From Funky Documentary to Circus and Senior-Citizen Ensembles, Houston’s Fringe Festival Pushes the Envelope

From Funky Documentary to Circus and Senior-Citizen Ensembles, Houston’s Fringe Festival Pushes the Envelope

Houston Contemporary Dance Company (Photo by Lynn Lane)

DURING A TWO-DAY celebration Aug. 31-Sept. 1 at MATCH, the 2023 Houston Fringe Festival commemorates 17 years of exploring the outer limits of dance, theater and film. The weekend includes a retrospective screening of Houston filmmaker Jonathan Caouette’s Tarnation, and “Anything Goes,” the festival’s signature mash-up showcase, with performances by Houston Contemporary Dance Company, Cai Circus, performance artist and self-proclaimed “internal humorist” Margo Stutts Toombs, and many other returning and first-time performers. For adventurous Houston theater-goers, or anyone in any field of the arts looking to get out of their comfort zone, the Houston Fringe Festival is a smorgasbord of creative ingenuity, heartfelt vision, and irreverent experimentation.


The festival opens with a special benefit screening of Caouette’s groundbreaking 2003 documentary Tarnation. Culled from more than two decades of Super 8 movies, VHS recordings, family photographs, and answering machine messages — and initially assembled and edited with free iMovie software to create its collage-like and hallucinatory narrative — this intensely personal film traces Caouette’s relationship with his schizophrenic mother, Renee, beginning with her accidental overdose of lithium medication. The film also traces Caouette’s burgeoning artistic growth and coming out at a young age as gay. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion led by Houston film makers Stephanie St. Sanchez and Kristian Salinas.

Cai Circus

In addition to the aforementioned dance, circus, and comedic artists, the festival’s second night of “Anything Goes” revelry includes a realization of Edgar Allen Poe’s The Conqueror Worm by the spoken word collective Invisible Lines, freely improvised music and noise by artistic collective The Magpie Parliament Society. There will be performances dance companies artistic edGe and KIMA, and, all the way from Brookdale Galleria independent and assisted living, the senior-age Off Our Rockers Ensemble. (We think they play kazoos, but you’re gonna have to just go to MATCH and be surprised.)

The Houston Fringe Festival is a program of the Pilot Dance Project, a non-profit arts organization led by artistic director and choreographer Adam Castaneda that seeks to empower and transform communities through innovative dance, theater and visual art.

Karen Imas (Photo by Lynn Lane)

Art + Entertainment
Propose in Style at The Westin Houston Medical Center/Museum District

Photo by Stephen Mendoza Photography

SEEKING TO MAKE your proposal as beautiful and bright as your love? Look no further than The Westin Houston Medical Center, a haven of contemporary sophistication, where love stories unfold amidst exquisite surroundings.

Keep Reading Show less

MUTINY WINE ROOM in the Heights is celebrating five years with a bash this month. Opening just months before the pandemic, the tasting-room-style bar and restaurant is run by Emily Trout and Mark Ellenberger, who also own Kagan Cellars in Napa Valley.

Keep Reading Show less
Food

A giant astronaut now looks over Discovery Green where the PCMA conference will host its opening event

AMAL CLOONEY, LIZ Cheney and Brené Brown will be in Houston this week to speak at the Professional Convention Management Association’s annual conference. Houston First is bringing the conference — for meeting-planners who work on behalf of companies and associations to book conventions — to town. Houston First president and CEO Michael Heckman has referred to the event as “the Super Bowl of our industry,” as the organization hopes to book $200 million in new incremental business over the next five years.

Keep Reading Show less