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Fringe benefits

The annual Hong Kong Fringe Festival is back, riding the crest of a successful relaunch in 2025. Rob Garratt looks back on the legacy of an event that shaped the Western-music sensibilities of a generation and finds out about the highlights of its ongoing edition.

By Rob Garratt | HK EDITION | Updated: 2026-01-05 09:06
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Comedian Vivek Mahbubani is presenting a "comedy buffet" at the Fringe Festival, hoping every audience member finds a resonance with what's on offer. CHINA DAILY

Open call, open arms

B-Jazz, Fung and Backstage Comedy are just three in more than 100 successful pitches to perform at the festival. The artistic breadth speaks for itself: from a mind-reading experience led by Zenneth Kok — titled The Memory Wall and due on Jan 4 — to a rock-music double bill pairing Mexican industrial band Deer MX with comedy-punk outfit Junk! playing on Jan 16.

B-Jazz band leader Becky Liu says that the Fringe Club's heritage space "amplifies our big band sounds perfectly". CHINA DAILY

Such diversity is nothing new. Over the past four decades, HKFC has historically "nourished local artists by providing a stage for experimentation," Liu says. This noble goal was woven into its fabric, at its founding as a nonprofit charity in 1982. Since then the club has participated in 68 cultural exchanges across 15 cities, hosted over 1,600 exhibitions and 9,000 stage performances.

For Mahbubani, being invited to perform alongside three visiting international comedians at HKFC was an early career milestone. "Growing up in Hong Kong, anybody and everybody would know the Fringe Club as being the place for arts," he remembers."Performing here has made me feel that I'm established enough to call myself an artist."

Fringe Festival guest curator Sheeta Ng says that the festival "nourishes local artists by providing a stage for experimentation". CHINA DAILY

HKFF doubles down on this ethos. Its final program is drawn from over 260 applications; of which more than 160 came from Hong Kong-based artists. Artists who made their debuts at HKFC have often been encouraged by the response to pitch to overseas festivals. Notably, HKFC has represented Hong Kong at recent editions of the China Shanghai International Arts Festival and Performing Arts Fair.

Clarinetist Linus Fung says that Volte, which was premiered at the Fringe Festival opening concert, invites listeners to consider the circularity of life. CHINA DAILY

"The thing artists in Hong Kong most lack is a platform to develop new work, to create 'works in progress'," adds Ng. "Artists need an established program to act as an incubator. At the Fringe Festival, they can start creating in this really comfortable, small venue. It's a stepping platform for young and emerging artists to find out what they want to do and how — before going out into the world."

IF YOU GO

Fringe Festival 2026

Dates: Through Feb 15

Venue: Fringe Club, 2 Lower Albert Rd, Central

www.hkfringeclub.com/en/whatson/index/7-Fringe+Festival+2026.html

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