Posts tagged #festival

“So ready for Scotland.”

So ready for Scotland.”

With that began an interview of Sarah Curnoles, producer and director of the 2015 Charm City Fringe Fest Audience Choice Award winner, A Fool’s Paradise. In just a few days, Sarah and her company will be the second Festival award-winner to take their production to Scotland to perform in the largest arts festival in the world, the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

Theatre, and Music, and Beers! Oh My!

We’ve locked down the venues, picked the artists, received more grants and support than ever before, and our educational work is taking off. Oh, and there’s going to be a Fringe Beer.

 First, the artists. We’ve nearly doubled the performing companies this year. There’s a one-woman cooking show comedy and a group of clowns exploring the meaning of life. And if you’re looking for something else, there’s plenty more.

Click here to get the scoop on all of this year's performers

Now, the venues. Returning for their second engagement with the Fringe Fest is the historic Baltimore Theatre Project, a force in Baltimore’s theatre community since opening its Mt. Vernon doors in 1971. New to the Festival is the Chicken Box of Station North and Hampden’s Church & Company. They’re as interesting as their names might suggest: one is housed in a former NY Fried Chicken, the other nestled in an historic church off the Avenue. 

Want the first peak at the 2014 artwork for the Charm City Fringe Fest? Well, you've found it, the wonderful work of Navid Azeez!

Of course, all of this is made possible by the help of our sponsors. We are thrilled to join forces with Brewer’s Art. Not only are they hosting happy hours and late-night gatherings for the festival, but Brewer’s is crafting a special release Charm City Fringe Beer! It will be delicious, we promise, and exclusively available on draught at your favorite Fringe bars and venues, also a promise.

If you're getting as excited as we are then I suggest signing up right here to volunteer at this year's festival. We love our volunteers and, along with all of our love and respect, they will receive free festival passes and cool swag. 

Before the fest hits in full this November, be sure to catch Charm City Fringe at HampdenFest on September 20th and again during Free Fest this October. We’ll have free giveaways, prizes, and discount tickets and buttons for the Festival!

That's all for now. Tune in next week for news on our new educational efforts!

With love, 

Michael Brush, co-founder

Artist Spotlight: A Sit-Down with Siobhan O'Loughlin

Charm City Fringe Fest participant and winner of “Best of Fringe 2013” Siobhan O'Loughlin (Natural Novice) recently sat down with Fringe PR Director Alex Ward to discuss all matters theatre. So what if the interview was conducted online? I’m sure they were both sitting down, maybe drinking some tea? We may never know, but here’s the interview for your reading pleasure.

A - What first drew you into theatre and performing arts?

S - I had amazing parents, honestly, who put me in piano lessons when I was very young. I am a person who is

A. basically not good at anything without a TON of practice; and

B. terrible at math, so piano was incredibly difficult for me.

They encouraged me to continue, and I think it was ultimately just for my personal growth and understanding of music and expression. However, I also had an incredible piano teacher, who believed in me in lots of ways. I learned to play songs I loved, songs I could sing along with, and my performance began to blossom musically first.

A - When writing your performances, what inspires you?

S - A combination of social movements and human power. I've met and seen so many artists and activists whose work completely motivates me to continue to create. Solo performers like Seth Lepore, Al Letson, and Monica Hunken. The activists I work with in the National Organization for Women, Occupy Wall Street, and the Jokers of Theatre of the Oppressed, NYC. These peoples' passion for creative work and their devotion to social justice--that's my drive.

A - What do you enjoy most about doing live theatre?

S - It's an adventure. Every night is different and it only happens once in that room with those specific people. Live theatre lets us live in the present moment--lets us feel things in a room with other people present; gives us a shared experience.

O'Loughlin performing "Natural Novice" in the 2013 Charm CIty Fringe Festival.

O'Loughlin performing "Natural Novice" in the 2013 Charm CIty Fringe Festival.

A - We were lucky enough to host your show "Natural Novice" last year, which deals heavily with female empowerment over issues of body-image. What other works have you done supporting feminist causes, and how can others show their support?

S - "Natural Novice" is my first full-fledged feminist play. My other solo show, "The Rope in Your Hands", has more of a racial-justice theme.

I do need support with this play, however.* Performing it here in NYC at the Planet Connections Theatre Festival I was reviewed as "repulsive" and a "hairy ape" by the TV show Hi! Drama. They [reviewed my appearance] without looking into the content of the play.

A - Your performance in last year's festival was the winner of "Best of Fringe 2013." What was your favorite thing about the 2013 Charm City Fringe Festival?

S - My one favorite thing? As a touring artist, I have three general objectives with doing festivals: 

  1. To meet other artists and network
  2. To get reviews
  3. To feel the general vibe and artistic climate of the city

I got all three of those at this festival, which was a real triumph for me. I owe a lot of that to working with the festival organizers, who really had the best interest of the artists in mind. I appreciate that so much.

A - If you had to pick one, what was your favorite show at the 2013 Fringe Fest, aside from your own?

S - "The Sound of Smoke," of course!! I'm still obsessed with Nick Horan. His performance was dynamic, powerful, moving, hilarious, spell-binding, beautiful. I went with a group of friends to see him--we all knew we were going to dig it before the show even started. Please, everyone, Google him, stalk him, go to all of his performances. You will thank me.

