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20 Years of the Free Fringe Festival – Charity Gala Show

COMEDY


20 Years of the Free Fringe Festival – Charity Gala Show

The Counting House

38 West Nicolson Street
The Ballroom: AUG 14 at 22:00 (90 min) - Pay What You Can - Tickets from £5

20 Years of the Free Fringe Festival – Charity Gala Show

A huge gala show with all proceeds going to the Sepsis Trust, celebrating 20 years of the Laughing Horse's Free Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

Featuring a host of big-name comedians and faces from the past two decades of the Free Fringe Festival coming together for a good cause and an unmissable one-off celebration looking back at the last 20 years of the Free Fringe Festival, an organisation that has helped to change the face of the Edinburgh Fringe.

Then, join the after-party with the performers and DJs until 3am.

This year we have two entry methods: Free & Unticketed or Pay What You Can
Free & Unticketed: Entry to a show is first-come, first served at the venue - just turn up and then donate to the show in the collection at the end.
Pay What You Can: For these shows you can book a ticket to guarantee entry and choose your price from the Fringe Box Office, up to 30 mins before a show. After that all remaining space is free at the venue on a first-come, first-served bases. Donations for walk-ins at the end of the show.



News and Reviews for this Show

ISH Awards: Horses, Deconstructed Comedy, a Tent and a Year’s Supply of Shoes

August 25, 2024   Entertainment Now

ISH Awards: Horses, Deconstructed Comedy, a Tent and a Year’s Supply of Shoes

Joint winners of the Panel Prize were, Alex Petty of Laughing Horse, champions of working class comics Best In Class and the Funny Women Glitter Project as well as comic Elaine Robertson, who spent the entire festival camping to cut costs. Click Here For Article


Comedians’ Choice Awards

August 22, 2024   The Scotsman

Comedians’ Choice Awards

Last night, in an Awards Ceremony held at The Counting House, British Comedy Guide in association with Angel Comedy and The Museum of Comedy announced the winners The Comedian’s Choice Awards 2024, as voted by comedians at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

The award for Best Person (intended to recognise anyone working in any capacity at the annual festival) was awarded for a second time to Alex Petty - co-founder and director of the Laughing Horse Free Festival. Click Here For Article


The true spirit of the Fringe straight from the horse’s mouth - Vladimir McTavish

August 18, 2024   The Scotsman

The true spirit of the Fringe straight from the horse’s mouth - Vladimir McTavish

Laughing Horse Comedy, the people behind the Free Festival are celebrating their 20th year on the Fringe this August.

Since 2004 the company, under director Alex Petty, have totally changed the landscape of the Fringe, offering a much cheaper alternative to the ticket prices charged by major venues like Underbelly, Pleasance and Assembly Rooms. In those far-off days, entry was free and the performers would take a cash collection at the end of the show, rattling a bucket as the audience filed out of the room.

Of course, not all the shows were brilliant, in fact some were undoubtedly awful. However, the same could be said of a lot of the entertainment on offer at the big venues. The difference was that if you went to a terrible show at Assembly Rooms, you’d already shelled out top dollar for your ticket, so were left with the choice of walking out mid-performance or resigning yourself to an hour of boredom.

With the Free Festival, you could leave whenever you liked if it wasn’t your cup of tea, and you didn’t have to pay a penny. Obviously, if you had a good time you would stay until the end and leave a generous donation in the bucket. And those donations could be very generous indeed. A lot of comedians did much better financially than their peers at the paid venues and the punters were getting value for money into the bargain. Over the years, more and more big names were attracted to do shows on the Free Festival.

In the mid-pandemic Fringe of 2021, very few people were carrying cash and numbers had to be strictly controlled so most shows went over to the “pay what you can” model where the public could reserve a seat in advance and choose their price. The buckets may be less common but the value-for-money ethos still remains.

Last week, Alex organised a number of events to mark the anniversary, starting last Sunday when they did two shows in a horsebox in the courtyard of Drop Kick Murphy’s. The Laughing Horse Box ran shows on both Sunday and Monday, with enough room for an audience of six and one comedian inside the box at any given time. Now that’s the true spirit of the Fringe. Click Here For Article