Auckland Fringe Programme Fully Live
Auckland Fringe Programme Fully
Live
20th Feb – 4th March
2018
We didn’t think it was possible, but the Auckland Fringe festival has just gotten Fringier. The second half of the Fringe programme has just been released, adding another 32 shows and 17 venues to the line-up, which takes place from February 20th to March 4th. The programme extends from a Summer Zinefest in the city to virtuoso violin concerts, interactive jury trial performances and interactive digital dance works to boat trips up the river Whau. Auckland Fringe 2018 is a celebration of the new, of the independent, and of the ability of the arts to build connections between us all.
The 2018 Auckland Fringe is the first annual iteration of the festival – an organic result of the momentum created from the success of the 2017 Fringe. The Auckland Fringe has existed in various guises since 2009, but it wasn’t until the current Festival Director Lydia Zanetti took over during make-or-break times, and carried off an explosive Auckland Fringe in 2017 that we’ve seen it start to show its teeth. Acknowledgement of this success by the sector saw the Auckland Fringe win a new award for Community Spirit at the Auckland Theatre Awards early this December. And with the newly packaged two week festival now released Director Lydia Zanetti couldn’t be more pleased by the direction in which the Auckland Fringe is heading -
“Because of the open access nature of the
festival (if you want to be involved, you can!), artists
really determine what this festival is. Therefore it’s
very reflective of where the community is at, where Auckland
is at, and what we are struggling with and moved by. I’m
continually awed and invigorated by the incredible people
that connect with Auckland Fringe – this year’s
programme is sprawling and full of unexpected joys! People
are pushing the boat out (in one show quite literally) and
connecting with new audiences and finding new spaces to try
out new forms. It’s exciting, invigorating, and moves with
its own momentum and energy. We’re very excited to share
it with Aucklanders across the whole region.”
Lydia
Zanetti, Director of Auckland Fringe
Read on for more detail on the 2018 Auckland Fringe programme.
Auckland Fringe takes place -
20th
Feb – 4th March 2018 at many wonderful venues around
Auckland.
For more information visit www.aucklandfringe.co.nz
For all media enquiries and high resolution
images please contact:
Saraid at Elephant
Publicity // saraid@elephantpublicity.co.nz // 09 368
4180 or 027 491 1646
For all direct festival
enquiries please contact:
Helen Sheehan // helen@aucklandfringe.co.nz // 022 343
1892
Highlights & themes of the 2018
Auckland Fringe:
BOSS
COMEDIANS
As well as featuring some comedy big
names – “American country music legend” Wilson
Dixon, snapchat impersonation genius Thomas
Sainsbury and Laura Daniel - the
latest line-up release has included a strong line-up of
women comedians. Mackenzie’s
Daughters features some of New Zealand’s best
improvisers and telly talent: Alice Snedden, Kura
Forrester and Donna Brookbanks to
name a few. Charmian Hughes is back after a
successful 2017 Auckland Fringe with Bra
Trek; after a sold-out season at the NZ
International Comedy FestivalLouise Bevnik
is bringing back Ladylike: A Guide to Modern
Etiquette; and Maria
Williamsand Angela Fouhy will be
sharing girl guide stories in Smore
Sisters. The Bright Lights of
Taihape, The Polar Bear Chronicles and
The Egg & Sperm Race are also
representing women in the comedy realm. Lastly, after
potentially pulling the plug Summer
Shakespeare are back! And they’ve uprooted
themselves to the Aotea Square for an all-female cast
presentation of Willy’s first comedy: Two
Gentlemen In Verona.
ART EVERYWHERE
(AS WELL AS OVER THERE)
A truly city-wide event,
the Auckland Fringe lets you discover the arts in nooks and
crannies you didn’t know existed (or just thought you did
normal stuff, like eating Reuben Sandwiches and Key Lime
Pie). You can leave your car in the garage and jump on a
ferry to Waiheke for Red Room
Cabaret at Artworks Theatre or
head to Devonport and catch La Luna & the
Gadjos at The Vic Devonport
for some French song & gypsy swing. You can catch
acclaimed Pretty Asian Theatre’s latest
presentation Roots, performed in
English & Mandarin at Uxbridge Arts
Centrein Howick as well as Q Theatre. Westies won't
have to venture far - New Lynn's Te Pou Theatre
will play host to Krādati and MANIAC
(on the dance floor). The most iconic
(Christian) family dinner is being served up at Auckland’s
most loved (Jewish) diner Federal
Delicatessen in The Last
Supper. Other venues include Auckland’s very
own Roman Temple discovered in Grafton of
all places (who knew!) with Caesar’s
Rome, second-hand store Junk &
Disorderly with Still Life,
the Whau River with Boat
Trip & the Nathan Homestead in
Manurewa which will feature wind trio Trio
Eclat and Brenda
Hollinshead’s Wire
Figurines.