A - How was your experience in Baltimore?

S - It was just lovely. As a New Yorker, I cannot tell you how hard it is to accomplish things in the city where I live. Feeling like you have the resources, the support, the audience--let's be real. Sometimes NYC does not care that you have a play. Sometimes the festival staff you are working for does not care.

When I arrived in Baltimore, Mike and Zach [the founders of CCF] asked me if I needed a ride to the theatre to do my tech. [They were] available during my ENTIRE tech. The boys even made sure that vegan cupcakes and pizza were available at one of the opening night parties. Because of me. I was just beside myself--that kind of stuff does not happen in NYC.

A - Arts and culture are on the rise in Baltimore, was this evident to you while you were in the city?

S - I'm not sure if you know this, Alex, but I'm no stranger to Baltimore. As a native Marylander, born and raised on the Eastern Shore in Salisbury, I went to undergrad at Towson University, and I'm so proud to see so many Towson students doing amazing work in Baltimore. Glass Mind Theatre Co. and Stillpointe were both started by Towson alum, which is totally fantastic. What is especially great about having a Fringe though, in each and every city with an arts scene, is that it invites other artists from elsewhere to join in the fun. It provided me with a great opportunity to bring my new play to Baltimore--I don't know how I'd have done that otherwise.

A - The next CCF fest is fast approaching, what would you tell the potential artists and audiences about the festival?

S - Artists: Enjoy this opportunity to network and share!! Go to the parties Fringe Staff plans. They are awesome and important. And go see each other’s work! Shake hands with an artist you don't know. Tell them who you are and invite them to come see you. And then you go see them. And utilize the wondrous resources that are Michael, Zach and Alex. They are really there for you.

Audiences: GO TO THE FRINGE. Go to it. Eat a Berger cookie and just get to the box office and buy tickets to at least three shows. It is good for you. Go to something you don't know anyone in. Go to a solo play and sit in the front row. Try it. Bring a friend so if you hate it you can laugh together. And if you love it, you can celebrate together with some Natty Boh or whatever the hell it is you guys drink over there.

A - Would you do it again?

S - Oh you bet. I can't wait to. My next play is a personal vulnerability log across the globe, called "The Coolest Places to Cry." It will be coming to you. Also in the works is my first collaborative/devised piece in a long time, with my half Australian/half American theatre company, Everything is Everywhere.

We are developing our new project (including another Baltimore native, Ira Gamerman) in Manila, The Philippines, next Spring. Look for it. I miss you all. Can't wait to be back, and thanks again for having me as part of your fest, and honoring me with my first award for this show. 

*To show your support for Siobhan and her cause, you can help by spreading the word about her show, "The Rope in Your Hands," celebrating the agency we all have over our bodies. "Like" her on Facebook and share her Tumblr page, which contains her photo-response to the review for her recent play, as well as the specific dates/times for her current tour of "Natural Novice."

Artscape, Festival, and the Omnipresent "More"

Holy wow! It’s July 4th and I missed last month’s blog. Well, sometimes you miss a blog here and there. We hope you got by all right, and never fear, we’re back.

Since you last heard, a lot has gone down here at Charm City Fringe HQ (hence the missed blog, in fact): we’re getting sponsored by our friends at The Brewer's Art, expanding the festival into Hampden, and we received a ton of applicants for the 2014 Fringe Fest—that’s coming up in November, you know! I can speak for myself, but I’m also going to speak for the rest of the Fringe team when I say that we’re excited by the mix of artists and companies coming to Fringe this year.

Do you think alien encounters may be ripe for the theatrical picking? Well we have that, TWICE!

Puppets? Yes, please.

Interpretive dance and narrative storytelling? You bet.

Shakespeare? This is a theatre festival, of course there’s going to be Shakespeare (this time, a comedy!).

Improv? Darn tootin’!

There’s more too, but to find that out, you will just have to follow us on The Facebook to stay up to date (got a smartphone, more of a Twitter user? Follow us @CharmCityFringe).

“But Zach, the festival is sooo far away, it’s in November!” Oh yes, little one, but fear not, your favorite Fringe peeps will be at Artscape this July 18-20. We’ll have a table at the GBCA tent and at Theatre Project too! We’re going to have some inside scooping going on for the festival, plus our cool new T-shirts, some classic merch from Fringe past, FREE stickers, and…wait for it…

 

A SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR FESTIVAL PASSES AND BUTTONS!

 

That’s about it for now. Oh yea, we’re still accepting BYOV (that’s Fringe-speak for Bring Your Own Venue) productions through the end of the month, so it’s not too late to join Fringe! Don’t scare Michael again like you did last time, send those apps in!

Charm City Fringe Fest 2014 is right around the corner, and applications are frighteningly easy! Apply now! http://charmcityfringe.com/2014-application/ Charm City Fringe Festival: November 5th-9th, 2014 Applications available April 1st-June 15th, 2014 Check us out on: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/CharmCityFringe Twitter - https://twitter.com/CharmCityFringe Official Site - http://charmcityfringe.com/ Donate to CCF - http://charmcityfringe.com/support/

^last time

Cheers,

Zach Michel

Co-founder, Festival Producer, and Tardy Blog Writer