Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Fringe 2019 - an alternate schedule for Thursday, August 1st
My schedule for Fringe on opening night, Thursday, August 1st was almost over in Northeast, rather than the Cedar-Riverside hub.
Looking at the 5:30pm slot across the whole schedule for potential kickoff shows, my eyes at first gravitated to a new queer play:
5:30pm - Moon River - Ritz Studio
(2019 Fringe Top 10, #7 - reasons why)
Then nearby at 7pm I saw another show on my top list of things to see:
7:00pm - Beat. - Crane Theater
(2019 Fringe Top 20, #16 - reasons why)
And at the same venue at 10pm was yet another show I was very interested in:
10:00pm - Nerd Rage! The Great Debates - Crane Theater
(2019 Fringe Top 10, #6 - reasons why)
In between I couldn't find anything nearby that was on the top of my list, but the 8:30pm show at the Crane was a combination of improv and dance, so staying put wasn't a bad idea:
8:30pm - The Provettes - Crane Theater
So if I hadn't be lured over to Cedar-Riverside by a couple of later shows I also really wanted to see, this would have been my Thursday instead.
But this Northeast grouping is also a nice combination of comedy, drama and dance. Another slate of great options I can recommend, if my own chosen schedule on Thursday doesn't strike your fancy.
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Monday, July 29, 2019
Fringe 2019 - Apologies to the Family Fringe (and regular Fringe, too)
Like so many things the last three months, it’s a scheduling thing. Were mom alive and well and healthy, she probably would have rescheduled the start of her Fringe visit a few days earlier this year to partake in an extra, more low-key weekend of Fringing like we had just this past weekend - to kind of ease into things. Sadly, that didn’t come to pass.
And because I’ve been out of town so much the last three months dealing with mom’s declining health, and then the aftermath of her death, I couldn’t go yet another weekend with no income from the second job. So while many of you were catching the first weekend of Family Fringe, I was piling on some extra work hours to prop up the bank account over the next two weekends when I *will* be seeing shows all day.
I think Mom would have appreciated the Family Fringe being moved closer to other West Bank venues this year. Last year, the logistics of getting to and from the Family Fringe show we saw cut into her schedule in a way she didn’t like. I think she’d also appreciate the two festivals overlapping but not being completely on top of, and in competition with, each other. She would have enjoyed a weekend just to see Family Fringe before the traditional Fringe got underway.
She was a purist, so I know, just like last year, the curation aspect creeping into the Fringe Festival via the Family Fringe would have bothered her. Even in the hospital, when the subject turned to the Fringe with her friends, she’d pipe up with “It’s not a true Fringe if someone’s choosing the shows.” I’m not going to get into an argument about that here. I agree with her, but I know the Fringe has its reasons for arranging things this way, too. That’s a subject for another time. I could just hear her voice in my head and I wanted to honor that before it slipped out of my memory.
The crazy unexpected travel and family time back in Pennsylvania also meant I was receiving press releases from various Fringe artists during a time I really couldn’t respond to them. I appreciate those who sent them, and I did read and use the material in them pretty liberally when blogging and making schedule decisions, so I was glad to receive them. The radio silence on my end was just a function of circumstance.
Also, since Mom’s not here to hang out with, I won’t be taking full vacation days during the week. I’ll have the weekends off, but I’ll work half days during the week (again, I’ve been away too long), and still have a few hours to decompress between the day job and start of evening shows. Not sure how that’s going to affect the coverage. I hope not too much.
But this is where we are right now.
Next year will be a different animal, with hopefully more flexibility. I guess we’ll know when we get there.
Right now, I just want to get through the next two weeks.
Thanks for understanding.
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Fringe 2019 Top 10 - The Full List
Here's links to the full list of this year's Top 10 for Fringe 2019 (updated as I post new entries):
1 - A Tension To Detail - Geard Harris
2 - Stoopidity - Ian McCarthy, Michael McKitt, Domino D'Lorion
3 - Ploys for Ensemble Glitz and Crisis Actors - Toot
4 - Botanical Dancing - LC Creations
5 - First Comes Love - Stephanie M. Hipple
6 - Nerd Rage! The Great Debates - Wonder Dave and Komedio Comedy
7 - Moon River - Ducdame Theatre
8 - Origin Story - Dying Theatre
9 - Mighty Real - Marvel Ann Theatre
10 - SplitScreen - Sterling Melcher, Meg Kirchhoff
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 10
Fringe 2019 Top 20 - The Full List
Here's links to the full list of this year's Top 11-20 for Fringe 2019 (updated as I post new entries):
11 - Which Middle Name of 'Philip Seymour Hoffman' are YOU? - alleged Theatre Co.
