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mark@theatreSCOTLAND.com

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Should you join the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society?

Author Mark Fisher outside the Fringe Office
THERE was an interesting exchange of Twitter messages this week between me and comedians Elise Harris and Andrew J Lederer. The 140 characters of Twitter are not ideal for expressing the subtleties of a complex debate, so I hope Elise and Andrew will add their own comments at the end of this post - in the meantime, I'll try and do justice to what they said, the approximate order in which they said it and what I was thinking at the time.

It started with this tweet from Elise:

Wondering whether it's worth going in the main book with my Edinburgh show this year. Advice from anyone who's done the Fringe without it?
By "book", she was referring to the 280-page Fringe Programme, traditionally regarded as the bible for fringegoers and the index of everything that's on in the world's biggest arts festival. Eying my chance to gain a reader of  The Edinburgh Fringe Survival Guide (yes, dear reader, I'm that shameless), I replied:
@eliseharris All advice is not to go it alone unless you have a very particular reason. See my book: edinburghfringesurvivalguide.com #edfringe #edfest
To which Elise said:
@MarkFFisher well the book is expensive and no longer seems worth it at all. Doesn't seem to bring people in, even.
And I said:
@eliseharris It's your choice, but signing up for @edfringe gives you more than just programme entry. It's discussed quite a lot in my book.
What I had in mind were two stories related in my book about performers who had gone ahead without being in the Fringe Programme. One told me he'd had a disastrous time and had returned for a second year determined to do things right; the other  managed to grasp victory from the jaws of defeat, but only with considerable professional support and a great show (and even he said he wouldn't do it the same way again). My general feeling is you have competition enough without making yourself invisible by avoiding the Fringe Programme.

I was also thinking about what else you get for your payment to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society. The entry in the Fringe Programme is the most visible benefit - online as well as in print - but what you're paying for is also a way to sell your tickets through a central box office as well as an extensive set of support services in areas such as press and marketing and post-Fringe planning.
Elise said:

@MarkFFisher if I had the spare funds I would but it's looking increasingly tight and I won't ever see that money again.
At this point, Andrew joined in with these three tweets:
@eliseharris @MarkFFisher Don't know what it says in your book Mark, but I do know for many, the cost of "official" entry is a useless waste
@eliseharris @MarkFFisher The Fringe Society "extras" amount in a practical sense to nothing unless you are a neophyte.
@eliseharris @MarkFFisher Last note: U gotta be in SOME book & it's gotta be one people use, either the main, the free or the big venue one.
My comment about this was:
@ajlondemand @eliseharris Andrew = old hand so take him seriously, but 2500 companies choose @edfringe programme so he's in a minority
Being in a minority doesn't mean he's wrong, of course, but anyone contemplating going it alone would be sensible to consider the possibility that there is wisdom in this particular crowd. To this, Andrew replied:
@MarkFFisher @eliseharris @edfringe And many/most of those 2500 should be. I agree.
I added:
@eliseharris @ajlondemand Do you need reviewers, agents, promoters, judges and auds to see your show? If so, how will they know it's on?
What I hadn't realised at this point was that Elise is planning to perform in one of the free festivals. This does put a different perspective on things. For a start, if your show is free (and unticketed), you have no need of a box office. I'm guessing that's what Elise means when says she "won't ever see that money again" - she would be paying for a box office that would not pay her anything in return.

The question then is how valuable the Fringe Society's other services are to her. There is no fixed answer to this question: it depends on what she wants to get out of her run on the Fringe. Only she can answer that.