FRINGE
SUPERSTARS
The 2018 Auckland Fringe has a
fistful of local and international artists that are
well-established on the worldwide Fringe circuit. We’re
welcoming international Fringe star Zuleika
Khan for her New Zealand debut in
Triage! A Nursing Cabaret, which was
named Number 1 in the Top 10 Picks of Perth’s Fringeworld
2017. Local fringers who have recently come out of
successful Edinburgh Festival Fringe seasons include
Julia Croft (shortlisted 2017 Total Theatre
Award for Emerging Artist) who is behind The
Plastic Orgasm, and Binge
Culture (shortlisted 2017 Total Theatre Award
Innovation, Experimentation & Playing with Form), with their
Barbarian Productions co-production
It’s A Trial, and comedy genius
David Correos with his newest work
The Correos
Effect.
ARTISTS TACKLE THE STUFF THAT
MATTERS
If you’re looking for something
Fringey with meat on its bones you can choose from a
selection of works investigating the stuff that matters.
Drowning in Milk, sees
Saraid Cameron erect a bar in the foyer of
Q Theatre, and serve some real talk alongside your drink.
The Race byHobson Street
Theatre Company is investigating the effects of
racism on homelessness, direct from those who experience it
themselves. If you missed it the first time, you can catch
Rob Mokoraka’s Shot Bro:
Confessions of a Depressed Bullet, a personal
story of his battle with depression and a bullet. Also
tackling mental illness head on is new theatre show
Lockdown. The aforementioned
It’s A Trial takes a panel of expert
witnesses and places an issue on trial which is so current
we don’t know what it is yet. Fuck
Rant by Nisha Madhan is also
serving “a loose as fuck subconscious rant” to those
that can stomach it, and ex-Green MP Catherine
Delahunty is revealing the truly bizarre underbelly
of politics via poetry and gossip in Question
Time Blues.
HOME OF THE
STRANGE
If you want to expect anything with
Auckland Fringe, expect the unexpected, the unique and the
unclassifiable. Watching Paint Dry
tests our ability to do nothing for a sustained period of
time (leave your phone on for this one), while a multimedia
celebration of women's bodies, deconstructing shame and
silence is revealed in Please Explain
Sacred. Liminal: Motion
asmanifest is a short interactive film at the
Bruce Mason Centre which captures the live,
sculptural movements of a dancer alongside those of the
audience. Queer Dating
Sitesinvestigates relationships between bodies
and places in “invisibilised spaces” across the central
city (don’t worry, we’re not sure what this means yet
either!). Basement Theatre is hosting an
entire programme on performances to be experienced by
audience members one at a time.
MUSIC TO OUR
EARS
The music programme is catering for all
tastes and palettes across a whirlwind of genres. Virtuoso
violinist Amalia Hall brings her
spellbinding programme of Eugene Ysaye's six solo sonatas to
White Studios while the singers behind
Opera Bites have created a chocolate box of
short scenes from the world’s greatest operas.
Rattle Records is presenting two nights of
showcasing their artists, Rubber Souls –
New Zealand’s “most daring” choir - will be performing
at Pocket Bar and Bostonian jazz vocalist
Simona Minns with the Alan Brown
Trio can be caught at Backbeat
Bar. A treat for those fond of musical theatre
comes from Theatre of Loveas they present a
new dark fantasy musical Pan is Dead
in a dramatic collision of myth and dystopia.
The 2018
Auckland Fringe is pulling together a unique gang of venues
including:
Aotea Square, Art House, Artworks Theatre,
Audio Foundation, Backbeat Bar, BaristaCats Cafe, Basement
Theatre, Bruce Mason Centre, Central City Library, Fed Deli,
Galatos, Garnet Station, Herald Theatre, Auckland Live,
invisibilized urban spaces, Junk and Disorderly, LOT23,
Nathan Homestead, Pocket Bar and Kitchen, Q Theatre, Raye
Freedman Arts Centre, Samoa House TAP Studio, Selwyn
Village, Theatre, Studio One Toi Tu, TAPAC, Te Pou Theatre,
The Classic Comedy & Bar, The Dog's Bollix, The Pumphouse
Theatre, The Roman Temple, The University of Auckland Drama
Studio, The Vic Devonport, The Wine Cellar, Whau River,
White Studios, Uxbridge Arts Centre
Auckland Fringe Facts:
86 unique events, performances and
installations (decrease of only 6.5% despite shortening the
festival by one third from 2017)
58% Premieres/new
works
359 Showings
50 Venues (increase of 11% on
2017)
20 Free or Pay What You Like events - keeping it
super
accessible!