“More than that, I think it really is the first big moment Sydney indie artists have had since COVID because whilst we have had Sydney festivals, and we’ve had revitalisation projects and street parties, we haven’t had a moment where everyone has been able to come together, where they have been able to present new work for productions in theatre,” she said.
“And the backlog of work for the last few years is really quite extraordinary. Fortunate for us but it’s led to this problem now where we are desperately trying to find more venues and new venues because we don’t want to turn anyone away.”
This year’s music program is its biggest. “That’s got a lot to do with the loss of gigs during COVID,” Glasscock said. “Also, we’ve lost some venues so it’s harder for people to get gigs now.”
Kiri Pedersen combines circus, burlesque and cabaret in her performance as the Spinning Sensation. This is her fourth year at Sydney Fringe and while it doesn’t have the same buzz as Adelaide, she says, it’s only a matter of time before it catches up.
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For creatives, it’s a vital platform to develop new theatre and connect with audiences without incurring hefty venue hire fees and upfront registration costs.
“It’s a space where I can perform new work or rework my show,” Pedersen says.
“I can expand my audience and I usually get into venues that are different than what I normally do and it allows me to make new connections. And also I get to see the other works where I wouldn’t necessarily be able to afford – going out to a whole lot of shows, an artist pass does help to see those, there’s great professional development workshops that run pre-festival.”
The only brake on Sydney’s physical theatre scene is the lack of venues.
“Sydney circus is dying,” Pedersen says. “We’ve had two of our major aerial schools have to close because of COVID.
“Melbourne has beautiful pop-up tents that can do circus. Here, trying to navigate getting a tent on council lands, then on private land, there’s just so many hoops to jump through – we’re missing a whole genre of work that is amazing because there is nothing in Sydney, unless you want to go for a massive 800-seater venue, and I don’t have the funds to do that.”
The best of Fringe 2022
- Bernie Dieter’s Club Kabarett with circus, gender-bending aerial, and fire-breathing sideshow in the Spiegeltent. First Fleet Park, The Rocks, from August-16-25.
- Limitless, a new micro-festival celebrating performance and visual artists with disabilities at 107 Projects in Redfern.
- Award-winning cabaret company Yummy will perform at the Darlinghurst Theatre Company.
- Babylon, presented by Tortuga Studios, takes over Chippendale’s Kensington Street and Spice Alley with light sculptures and projections, live music, dancing, soundscapes, food, performance, and drinks.
The Fringe’s full program will be announced in August.