12 - A Confederate Widow In Hell - Breaker/Fixer Productions
13 - Glass, and Lady M. - Full Circle Theater
14 - Fool Muun Komming! [BeBgWunderful/ YEsyes/ 4sure.Hi5. TruLuv; Spank Spank: SOfun_Grate_Times] - Sam Kruger
15 - Ancient Future Division: Battle for the Existence Yeti - 5th Wheel Productions
16 - Beat. - W.A.R. Theater
17 - Destination: Everywhere, and Quiet Riot - Broken Box Mime Theater
18 - Relic - Jesse Factor
19 - R Culture - EnCompass Theatre
20 - Carbon Man-Dating: A Climate Themed Gay Romantic Comedy - Lee Samuelson
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 20
Sunday, July 28, 2019
Fringe 2019 - Top 20 - #11 - Which Middle Name of “Philip Seymour Hoffman” Are YOU? – alleged Theatre Co. (Jake Mierva, Danylo Loutchko) – Ritz Studio
Description - Get it? Cause ‘Seymour’ is his only middle name. It’s funny. Well, we thought so too, until we got in too deep. Far too deep. We need your help to take this internet quiz before we lose our minds.
This one’s a catch-up appointment for me. I was all set to see alleged’s production Four Square at the beginning of May, and then I got a call that Mom had a brain tumor. Obviously, the artists understood my needing to take a rain check on seeing their work. But I was actually really curious to see the production, and their particular brand of theater.
This one is, of course, completely different, but I imagine their sensibility carries through from one production to the next. The set-up certainly sounds equally oddball. The press materials call it:
“an internet personality quiz in the form of a theatre performance. Danylo and Jake (performers & creators) found this mysterious personality quiz on the internet and are trying to get the audience to take it as many times as possible during the show. Working with the audience, they must somehow get the 'correct' result, otherwise the malicious and mysterious creator of this quiz will seek retribution. Will they succeed?”
The bios of the performers on their Fringe show page gives a hint of their sense of humor:
Jake Mierva first met Philip Seymour Hoffman in his dreams at age 12. This was, of course, prior to him having seen any of his work. Hoffman told Mierva, "Don't you dare", and that's haunted him ever since. As of 2019, Jake's a big fan of "Boogie Nights.”
Danylo Loutchko (age 24, but doesn’t look it) knew who Philip Seymour Hoffman was before he knew who Truman Capote was. So when he read “In Cold Blood” in high school, he kept imagining that Philip Seymour Hoffman had written it. It was confusing. He also hopes one day he has an acting role that is as perfect and iconic as Philip Seymour Hoffman’s role in “The Big Lebowski.”
Philip Seymour Hoffman's profound quote, "I know I wasn't as handsome as some other guys, but I was OK with that" gave young Chris the confidence necessary to make it through those early years…
They’re weird, but also strangely endearing. I’m going.
First show - Saturday, August 3, 2019, 2:30pm - Ritz Theater Studio
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 20
Fringe 2019 - Top 10 - #10 - SplitScreen – Sterling Melcher, Meg Kirchhoff – Crane
Description - Separated by time and space, Meg and Sterling have to find their way back to the center of the wild wild web. Through dance, theater, and video, help us rediscover who we are in this new digital landscape.
Further description from the More Information tab on their Fringe show page:
The audience and performer in Minneapolis, MN will be joined by an audience and performer somewhere in Philadelphia, PA.
Meg and Sterling are working to link their respective cities together through live video feed and bringing the public Philadelphia space into the Crane Theater’s more traditional venue.
By blurring the lines between public and private art, they are looking to investigate the uses of the ‘new town square,’ aka ‘the internet.’
There will be some elements of audience participation that allow the audience to effect or control some aspects of the show.
This idea sounds kinda nuts, but that’s kind of why I want to see how it works.
One performer live, with their audience, connected to their dance partner via video link through the internet. Connecting Minneapolis to Philadelphia and vice versa. Since I come from the Philadelphia area originally, I’m doubly intrigued by the whole concept.
Will half of the show seem “less” somehow? And would it be the video half, or the live half? They’ve been developing this for a while, even though they call it their first cross-country collaboration. They must have found a way for it to work equally well whether you’re watching the performer right in front of you, or one half way across the country. They must have found a way to work together, even though they’re separated by thousands of miles.
I just have to see it for myself.
Keeping my fingers crossed that the internet connection holds up.
