Sunday, December 7, 2025
ADVT 
National

Edmonton's Fringe Festival breaks ticket sales record, extends theatre dates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Aug, 2025 10:21 AM
  • Edmonton's Fringe Festival breaks ticket sales record, extends theatre dates

North America's oldest theatre festival says it has set a record for most tickets sold in its 43-year history.

The Edmonton International Fringe Theatre Festival says it has broken its all-time box office record set in 2019 and sold 138,500 tickets this summer.

It amounts to $1.47 million for the festival's artists, surpassing the $1.39 million in sales garnered in 2019.

The festival was set to come to an end this weekend, but is extending some shows for another week due to the turnout.

Festival organizers say the milestone confirms that Fringe is an essential part of Edmonton's cultural identity.

Alberta's capital city was the first one in Canada to host the theatre festival in 1982, drawing inspiration from the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, which first began in 1947.

Picture Courtesy: HE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Edmonton Fringe Festival 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. woman injured, hospitalized after being struck by beer can thrown from truck

B.C. woman injured, hospitalized after being struck by beer can thrown from truck
RCMP say it happened close to midnight on Saturday near Lake Cowichan in the area of Youbou and Meades Creek roads.

B.C. woman injured, hospitalized after being struck by beer can thrown from truck

B.C. court squelches Vancouver bylaw that forced ride-hailing firms to pay fees

B.C. court squelches Vancouver bylaw that forced ride-hailing firms to pay fees
Uber Canada took the city to court over the bylaw, claiming it overstepped a municipal government's power to regulate so-called "transportation network services."

B.C. court squelches Vancouver bylaw that forced ride-hailing firms to pay fees

B.C. to appeal landmark Aboriginal title ruling over land in Metro Vancouver

B.C. to appeal landmark Aboriginal title ruling over land in Metro Vancouver
Niki Sharma says the government strongly disagrees with last week's B.C. Supreme Court decision granting fishing rights and Aboriginal title over the parcel of land on Lulu Island in Richmond, B.C.

B.C. to appeal landmark Aboriginal title ruling over land in Metro Vancouver

BC Hydro says Site C dam near Fort St. John now fully operational

BC Hydro says Site C dam near Fort St. John now fully operational
The dam in northern B.C. is now able to generate 1,100 megawatts of electricity -- enough to power half a million homes per year -- after the sixth and final power-generating turbine came online. The first of the six turbines started to generate power in October 2024.

BC Hydro says Site C dam near Fort St. John now fully operational

Vulnerable people lack access to cooling amid stifling heat across Canada: advocates

Vulnerable people lack access to cooling amid stifling heat across Canada: advocates
Heat warnings from Environment Canada stretch from the country’s western to eastern coasts today, with temperatures expected to reach the low to mid-30s and humidex values at around 40 C.

Vulnerable people lack access to cooling amid stifling heat across Canada: advocates

Appeal Court says challenge of Saskatchewan pronoun law can continue

Appeal Court says challenge of Saskatchewan pronoun law can continue
In the decision released Monday, the court granted, in part, the government's appeal of a decision that allowed the challenge.

Appeal Court says challenge of Saskatchewan pronoun law can continue