History of Bath Fringe

Origins

The origins of Bath Fringe go back to the sideshows which sprang up around important Temple festivals before and during the Roman Occupation, to the street fairs that surrounded the Abbey for the coronation of Edgar in 959… Well obviously we can’t trace that exactly, of course, but it’s worth remembering that Bath has been a town of arts, visitors, travelling performers, even before the Georgian era that our Heritage Industry makes so much of.

It makes more sense to trace the Fringe back to the Bath Festivals of Blues & Progressive Music of ’69 & ’70, but the connections to the current crew are a little tenuous, so let’s say the real start were the Walcot Festivals of the ’70s & ‘early 80s, mostly run by a community group called Bath Arts Workshop – the name still exists for the company that runs the Natural Theatre Company of Bath.

The Arts Workshop (some of the festivals were also under the banner of Comtek, what was then called Alternate or Intermediate Tech, and now Green or Off-Grid, all very contemporary still…) and in 2019 there was an exhibition, a book, and some events about those early festivals. Some of the material might even re-appear this year, and there’s some (and sometime soon more) online. These events were inspirational, some of their perpetrators are now pillars of the alternative establishment locally and nationally; our continued Walcot community events are a homage and acknowledgement of how important that all was and is to the Spirit of Festival and to Bath.

Around the end of the Walcot Festivals (things change, people get tired and move on…) it was recognised more widely that there was a great deal that people wanted to experience and celebrate that wasn’t covered by the classical music centred Bath Festival, and a Bath Fringe was set up with the support of the then city council in 1981, with dates related to those of the ‘main’ festival but an independent organisation (Bath Arts Association) and a lively interest in many more artforms. There was financial support, at least for staff, available under various Community Programme initiatives in arts and, ah, community events, but with political shifts and internal developments those resources dwindled over the next decade to the barest handful of events.

A group of local promoters and artists were unwilling to let the idea die, and constituted a new group in 1991 to promote a festival that same year. That group, Bath Fringe Ltd., is a cooperative, and still includes promoters, artists, performers, venue volunteers, and audience members. It was briefly, at council request, funded through Bath Festivals Trust, but the arrangement didn’t work out and the Fringe retained its full independence. Many of the bigger Fringe events have their own dedicated volunteer team and run their own affairs under the Fringe ‘banner’ and couldn’t be done any other way: see other material about FAB Fringe Visual Arts, Fringe Art Fair, Children’s Festival, Bedlam Fair street performance, etc. Local council support has always been part of the picture, although this has got more difficult now councils have less money and more call on it (we’ve not ourselves had any actual cash from the council for many years, though they have supported some things that have appeared in the programme); the festival has also always been equally dependent on sponsorship, outside grants, much volunteer work and local goodwill – this is good for us, it keeps us very connected with our audience and other parts of the community as well as national institutions.

Over the years the Fringe has investigated and developed artforms events and audiences that have in many cases become mainstream, others of which have been taken on and commercialised by other promoters and festivals. ‘Affordable Art’, Spoken Word, Digital Arts & Media, Standup Comedy, Cabaret, Physical Theatre, Circus Arts, Folk & World Music, Latin Dance, Jazz, and the serious presentation of major figures from Pop, Rock and Black Music have all been Fringe centrepieces, some of which have been maintained and others developed elsewhere. That’s part of how Fringes work, and in a good way it gives us space to try and develop new things, even if we have to work the difficult trick of walking away from commercially successful artists and artforms…

Past performers include:
Arthur Smith, Barry Cryer, Nola Rae, Jonathon Burrows Dance Company, Ken Campbell, Jeremy Hardy, Rich Hall, Mark Thomas, Julian Clary, Bill Bailey, Rory McLeod, Baka Beyond, James Fagan & Nancy Kerr, Eliza Carthy & Nancy Kerr, Martin Carthy, Martin Simpson, Martin Taylor, Evan Parker, Lol Coxhill, Davy Graham, Robin Williamson, Mike Heron, The Tiger Lillies, Jeff Green, Billy Childish, The Wrigley Sisters, Chris Newman & Maire ni Chathasaigh, Peter Hammill, Jah Wobble, Ed Byrne, Mike Maran, Guy Masterton, Zion Train, DJ Yoda, John Shuttleworth, Andy Irvine, Dave Swarbrick, Jazz Jamaica, Lumiere & Son, Bob Downe, Forced Entertainment, Red Shift, The Cosmic Sausages, Steve Arguelles, Kate Rusby, Howard Marks, Mark Steel, John Hegley, Leon Rosselson, Peepolykus, Ridiculusmus, Alan Parker Urban Warrior, Simon Munnery, The Kosh, Lee Evans, Malcolm Hardee, Jim Moray, Tinariwen, Lo’Jo, Garth Merenghi, Marcos Valle, DJ Suv, Angela De Castro, Jamie Cullum, Beth Rowley, Get The Blessing, Tinariwen, Sweet Billy Pilgrim, DJ Derek, Rory Bremner, The Correspondents, Robyn Hitchcock, Georgie Fame, Sam Lee, Nina Conti, Andy Hamilton, Henning Wehn, Gas Giants, Cie. Cacahuete…
…if we’ve forgotten one of your favourites, write in and tell us!

You can see some past Bath Fringe programmes – click on the years below to see the archived sites (a lot of the links obviously don’t work any more):

fringe 2013fringe 2012fringe 2011fringe 2010fringe 2009fringe 2008fringe 2007fringe 2006fringe 2005fringe 2004fringe 2003fringe 2002fringe 2001fringe 2000fringe 1999   fringe 1998fringe 1997

plus a documentation project created in 1998, ’99 & 2000 by The Process Art in Progress at www.artuk.co.uk