Warnings: Adult Language, Crude Humor

There’s a short trailer:

 

And a longer, but fun, explainer, breaking down Shakespeare’s use of language, and how the play pokes at the boundaries between gender, class and sexuality among the characters:


Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  




Friday, July 25, 2025

Fringe 2025 Top 11 to 20 - #17 - Songs Without Words (or, The Mendelssohn Play) - Jennifer Vosters


One of the many things I go to the Fringe for each year is new plays.

And this one sounds like a doozy, as well as a great solo showcase for the playwright/actress that racked up a lot of awards last year on the Fringe circuit - and now it arrives in Minneapolis.  So I’m naturally drawn to a production like this.  (I often say I’m not much for plays about artists, particularly writers, but this may be one of those exceptions, largely because it’s about music instead, and looks like it’s about the people as much as the art, and that balance can get me through.)

Songs Without Words (or, The Mendelssohn Play)
Jennifer Vosters
Venue: Rarig Xperimental

Show Description:
This award-winning solo performance grapples gender, genius, and family in the extraordinary true story of sibling composers Fanny and Felix Mendelssohn, two very different artists sharing one artistic soul.

You may have heard of the great composer F. Mendelssohn. You may not have heard that there were two. Equally talented siblings Felix and Fanny Mendelssohn were each other's chief supporters and best friends. But under the constraints of an unforgiving world, there was only room for one to be great. Songs Without Words is the funny, tragic, and heartfelt story of one artistic soul inhabiting two very different artists. Featuring a solo actor's tour-de-force performance as both Fanny and Felix, Songs Without Words wrestles enduring questions of gender and genius, family and fame, siblinghood and the power of art. 

Songs Without Words (or The Mendelssohn Play) is an award-winning solo play by Jennifer Vosters, featuring her tour-de-force performance as composers Fanny and Felix Mendelssohn. No classical music knowledge required! As the 21st century gives Fanny Mendelssohn her overdue spotlight, from documentaries to concert halls, take an hour to get to know her and her famous brother, up close and personal. Perfect for siblings, history lovers, music buffs, and anyone craving some catharsis. 

Songs Without Words won:
American Theatre Critics Association’s Osborn New Play Award in 2024 
as well as 
Critics' Pick (Cincy Fringe, 2024)
Pick of the Fringe & Audience Favorite (Green Bay Fringe, 2024)
Best International Show (Saskatoon Fringe, 2024).

 
Genre & Content: Drama, Solo Show, Historical Content
Warnings: Adult Language

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

 

Fringe 2025 Top 10 - #7 - La Tunda: A Reimagining of a Colombian Folklore - JexArzayus Productions


It’s a new play.  It’s queer.  It’s trans.  I’ve seen some of the artists involved in other projects before, both scripted and improvised, and I enjoyed their work, so… that, plus all the information below adds up to something I want to put on my schedule and would recommend for others as well.  If it sounds like it might be your kind of thing, too, give it a try!

La Tunda: A Reimagining of a Colombian Folklore
JexArzayus Productions
Written by Jex Arzayús and Ora Jay
Venue: Mixed Blood

Show Description:
Join Dario on his journey to uncover the truth behind the feared ancient Colombian shapeshifter known as La Tunda. When the daytime shrimp shack turns queer bar at night, Dario faces unexpected realities.

La Tunda is a shapeshifter that lures people into the jungle by looking like a family member or friend. Some say La Tunda entraps its victims in the jungle by feeding them their special shrimp; others say La Tunda kills those who disobey. What La Tunda will you encounter on the MN Fringe stage?

JexArzayús Productions debuts at the Minnesota Fringe Festival with La Tunda: A Reimagining of a Colombian Folklore, told through a queer-Latinx lens. Co-written by Jex Arzayús, who stars as Dario, and Ora Jay, who makes their directorial debut, La Tunda, follows a journey to Colombia to uncover the truth behind the ancient folklore. Blending suspense, humor, and storytelling, the show explores queerness, identity, and cultural roots. Featuring a diverse cast and crew of BIPOC, LGBTQ+, and allied artists, this show introduces new folklore to your repertoire with a playful modern spin.

