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Fringe Returns to ā€˜Unfamiliar Waters’

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 ā€œUnfamiliar 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 .

Full Fringe Poster, Unfamiliar Waters

ā€œThe beauty of Fringe is that it’s 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. ā€œA 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 we’ve 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, ā€œmind(full),ā€ with two other theater students, Ford Sachsenmaier ’24 and Kay Sanchez ’22. ā€œWe’re collaborating to make a piece that asks big questions about what a future society could look like, and how those who are the ā€˜in group’ in society function with ā€˜out-group’ people,ā€ she says. ā€œIt’s my first time acting in my own writing, so I’m excited to see how things change and bloom out of character discovery.

ā€œIt'll be exciting to see the final products and the fruits of everyone’s labor. We also have a few dance numbers, films, and poems that I’m looking forward to seeing. There are a lot of moving parts to this festival, but that’s 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 ’04, assistant professor of theater.