First show - Friday, August 2, 2019, 7pm - Crane Theater
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 10
Fringe 2019 - Top 20 - #12 - A Confederate Widow in Hell – Breaker/Fixer Productions (Willi Carlisle, Joseph Fletcher) – Southern
Description - After 150 years of waiting, a widow has returned to resolve her eternal fate. Armed with mementos from her past life, she faces the legacy of the American South in this irreverent, ghostly dramedy.
One of the scheduling regrets that Mom and I had in Fringe 2017 was missing Breaker/Fixer’s There Ain’t No More. Friends whose opinions we trusted were raving about it, sometimes from the stage of their own Fringe shows. And we saw their preview the night before the festival started that year and we really liked it. I couldn’t even make it work on my remaining schedule after Mom left at her usual time, mid-Fringe. Just missed it all the way around.
So this is a chance, at least for me, to rectify that this Fringe. Honestly, if it was anyone else, the word "confederate" would be enough to turn me off these days. But since it’s Breaker/Fixer, I’m giving it a look.
Previous outings of this production have garnered reviews calling it “richly unsettling,” “powerful... worth seeking out,” and, just for good measure, “a whirlwind deconstruction of historical revisionism” (which I think puts my discomfort with “confederate” to rest).
Bring on the “ghostly possessions and prophetic visions.”
First show - Thursday, August 1, 2019, 7pm - Southern Theater
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 20
Fringe 2019 - Top 10 - #9 - Mighty Real – Marvel Ann Theatre – Augsburg Main
Description - A piano bar. Closing time. The 50th anniversary of Stonewall. Five men of all ages will tell their comic, poignant, true-life tales creating a shared context of the journey so far. Then they'll probably sing!
I’m the first to admit I didn’t fully “get” Marvel Ann’s Vert-O-Graph last year. But both Mom and I were amused, so they were always on the “worth another look” list.
And in a year I’m looking for more queer content, it makes sense to make another visit.
The More Information tab on their Fringe show page gives a bit more detail:
In honor of the 50th Anniversary of Stonewall, Marvel Ann decided to look into the last half-century through the eyes of five actors ranging in age from 23 to 61 to see how the gay experience has changed, or stayed the same. These are real-life tales told by actors playing themselves. It is brutally honest at times, and downright hilarious at others, as these players share their experiences spanning the past 50 years. And then they are probably going to sing and dance a bit.
The press packet also shared:
This work is the compilation of five original storytelling pieces. Director Raine Hokan has woven theses stories into one cohesive tale. All five of these performers are playing themselves in a hypothetical scenario whereby they all linger just after closing time in a local piano bar around a baby grand.
Like I said, worth another look. So on the list they go.
Side Note - the title (in case you were wondering where it came from, I think this is it - one of the original gay anthems)
First show - Saturday, August 3, 2019, 2:30pm - Augsburg Mainstage
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 10
Fringe 2019 - Top 20 - #13 - Glass & Lady M. – Full Circle Theater (Lindsey Bushnell, Martha B. Johnson) – Dreamland Arts
Description: Two Pieces, One Compelling Vision: GLASS, a dystopian, feminist absurdist play by Lindsey Bushnell; and LADY M., a ritualistic re-imagining of Lady Macbeth’s sleepwalking scene conceived by Martha B. Johnson
I became an instant fan of Full Circle Theater upon seeing their 2017 remix of Suzan-Lori Parks 365 Days/365 Plays. So whatever they’re up to, I recommend.
This is an independent production running alongside the Fringe, but they wisely position themselves as being accessible in all senses at Dreamland Arts. Also, their show (unlike some of the other independents) is standard Fringe length, at an hour, and tracks along the same scheduled times as other regular Fringe offerings. So you don’t have to completely upend your schedule to fit them in. If you haven’t already seen Full Circle Theater, this is a perfect opportunity to get acquainted with their work.
The two short plays are further described as follows:
Glass
Described by its playwright Lindsey Bushnell as “A Feminist Absurdist Play,” Glass is set in a dystopian world where four women are psychologically trapped and controlled behind glass by an unseen Man. Each woman is an archetype--nurturer (Apple Woman), housekeeper (Sweeping Woman), mother (Rocking Woman), and woman obsessed with body image (Too Woman)--and each has her own views of escape. Glass tackles gender, economic, and societal issues faced by women throughout the centuries.
Lady M.
Conceived by Martha B. Johnson, Lady M. is a reimagining of Lady Macbeth’s iconic sleepwalking scene (“Out, damned spot”) from Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Using mythical and ritualistic theatrical techniques, this piece re-envisions Lady Macbeth’s profound remorse and guilt as a wake-up call for America to similarly acknowledge the problematic nature of American history, and to feel the humanizing power of remorse.
