°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp News
Fringe Returns to āUnfamiliar Watersā

By
Scott Craig
The °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp Fringe Festival returns with a four-day, student-led celebration of the arts April 21- 24, beginning at 7 p.m. in and around Porter Theater. About 80 students are acting, designing, directing or writing plays and poetry for the performance extravaganza themed āUnfamiliar Waters.ā A four-day, all-access general admission pass costs $20; $15 for seniors/students. A one-day pass is $10 with no student/senior discount. Tickets may be purchased at .

āThe beauty of Fringe is that itās art that exists on the fringe of mainstream pieces,ā says junior Rachel Herriges, Fringe artistic director who has been unable to experience an in-person Fringe due to the pandemic. āA lot of the pieces produced through Fringe are experimental or cathartic pieces for a lot of students, and gives us the opportunity to create what weāve had lingering in our minds. I've always wanted to be a part of it in a large capacity.ā
Herriges is writing, directing and acting in her own piece, āmind(full),ā with two other theater students, Ford Sachsenmaier ā24 and Kay Sanchez ā22. āWeāre collaborating to make a piece that asks big questions about what a future society could look like, and how those who are the āin groupā in society function with āout-groupā people,ā she says. āItās my first time acting in my own writing, so Iām excited to see how things change and bloom out of character discovery.
āIt'll be exciting to see the final products and the fruits of everyoneās labor. We also have a few dance numbers, films, and poems that Iām looking forward to seeing. There are a lot of moving parts to this festival, but thatās what makes it exciting and unique.ā
The Fringe, begun in 2005 at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp, is curated by Mitchell Thomas, professor of theater, and produced by Jonathan Hicks ā04, assistant professor of theater.
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Arts at °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp, Student Stars, Campus Events