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The Free Fringe is back, with over 120 shows across the Edinburgh. As ever, there will be no charge
to the public, with free entry at all venues. Edinburgh can be an expensive place, especially during festival time. The Free Fringe is an excellent opportunity to sample some great comedy, and save some of that hard earned cash at the same time.
Why not see several shows in a row? With bar facilities and back to back free shows at all our venues, you can save your feet, as well as your money.
This year's programme contains some big names, all performing free of charge, plus outstanding newer acts, and for the first time Theatre, at dedicated venue: 'Art's Complex'.
You can find our full programme here...
There are also lots of newer acts at the Free Fringe this year. The roots of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe are in developing and supporting new talent. Without a constant flow of new writers and performers, the Fringe is at risk. By supporting the Free Fringe you are supporting the entire Fringe and everything it stands for.
You can also become a friend at myspace .jpg)
The Free Fringe: bringing free comedy to the Edinburgh Fringe since 1996.
Winner, Tap Water Awards: spirit of the Fringe 2006
Winner, Chortle Award for Innovation 2007
Winner, Chortle Award for Best Off--Stage Contribution 2007

Adolf Hitler & Mother Teresa Walk into a bar
History
The Free Fringe began in 1996, founded by Peter Buckley Hill, with his show Peter Buckley Hill And Some Comedians.
Peter saw the Fringe as it then was: performers losing thousands of pounds, venues with four or five people in them, and complaints about high ticket prices. He saw that this was a vicious cycle. As costs to the performers rose, ticket prices rose. As ticket prices rose, fewer people went to shows and even fewer went to shows by artists they hadn't heard of. And this was bad for comedy; you can't make people laugh if there are only four of them, one in each corner of an otherwise empty room. And the more empty the audiences were, the more prices went up, to cover the rising costs of the venues. There seemed no escape from the cycle, and yet it was providing no opportunity for performers to rise through the ranks. The circle had to be cut.
Making the space free to performers would not be enough. The benefit had to be passed on to the consumer. Only thus could more people be attracted to see more shows.
The show that started the Free Fringe ‘Peter Buckley Hill And Some Comedians’ was the first of its kind. Peter paid a promoter for the space (there was no other option) and absorbed the loss. People called him mad. But audiences came. And came again. The bar broke all previous sales records.
In 1997 a different promoter attempted to force Peter to charge for admission. He resisted, and won. Peter Buckley Hill And Some Comedians II went ahead, and this time he didn't have to pay for the space. Indeed, it turned out that the promoter had not been charged for the space by the venue; she had sold the slots to her fellow artists and kept the money. The middleman was cut out, and the principle was established that increased drink sales were enough to satisfy the venue.
1998: PBHASC III became more established and increased its length to 1 1/2 hours. Name comedians played guest slots. But the pub manager left, and the area management didn't want the show to continue. A new venue had to be found. The experiment could have died at that point, but PBH was determined that it shouldn't.
After some searching, a new venue was found: the Three Quarter Sports Café on Grassmarket. This converted church had a wonderful performing room on two levels upstairs; this arrangement was marred only by the management's occasional cancellations of the shows to broadcast football and other sports on the big screen. It was in this venue that the first attempt to broaden the Free Fringe idea to more shows was made. The idea was to use weekday afternoons for a three-hour long rolling preview of any Fringe shows that wanted it, in 15-minute slots. This was an ambitious plan involving vast co-ordination between slots in the days before everybody had a mobile phone, and consequently suffered from occasional no-shows and dropouts. For these reasons, it didn't always succeed, but often it did, end the public took it in good part, often having lunch while watching the varied previews going past them. PBH bought an electric piano for this show; it was played twice. He still has it, and he still can't play it.
There were three years at the Three-Quarter; the public came in increasing numbers and name comedians played the shows. But the bar was closed and the venue sold, and yet another venue was needed. This was quite difficult to find.
Eventually, the Canon's Gait was approached. The then manager enthusiastically agreed to host PBH's two shows, but no more than that. Any expansion would have to wait for the future. In fact, the 2002 shows nearly did not take place, since that manager then left and the message about the shows was not passed on. Fortunately, the situation was rectified in time and PBHASC VII took place in the Canon's Gait. Smaller than the Three-Quarter, in nevertheless boasted a warm atmosphere and the audience flocked. After so much upheaval in the past, the Free Fringe had found a home and a place to expand in. Or so it seemed.
It was not to be. One of the numerous parasites who spoil the Fringe intervened. Declaring himself a comedy promoter, he persuaded the Canon's Gait's management that he could programme the space with better shows. PBH said he could do the same, but the management went with the 'promoter'. Who proceded to organise no shows whatsoever, having offered the space he was given free at £2000 per one-hour slot to performers. Meanwhile, no free venue was available to PBH and the cause seemed lost.
A chink of light showed through this darkness in June 2003, when the former manager of the Canon's Gait, Linsay Watts, telephoned PBH to say that she was now manager of a trade union club in
For Peter Buckley Hill’s own account of these events go to: Truth & Lies
In 2007 the true Free Fringe coped with the opposition festival set up by the Laughing Horse, and survived a venue suddenly closing three weeks before the Fringe started. In the first week, it did nothing but rain, and the number of visitors to Edinburgh plummeted. We survived all this; not only survived, but triumphed. 1200 performances of 61 shows in seven venues happened, to acclaim from audience and critics. The ethos had proved itself. Performers worked together, provided all the equipment that the venues could not, and worked collaboratively and on their own initiative to make the Free Fringe happen. And it was extremely successful.
2008 will see a further controlled expansion, to 11 performance spaces in 10 venues. The public are coming to recognise that free is good; not only good for their pockets, but good artistically.
We will always continue to promote a collaborative, not-for-profit Free Fringe Festival. Free for Performers, Free for audiences, and free of the commercial trappings that have led to the spiralling cost of both attending, and performing at the Fringe.
The fringe is coming back to the people. This year the Free Fringe is bigger than ever, with more free venues, more free shows, and the best line-up yet. Check out the shows as they are put into the directory, and keep supporting the one and only, truly free Fringe!
| Information for Performers | |
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| The Free Fringe welcomes proposals for shows. We hope to grow organically. We believe our deal and way of working is good for all concerned. We welcome those who think the same, providing their shows will be of a standard that does not let our reputation down. We are all in this together, and all shows are expected to contribute in some way or another. There are terms. These have been worked out after experience. They are set out below. Please read them. If you are fully on side with them, please email PBH with brief details of your show idea. THE FREE FRINGE TERMS AND GUIDELINES: Conditions of negotiation:
Conditions for the shows themselves
Nicol Edwards, Niddry Street (Music Lounge) Nicol Edwards, Niddry Street (Banqueting Hall) Voodoo Bar, Torphichen Place, Haymarket
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