The Scotsman

Fringe chief admits its world-beating size could be ‘meaningles­s’

● Mccarthy warns festival experience must be excellent ‘on and off stage’

- By BRIAN FERGUSON

It is the cultural bonanza that for decades has been promoted at home and abroad as the world’s biggest arts festival.

But now the body behind the Edinburgh Festival Fringe have admitted the scale of the event risks becoming “absolutely meaningles­s” in future unless it is also the best place to perform, stage and watch shows.

Shona Mccarthy, chief executive of the Fringe Society, has pledged that ensuring the festival experience was “excellent both on and off stage” would be more important than anything else for the event in the future. She has also pledged that it would take “direct” action against producers of shows and operators of venues “who fall short of good practice” and would be taking steps to “rate and reward good practice” at the event.

But she insisted the event’s founding ethos of being “open access” would remain intact – despite claims by campaigner­s that it is “turning a blind eye” to exploitati­ve practices in some venues.

Official reports for the city council have raised concerns about growing overcrowdi­ng on the city’s roads and pavements, particular­ly Princes Street and the Royal Mile, and an increasing strain on the city’s public transport networks.

Ms Mccarthy, who has previously compared the scale of the festival to the football World Cup, has been at loggerhead­s with activists from the Fair Fringe campaign in recent weeks after they demanded one of the biggest producers of events, C Venues, be banned from the official programme

She said some producers and promoters were being unfairly vilified and portrayed as “evil megalomani­acs” by Fair Fringe activists and accused them of being more interested in “hyperbole” and “exaggerati­on” than facts about the Fringe landscape and how venues operate.

Speaking at the launch of the Fringe Society’s annual review, Ms Mccarthy said: “Whether we look back to 2018 or forward to 2019, we are proud that the founding idea at the heart of the Edinburgh Fringe remains constant – anyone with a desire to perform and a venue willing to host them is welcome.

“Our ambition is to ensure that this commitment to freedom of expression, giving voice to all, is a reality. Physical, socioecono­mic, geographic or financial factors shouldn’t prevent people being part of it.

“Whilst the Fringe is undoubtedl­y the biggest performing arts festival in the world, that scale will be meaningles­s unless we can also say with confidence that it is the best at which to perform, work, create, run a venue, see a show.”

Recent research carried out for the Fringe Society found that nearly a third of venue workers were not paid anything for their time.

However, Ms Mccarthy has highlighte­d that 90 per cent of those who took part in the survey said they would choose to work at the event again.

She added: “More than anything we want the experience of the Fringe to be excellent both on and off stage.

“We’ve been working closely with Fringe venues and promoters, and been consistent­ly proactive, conducting the biggest independen­t survey of workers on the Fringe ever undertaken, publicly sharing the results, giving positive encouragem­ent to those whose good practice resulted in a 90 per cent positive rating of the Fringe work experience, and being direct and constructi­ve with those who fall short of good practice.”

 ??  ?? 0 Shona Mccarthy wants to ensure freedom of expression
0 Shona Mccarthy wants to ensure freedom of expression

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