But for a free show, it's quite possible that the most effective use of funds is to do as Andrew suggests: make sure your show is listed in your venue's programme and concentrate on flyering audiences on the street. Andrew said this:

@MarkFFisher @eliseharris She's in the Free Fringe. Audiences come directly from the FF programme. & Flyering. A press release may get press
@MarkFFisher @eliseharris Likewise, a listing in the Society programme may not. Judges are irrelevant to most shows.
Equally, though, Elise herself then made the point that being in the Fringe Programme had the knock-on benefit of getting you included in, for example, newspaper listings:
@ajlondemand @MarkFFisher yes you need to be in a book of some sort. Though need to be in big book for most listings. Might have to think.
As for my point about all the various people - "reviewers, agents, promoters, judges" - who may be using the Fringe Programme in addition to regular audiences, she said:
@ajlondemand @MarkFFisher yes Free Fringe best for getting people in, and reviewers tend to be useless anyway. Official listings the problem
I'd be interested to know what she means by reviewers being useless - not because I am one (I know how useless I am), but because even in the past few days, I've been finding reviewers very useful as a way of promoting my book. Putting their nice comments on my website here strikes me as a very effective way of persuading people not only to buy the book but also to take me seriously in anything I might do in future. The value of reviews on the Fringe is partially to do with attracting audiences and partially, for those that want it, to do with raising your profile, persuading funders, getting gigs, or whatever, after the festival.

All of which brought us to a final volley of comments from Andrew (and one from Elise) which, I think, are worthy of further discussion:

@eliseharris @MarkFFisher Over time, as the Free becomes an ever larger component, the press will b forced to list its shows wout Fringe reg
@eliseharris @MarkFFisher In the short term, I've found that if you're in a good free venue at a good time, you'll get an audience.
@eliseharris @MarkFFisher And it helps if you have a good show. 'Specially now, w/Twitter, etc, people spread word quickly if you do.
@ajlondemand @MarkFFisher though a bad venue at a bad time and nothing will help!
You know what? I think my comments to @eliseharris & @markffisher re @edfringe would be helpful to people. So, look. #edfringe
I'm interested to hear what other people have to say about this. One thing I would emphasise, however, is that Andrew's perspective is likely to make most sense a) if you are performing in the PBH Free Fringe or the Laughing Horse Free Festival and b) if your only concern is getting audiences. The picture changes quite dramatically if you are performing anywhere else or if you have any additional reason for appearing on the Fringe, such as being spotted by an agent, getting post-Fringe gigs and other professional concerns.  The Edinburgh Fringe Survival Guide goes into this in much more detail.

13 comments:

  1. Elise tweets to point out it is possible to join the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society for £10 without also paying for other services including entry into the Fringe Programme - indeed, PBH Free Fringe makes it a condition that you do so.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Not only that but paying/entering the "official" Fringe programme does NOT make you a member. By registering your show, you have joined NOTHING. (I am a member.)

    Andrew

    ReplyDelete
  3. Now, here's the comment I was about to make.

    ******

    Wow, MySpace! That was unexpected.

    This post is very nice, as well as comprehensive when it comes to our exchange. I may, however, have some curmudgeonly comments re the additional motivations listed in your last paragraph later in the day.

    Generally, though, thanks. On my behalf and others'.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was a toss up between MySpace and Wikipedia - that's what Google throws up, plus some comedy sites.

      Looking forward to your curmudgeonly comments . . .

      Delete
    2. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
  4. Not so curmudgeonly, it turns out, but here are some of my additional thoughts:

    As far as getting "spotted," I'm not sure it happens so much, at least not in the spontaneous way people like to imagine. A good deal of the time it takes a lot of determined work to get "spotted" and much of that work can be done without spending 300 quid to be in the Fringe Society megabrochure. Similarly, if you're a comic, you can angle for post-Fringe gigs and nudge promoters without any official imprimatur. But that's the thing -- theatre is, I suspect, different from comedy when it comes to what can and must be done. I have no expertise in that arena and thus can't offer advice of value to companies that are putting on a "real" show. Though certainly the Forest Fringe has demonstrated you can make a mark outside #edfringe auspices.

    ReplyDelete
  5. As someone who has spent many unhappy hours trying to format unweildy databases of Fringe listings, I can say with some confidence that cash-and-staff-strapped media operations are highly unlikely to start including Free Fringe listings in any comprehensive guides. Indeed, I'm not sure anyone still prints comprehensive listings, which is a shame as an hour-by-hour printed guide tends to be more useful to audiences on the ground than the Fringe programme.