Seriously, check Full Circle out.
First show - Thursday, August 1, 2019, 8:30pm - Dreamland Arts
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 20
Fringe 2019 - Top 10 - #8 - Origin Story – Dying Theatre (Alex Goebel) – Crane
Description: Jett is 16, homeless, with a dark past and an alter ego. He dons a mask to fight a mysterious villain... and a forgotten trauma. But who saves a superhero? - Think "Curious Incident..." meets "The Dark Knight"!
Queer content, religious content, political content, new play, local artists, a different spin on the superhero genre.
OK, you got me.
Short description in the Fringe press packet says:
A fast-paced, action-packed epic about heroes, villains, and LGBT teen homelessness.
A longer write-up in the same materials says:
Jett is 16, finding himself alone on the streets with nowhere to go, unable to remember what forced him there. Everyday, he struggles just to survive. By night, he disappears behind a mask and an alter ego, fighting to save his best friend from the clutches of a mysterious villain who may also hold the key to Jett's past. But as time passes and reality wavers, the lines blur between good, evil, man, and hero. And Jett will face the question: Who saves a superhero? A new, fast-paced, ensemble show. A necessary epic. An untold story.
I’m super curious about this one (no pun intended).
First show - Friday, August 2, 2019, 10pm - Crane Theater
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 10
Fringe 2019 - Top 20 - #14 - Fool Muun Komming! [BeBgWunderful/ YEsyes/ 4sure.Hi5. TruLuv; Spank Spank: SOfun_Grate_Times] – Sam Kruger – Mixed Blood
Yeah, that's not a crazy typo, the full title is -
Fool Muun Komming! [BeBgWunderful/ YEsyes/ 4sure.Hi5. TruLuv; Spank Spank: SOfun_Grate_Times]
Description - Set inside a giant mass hallucination, an extraterrestrial being appears before humankind to present a gift, millennia in the making. Part sci-fi clown, part acid mime, part oddball love letter.
This artist’s Fringe preview was deeply strange, but I also had a really strong feeling that he knew exactly what he was doing. And of course, there’s the weird title to go with the weird preview but, again, I think the guy knows exactly what he’s doing. He’s actually a local artist, but he’s taken this solo show of his on the circuit already - he’s been around Canada and the UK, picking up multiple awards for comedy, solo performer and “pick of the Fringe” along the way.
From the More Information tab on his Fringe show page:
Performed with nothing more than whiplash physicality, kaleidoscopic imagination, and one plastic bag, Fool Muun Komming! (etc, etc) is the genre defying, multi-award winning debut solo show from Sam Kruger, about an alien, his asteroid spaceship, and the dreams they wish to share with you.
This show is described in reviews from other festivals as “hilarious, beautiful, sensual, absurdist… unconventional, unexpected, and unbelievably good… Intellectual, absurd, raunchy, poetic, adorable, and funny… agile and frenetic… a special and weird Fringe jewel.”
I honestly can’t describe the preview, other than it just made me feel weird, in a way I didn’t mind, drawing me in rather than repelling me. So I’m going to give it a go.
You can give his Fringe preview performance a look for yourself here
And he also has a video trailer.
First show - Friday, August 2, 2019, 5:30pm - Mixed Blood Theatre
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 20
Fringe 2019 - Top 10 - #7 - Moon River – Ducdame Theatre (Paige Quinlivan) – Ritz Studio
Description - In 1944, the moon disappeared from the sky. 16 years later, a greaser and a square are drawn together by fate in an homage to butch/femme identity that queers the fraught legacy of contemporary fantasy.
As a playwright myself, I love seeing new plays at Fringe time. It’s where I run across things I love like the work Shelby Company does. So the fact that this is a new play is a plus. And the fact that it’s got queer content is another plus - in this case, a central lesbian couple around which the story revolves. And the premise is fascinating.
But also, again, their Fringe preview really kicked ass. I don’t think the three minute segment they presented is pulled directly from the play as is. I think they pulled key lines and brief character interactions from different parts of the script and created a super sharp summary of basic relationships and key plot points that get the story started. They might have even introduced the entire cast. One snippet flowed right into the next in a way that was easy to follow and very intriguing. It was a great way to sell the production in just under three minutes. I wish all previews were this good *and* informative.
I’m really looking forward to seeing this show. It was almost the very first thing I was going to see at the Fringe this year until my scheduling puzzle took a different turn. But you could make it your opening night first Fringe show and beat me to it.
