New Brad Fraser play too fast for its own good

New Brad Fraser play too fast for its own good

Kill Me Now is a title that speaks to a desire for death in the face of pain and misery. Add an ironic twist and playwright Brad Fraser’s trademark raucous humour and you might have a hit on your hands. With his new play, running through Sept. 22 at La Cite Francophone, he boldly makes […]

Brad Fraser to premiere new play in Edmonton

Brad Fraser to premiere new play in Edmonton

There’s a long list of gifted artists that Edmonton has lost that we still mourn. They’re not dead – they just moved away to greater success in Toronto where the hopelessly hipster citizens imagine that all Westerners hang hitch balls on their pick-up trucks. And they hardly ever write. How dare they?! But then there […]

Holdovers methadone for Fringeheads

Holdovers methadone for Fringeheads

To ease the crushing existential pain from Post Traumatic Fringe Disorder (PTFD), three Fringe venues are presenting holdovers of hits through this last, precious week before school starts. It’s hard to go cold turkey from 10 days of more than 200 plays in what turns out to be the most successful edition of the Edmonton […]

Fringe festival stuck with star system

Fringe festival stuck with star system

Fringe artists hate the star rating system – and they love the star rating system. Is it time to get rid of it? Fringe artists recently replied, “Yes … but no!” Rest assured that any thespian bestowed a four or five-star review from one of the area print publications will be out there at the […]

FRINGE: Redheads have more fun!

FRINGE: Redheads have more fun!

If you’re not already a sucker for redheads, you will be after seeing Rebecca Perry in her creative and original one woman show “Confessions of a Redheaded Coffeeshop Girl” (Venue 42) at the Edmonton Fringe. Perry plays Joanie, a 20-something girl stuck working at a Toronto area coffee shop and trying to figure out her […]

Fringing in the French Quarter

Fringing in the French Quarter

Rapide! Dispatch one accordion player, one mime and more wine to La Cite Francophone immediately! Mon Dieu, those poor tourists have nothing to do while they’re waiting for their plays at the Fringe! So polite. Some people out East actually can’t believe that Edmonton has a French Quarter – but there it is, just a […]

FRINGE: The Tenant Haimovitz will mess with your mind

FRINGE: The Tenant Haimovitz will mess with your mind

The first 15 minutes or so of The Tenant Haimovitz (Venue 1) makes about as much sense as Middle Eastern politics does to a New World man. A writer named Daniel – “it’s pronounced Dan-ee-yell” – rents an apartment only to discover he already has roommates which may or may not be figments of his […]

FRINGE: The madness of King Ludwig

FRINGE: The madness of King Ludwig

Calgarian Kyall Rakoz looks barely out of high school and he’s already pulled off what should become a Fringe success with his one man show “Ludwig and Lohengrin.” (Venue 10) As playwright, director and star, Rakoz tackles the story of King Ludwig II of Bavaria, a controversial figure in German history, and not just because […]

FRINGE: Moscow Stations anything but life affirming

FRINGE: Moscow Stations anything but life affirming

Actor Clayton Jevne is so flawlessly believable as a decrepit drunk that you can almost smell the booze on him. Listening to him talk for 80 excruciating minutes is even worse. In “Moscow Stations” (Venue 7), adapted from a novel by Russia’s Venedict Yerofeev, Jevne delivers a stellar performance as Venya, a pathetic and completely […]

FRINGE: Innocent When You Dream a whale of a tale

FRINGE: Innocent When You Dream a whale of a tale

Viewers shouldn’t be surprised to learn that the playwright, actor, puppeteer and ukulele virtuoso behind “Innocent When You Dream” (Venue 2) hails from Austin, Texas – one of the few great American cities that openly declare pride in their apparent weirdness. The Fringe is known for weirdness, so Zeb West’s unique tale of tails, a […]

FRINGE REVIEW: Forget Me Not a disturbing masterpiece

FRINGE REVIEW: Forget Me Not a disturbing masterpiece

Sometimes humour can help the mind grasp a disturbing topic. “Forget Me Not” (Venue 10) is an intelligent and gutsy comedy by Rob Gee that underneath the superficial comic presentation takes a subversive detour into the dark side of institutionalized care, asking the audience to consider if patients in such facilities are receiving quality care […]

FRINGE REVIEW: Zack Adams an existential time traveller

FRINGE REVIEW: Zack Adams an existential time traveller

The premise of Zack Adams: Zack to the Future (Venue 2) involves a failed Fringe playwright who travels into the future to try to discover his identity and assuage his existential angst about career choices that led to becoming a failed Fringe playwright. He ends up discovering a couple of unexpected things: that no quantum […]