Irish Independent

All the world is a stage as festival puts on plays in Croker and the Dart

- Kirsty Blake Knox

FROM the Four Courts to the Dart and even Croke Park – all the world is indeed a stage for the organisers of the Dublin Fringe Festival. In a bid to bring the arts outside their traditiona­l homes, they have chosen some rather unusual venues this September.

For the first time, the prestigiou­s Bencher’s Room in Dublin’s Four Courts is to become the venue for an immersive theatrical performanc­e as part of the festival.

Audience members attending ‘The Justice Syndicate’ will take on the role of jurors in a fictional trial, and deliver a verdict at the end of the performanc­e.

The Bencher’s Room is a room ordinarily used by judges and senior counsel.

There will be also be stagings at Croke Park, in abandoned VIP nightclubs, in hairdresse­rs and on icerinks.

There is also a so-called “sonic aural pilgrimage” on the Dart (which thankfully won’t take place during rush hour).

“We wanted to use all of the city and get people into different spaces, and areas they may not have had access to,” said Ruth McGowan, director of the Fringe Festival.

Set in a Croke Park dressing room, ‘Grounds for Concern’ is a one-man show based on anonymous interviews with GAA stars discussing mental health.

Meanwhile, the Peacock Theatre will be transforme­d into an ice-rink with patrons encouraged to get their skates on.

The theme of this year’s festival, which runs from September 7-22, is Power and Passion.

The festival also caters for families and younger audiences.

‘Rainbow in a Box’ is an interactiv­e art installati­on using prismic light to mimic the experience of being inside a rainbow.

This year is the festival’s 25th anniversar­y and it has expanded rapidly during that time. Jimmy Fay establishe­d the inaugural event on a budget of IR£3,000 in 1995, after an applicatio­n to stage Caryl Churchill’s ‘The Skriker’ in the Dublin Theatre Festival was rejected.

The Fringe Festival has launched the careers of some of Ireland’s best regarded directing and acting talent.

Playwright Conor McPherson, and companies such as The Corn Exchange and Pan Pan, began showcasing their works at the Fringe.

A staging of Enda Walsh’s ‘Disco Pigs’ also launched the playwright’s career and those of its cast members, Cillian Murphy and Eileen Walsh.

 ?? PHOTO: PHOTOCALL IRELAND ?? Dancing queens: Lucia Kickham (left) and Rachel Ní Bhraonáin at IMMA during the Dublin Fringe Festival programme launch yesterday.
PHOTO: PHOTOCALL IRELAND Dancing queens: Lucia Kickham (left) and Rachel Ní Bhraonáin at IMMA during the Dublin Fringe Festival programme launch yesterday.
 ??  ?? Performanc­e: Avant garde artist Deirdre Griffin of Headonbody, who will bring her new work ‘Soup’ to the Festival Fringe in September
Performanc­e: Avant garde artist Deirdre Griffin of Headonbody, who will bring her new work ‘Soup’ to the Festival Fringe in September

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