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St. Louis celebrates 鈥楲et There Be Theatre Day鈥 with no director, no set and one very confused actorAt exactly 2 p.m. around the world, theater lovers will take part in a production of 鈥淲hite Rabbit, Red Rabbit.鈥
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A total of 22 independent productions comprise this year鈥檚 series of events. The hybrid festival wraps up Sunday, with some of the virtual offerings to be available on demand soon afterward.
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In a way, the reinvention of performing arts in the age of coronavirus fits right in with the founding spirit of the St. Lou Fringe Fest. Now in its ninth season, the festival draws its inspiration from mid-20th-century Scotland, where avant garde artists responded to a more traditional festival by setting up makeshift venues in alleys and streets 鈥 anywhere they could connect with an audience. Now places like couches and closets are among the best and safest spots to do so.
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To describe the St. Lou Fringe Festival as a theater event is something of a misnomer. There are plenty of actors, playwrights and other theater鈥
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When Brandon Bieber was a toddler, his parents took him to his older sisters鈥 dance recitals.Soon, he was riveted to the sight of their sequins and鈥
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鈥淵ou can kind of do whatever you want, and it鈥檚 still art, it鈥檚 just not what people would see as mainstream,鈥 actor Omega Jones said about the 2018 St.鈥
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St. Lou Fringe Festival is back for a fifth year, running Aug. 19-27 in Grand Center, and features everything 鈥渁vant-garde, independent and brand-new鈥濃
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Four years ago, St. Lou Fringe set out on a 鈥減assion project鈥 to create an event that provided a networking platform for emerging artists to gain鈥
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This article first appeared in the St. Louis Beacon: When Adam Rosen was growing up in St. Louis, he spent a lot of time in support groups. Not for鈥
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This article first appeared in the St. Louis Beacon, June 19, 2013 - In bigger cities with more experience with these festivals, those who hear the word鈥