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Montreal

Montreal Fringe Festival goes virtual, staging comedy, dance, storytelling from afar

This year's edition, billed This Is Not a Fringe Festival, will be unlike the festival's first 29 years, but the organizers are determined to go on with the show despite the pandemic restrictions.

'This Is Not a Fringe Festival' features live, interactive event aimed at keeping spirit of Fringe Fest alive

Amy Blackmore is the executive and artistic director of the St-Ambroise Montreal Fringe Festival. This year's edition will be quite different from previous years, but the team is dedicated to putting on a show despite the pandemic restrictions. (Cindy Lopez/Montreal Fringe Festival)

"The show must go on." It's the oldest adage in theatre.

This is the approach that the 2020 St-AmbroiseMontreal Fringe Festival is taking, after having to postpone its 30th anniversaryprogramming due to the pandemic. It's taking the spirit of the Fringe Fest online.

In lieu of Montreal's traditional fringe, which includes hundreds of in-person performances spread across venues all over the Plateau, the virtual version will bring together artists from across the country and farther afield for a series of curated, live, interactive events.

"We're going to be fringing a little differently this year," said Amy Blackmore, executive and artistic director of the festival.

This year's fringe festival logo represents the #cavabienaller message that has spread through Quebec during the pandemic. (Montreal Fringe Festival)

The event, called This IsNot a Fringe Festival, runsJune 11 to 21 and features theatre, comedy, dance, storytelling and activities for kids on platforms like Facebook andYouTube.

Blackmore told CBC's Let's Go that this year's event is "an ode to a festival that never was and never will be."

It's been a long three months for Montreal's theatre community, grappling with financial losses from cancelled shows and uncertainty about when performing arts spaces will be able to reopen to the public.

"When the pandemic got going, we realized it was unsafefor our artiststo be rehearsing. We couldn'tdo it," Blackmore said.

Still, the team wanted to offer something to help bring the community together.

"We really want Montrealers to get a taste of the fringe this year," she said.

Highlights of this year'salternate fringe include Lipsync Bingo hosted by Montreal drag queen Uma Gahdand a series of talks, called the Transformation Series, facilitated by Blackmore.

Montreal drag queen Uma Gahd will be hosting an event called Lipsync Bingo, where virtual bingo winners will choose a song for her to perform via Facebook live. (Montreal Fringe Festival)

In a series called the Daily Dose of Fringe,Blackmore said, short videos willbe released on the festival's social media every day at 11 a.m., featuring dance, magic tricks or storytelling performances.

There will also be a series of challenges issued to the audience, inviting them to get creative and share their work.

"We want the audience to make art with us," said Blackmore. "We're hoping people get in the spirit of it all."

Blackmore said that plans to celebrate the festival's big 3-0 are on hold until 2021, but the extra time gives her a chance to make next year's edition even better.


An opening night concert kicks off the festival on Thursday, June 11. Find more information about the festival's events here. In lieu of tickets, people who can afford it are invited to buy an optional $50 pass for the full 11 days to help support the Fringe Festival and its artists.

With files from CBC's Let's Go

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