    Of course, that's not to say that Free Fringe shows won't make it into "critics' choice" selections, but even then I'd consider the extra hassle of having to search multiple websites. If a journalist is looking for a list of shows about, say, Scottish independence, they'll probably do keyword searches on the Fringe website. Only if they have time (again, not likely these days) will they make sure to also search Free Fringe.

    Shona Craven

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm working my way up now from Mark's comment about listings below. Seeing this, it hits me that all these "reasons why" are nothing more than a list of alibis for making performers and companies pay a lot of money for something that's essentially useless. "Sure, you get no value for your buck but there's this TINY LITTLE THING you won't get that I don't think you wanna do without. Are you sure you can RISK that? [performer starts to get scared] Okay, now FORK OVER THE MONEY [the Fringe officials laugh maniacally]."

      Delete
  6. On being "spotted", John Retallack brought his brilliant shonw Hannah and Hanna up a few years back and for some reason (possibly just timing) it was not in the programme so he was having to take a very hands-on approach to spreading the word. I ended up reviewing it for Metro after he approach me and a friend in the street. However, he only approached us because he thought we were its target audience (of 15-year-olds). We were 19!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Yeah, the more I think about it, the more I think Elise's worry about being in newspaper and website listings is crucial. So many audiences on the Fringe will say, "I'm free at 3pm, what's on?" If your show isn't listed with all the other 3pm shows, you have no chance of getting those audiences. How much those audiences are worth to you is a harder question to answer.

    I agree with Shona that newspapers are unlikely to go to the bother of taking listings from anywhere but the Fringe Office. The staff are too stretched to have the time to integrate additional material into an already massive listing, even if they had the will.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So, you believe a performer or company should pay three hundred pounds for a raw listing, by time, with no show description, in a paragraph containing perhaps a dozen or more shows beginning at that same time, inside a newspaper a potential punter may or may not have at hand when this spontaneous moment of decision arises.

      Delete
    2. Well, that's why I said "How much those audiences are worth to you is a harder question to answer." As we've already agreed, most people do pay the £300, so presumably most people think it's worth it - and for a whole variety of reasons. But that doesn't mean everyone will think it's valuable to them.

      Delete
  8. Most of the people who pay the 300 use the Fringe box office. Until there's a different tier of programme registration for people who don't, the registration fee will, for them, be a rip-off. Many of the rip-offees will, unfortunately, continue to succumb to the extortion I've alluded to above. However, the need for that box office is, if not exactly dwindling, a factor for an ever-smaller (though not small) percentage of the shows on the Fringe.

    The Fringe, as we all know, is a collection of whatever performers and projects show up, uncurated. It existed before there was a Fringe society and, as I've stated,would exist (happily, I think), without it. Registering does not make a show official. Showing up does. What registering DOES do is lock in deadlines and expenses that may not be necessary or helpful.

    The Fringe society was created to lighten the burden of Fringe participants and spread the word of its greatness. Over time, as with any enterprise composed of men and women, it has developed an interest in its own growth and survival and its own institutional ego. These interests do not necessarily gibe with the interests of the Fringe itself. Sometimes they are in opposition.

    Natural selection, as it does, will prevail. The society will either change, fade into irrelevance or die.

    The Fringe will go on.

    ReplyDelete

© Mark Fisher 2012. Powered by Blogger.

About Me

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Follow me on Twitter @MarkFFisher, @WriteAboutTheat and @LimelightXTC I am a freelance journalist and critic specialising in theatre and the arts. Publications I write for include the Guardian and the Scotsman. I am the author of The Edinburgh Fringe Survival Guide: how to make your show a success and How to Write About Theatre: A Manual for Critics, Students and Bloggers. I am also editor of The XTC Bumper Book of Fun for Boys and Girls: A Limelight Anthology and What Do You Call That Noise? An XTC Discovery Book. From 2000-2003, I was the editor of The List magazine, Glasgow and Edinburgh's arts and events guide.

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