Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Adelaide Fringe, formerly Adelaide Fringe Festival, is Australia’s biggest arts festival and is the world's second-largest annual arts festival (after the Edinburgh Festival Fringe), held in the South Australian capital of Adelaide. Between mid-February and mid-March each year, it features more than 7,000 artists from around Australia and the ...
As part of the Adelaide Fringe, they held an Artist Market modeled after their traditional Artist Alley. In July, an AVCon After Dark event was also held, featuring DJs, local artists, and vendors. After a three-year hiatus and with COVID-19 restrictions lifted in South Australia, AVCon 2023 was held as a large-scale event at the Adelaide ...
The Adelaide Festival of Arts, also known as the Adelaide Festival, an arts festival, takes place in the South Australian capital of Adelaide in March each year. Started in 1960, it is a major celebration of the arts and a significant cultural event in Australia.
Heather Ann Croall AM (born 1967) is an international arts CEO, artistic director and documentary producer, best known for leading Sheffield Doc/Fest which she grew to be one of the best documentary festivals in the world and Adelaide Fringe where she has taken ticket sales from 500,000 a year to a million each year and won many awards for the festival.
The Adelaide Fringe in Adelaide, South Australia, now second-largest annual arts festival in the world (after Edinburgh Fringe), started in 1960 as an adjunct to the main Adelaide Festival of Arts. [4] [5] Haynes, while at the helm of the Traverse, was receiving state support and even got a new theatre in 1969.
Riot City Wrestling was founded in Adelaide in January 2006. [1] [2] In 2010, RCW appeared at the Adelaide Fringe, hosting the STRENGTH Cup tournament, and was voted one of the festival's top five attractions by the Adelaide Advertiser. [3] They returned to the festival in 2011, hosting the tournament again. [3]
The Premier's Award is the richest prize, worth A$25,000, and awarded for the best overall published work which has already won an award in one of the other categories. [6] [2] There is a total prize pool of A$167,500, which is distributed 11 categories, including the Premier's Award.
Fuse was a not-for-profit, largely government-funded event, managed by Music SA and the Adelaide Fringe, with a focus upon deriving outcomes for all those who attend the events. The Fuse events finished after 2012, after which there was a Fuse Presents program, which presented a travelling scholarship to a musician in 2013.