(Side note - the name of the theater company also grabbed me, because it's from my favorite Shakespeare play, As You Like It. It's a joke that Jacques plays on the good Duke's merry men, getting them to sing lyrics to a song with words they don't understand. They ask him what the word "ducdame" means, and he replies, "'Tis a Greek invocation, to call fools into a circle.")
First show - Thursday, August 1, 2019, 5:30pm - Ritz Theater Studio
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Labels:
Fringe Archives 2019,
Fringe blogging,
Fringe Top 10
Saturday, July 27, 2019
Fringe 2019 - Schedule Day 6 - Tuesday, August 6, 2019
5:30pm - The Overview Effect - Octoberdandy Productions (Jen Scott, Eric Heiberg, Damian Johnson) - Strike Theater
7:00pm - Moon River - Ducdame Theatre (Paige Quinlivan) - Ritz Studio
(2019 Fringe Top 10, #7 - reasons why)
8:30pm - Sandcastles - Emma Wick - Ritz Studio
10:00pm - Bo and Howie Are DTF (Defining Their Friendship) - Bo (Kinney) and Howie (Hamlin) Have a Theater Company - Strike Theater
This is my first Fringe without Mom at my side, so I could use some company.
If you're planning on seeing any of these shows at these times and would like to join me, please do. If you have my phone number, feel free to text or email me to coordinate. If you have my email, send me a message. If you don't have either, you can message me through facebook, Twitter or Instagram.
Or, you know, just show up. That works, too. I'd welcome a friendly face (or two, or three) to help get me through this Fringe. It's going to be tough. Thanks.
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Fringe 2019 - Schedule Day 5 - Monday, August 5, 2019
5:30pm - Chorus - Michael Rogers - Rarig Thrust
7:00pm - Fool Muun Komming! [BeBgWunderful/ YEsyes/ 4sure.Hi5. TruLuv; SpankSpank: SOfun_Grate_Times] - Sam Kruger - Mixed Blood Theater
(2019 Fringe Top 20, #14 - reasons why)
8:30pm - Stand Up Eight - Kingfisher Theatre Company (Heather Fones, Callista Wengel) - Theatre in the Round Players (TRP)
10:00pm - Mad As Nell: or How To Lose a Bly in Ten Days - Rinky Dink Productions (Josh Carson) - Rarig Thrust
This is my first Fringe without Mom at my side, so I could use some company.
If you're planning on seeing any of these shows at these times and would like to join me, please do. If you have my phone number, feel free to text or email me to coordinate. If you have my email, send me a message. If you don't have either, you can message me through facebook, Twitter or Instagram.
Or, you know, just show up. That works, too. I'd welcome a friendly face (or two, or three) to help get me through this Fringe. It's going to be tough. Thanks.
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
Fringe 2019 - Schedule Day 4 - Sunday, August 4, 2019
1:00pm - Ancient Future Division: Battle for the Existence Yeti - 5th Wheel Productions - Southern Theater
(2019 Fringe Top 20, #15 - reasons why)
2:30pm - Tess Jones, Space Archeologist - MDK Productions (Michael D. Krefting) - Rarig Arena
4:00pm - The Bisexual Unicorn and Other Mythological Creatures - Jena Young Productions - Theatre in the Round Players (TRP)
5:30pm - All Is Bright - Shelby Company - Mixed Blood Theater
(Returning Favorite from 2009-2014 - reasons why)
7:00pm - Quiet Riot - Broken Box Mime Theater - Augsburg Mainstage
(2019 Fringe Top 20, #17 - reasons why)
8:30pm - A Man’s Guide for Appropriate Behavior in the 21st Century - One T Productions (Scot Froelich) - Augsburg Studio
10:00pm - The Kid - Rachel Buhman - Augsburg Mainstage
This is my first Fringe without Mom at my side, so I could use some company.
If you're planning on seeing any of these shows at these times and would like to join me, please do. If you have my phone number, feel free to text or email me to coordinate. If you have my email, send me a message. If you don't have either, you can message me through facebook, Twitter or Instagram.
Or, you know, just show up. That works, too. I'd welcome a friendly face (or two, or three) to help get me through this Fringe. It's going to be tough. Thanks.
For a quick list of links to my other postings, check out my Top 10 and Top 11-20 new Fringe artists to check out for Fringe 2019. There's also Returning Favorites, and Fringe Shows I Just Can't Watch Right Now, but You Probably Should. If you want to keep me company, during my first Fringe without Mom, I'll be posting my schedule here. Also, here's some links if you want to hit all the Fringe 2019 blog posts, or see the full Fringe Archive from years past (just keep scrolling down, or hit the different years in the archive listing for the full blog on the right side of the screen and zero in on July and August)
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