 
Genre & Content:
Comedy, Drama, Horror, LGBTQIA+ Content
Warnings:
Adult Language, Crude Humor, Abuse/Physical Violence, Loud Noises, Sexual Content, Violence

There’s more monster lore on the More Information tab of their Fringe show page:

What is La Tunda's origin story?
La Tunda is a folklore about a shapeshifting creature that originates from the Pacific coastal region of Colombia and Ecuador, specifically the Chocó department, which is populated by the Indigenous Emberá (Colombia) and Awá (Ecuador), as well as Afro-Colombian people. La Tunda bears similarities with other famous Colombian folklore, including La Pata Sola and La Moana. Queer studies writer, María Amelia Viteri, discusses how "La Tunda is a gender ambiguous character," and a folklore we should look to understand Latinoamericano queer studies. Ibsen Hernández Valencia argues that La Tunda symbolizes resistance and rebellion against colonial oppression in his discussion of emancipation. Due to the nature of oral storytelling, there's no exact moment in history where we can pinpoint the inception of La Tunda; rather, it embodies layers of cultural fusion. Focused on creating a story that centers a trans first-generation American-Colombian, we drew from many retellings of La Tunda, discussions of Latinoamericano queerness, and interpretations as a liberation symbol to craft a reimagined story of La Tunda for the queer Latinx-American 'no sabo' kid, and we are so excited to share it with you!


Also some words of reassurance:

Is the play in Spanish? I don't know Spanish, will I be able to follow?
We recommend this play for individuals who can understand English or those who are bilingual in English and Spanish. The play is primarily in English, and to ensure that all audience members can follow along, we pair the Spanish lines with English lines that provide context for non-Spanish speakers. For all our 'no sabo kids', this play is for you!

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.  

 

Fringe 2025 - Returning Favorites - Andrew Erskine Wheeler (Wheeler In The Sky) - In the Garden of American Heroes


Andrew Erskine Wheeler, one of the best actors we have in the Twin Cities, is back again with another of his historically-based solo shows, after two previous back to back award-winning historically-based, 5-star solo show performances in Booth’s Ghost, and Whoosh! The Civil War Mythology of Michael Hickey and His Perilous Precipitation Over St. Anthony Falls.

Do I really need to remind anyone who’s seen either or both of his previous shows that any new creation from Wheeler is definitely something you want on your schedule?  Funny, insightful, smart, taking history’s various misfits and making them fully human, while also never letting them off the hook for their faults and misdeeds.  This time, it’s General George Armstrong Custer.

He also had a charming Fringe preview for the new show (below) during which he reminded us there is a nudity warning (“I cannot stress enough the reading of the show descriptions”)

In the Garden of American Heroes
Wheeler in the Sky
Venue: Southern Theatre
 
Show Description:
An astounding solo show about American memory, myths, and monuments as told by an atrociously monumental a**hole.
 
From a restless haunt along the Greasy Grass, Custer's atrocious, asinine specter lampoons and laments the vainglories of life, and his own infamous legacy of the Last Stand at Little Big Horn. In The Garden Of American Heroes is a satirical, scathing, and scandalous indictment of what has currently befallen the National Endowment of the Arts and what it means to be both memorialized, and metastasized, into American cultural mythology.
 
To honor the 250th anniversary of the United States, the National Endowment for the Arts has provided a list of 250 suitable American Heroes to be the subject matter of future grants. The list of heroes is taken from the proposed list of 250 sculptures for the National Garden of American Heroes to be located in the Black Hills of South Dakota near Mount Rushmore. Conspicuously absent from that list is one of the most famous (and admittedly infamous) names associated with the Black Hills, and all of American history, General George Armstrong Custer. 

Ozymandias as told by Aladdin’s Genie, Wheeler In The Sky revels in Kings and Fools: Titanic emotions, laughter thru tears, archetypes and archvillains, cathartic, confessional, irredeemable characters seeking redemptive arcs; sometimes colossally wrenching, sometimes colossal wrecks. 


Genre & Content:
Comedy, Drama, Solo Show, Historical Content, Political Content, Shakespearian Elements
Warnings:
Adult Language, Crude Humor, Nudity, Violence, Other Divisive Content

(Always intrigued when a show tags itself for “Other Divisive Content” - what *are* we in for that isn’t covered by the other warnings? :)

 

 

Here’s some handy links to my Fringe Top 10Top 11 to 20 and Returning Favorites lists for this year, as well as all the coverage of this year’s Minnesota Fringe Festival.