This year saw the first ever Harling Fringe Festival take place from the 10th to the 12th of July. Although I’m Watford based it was a pleasure to jump on the Metropolitan line to Liverpool Street and switch to the train up to Diss to join the residents of Harling for their celebration of creativity and art.
The reason I made the journey was primarily because I'd been invited to perform as the headline act. So although I didn’t get to enjoy the whole weekend, fortunately I arrived early enough to take in many of the Sunday performances. And what a delightful array of activities it was.
The first thing I attended was the Harling Horsepower Classic Car Show at the charming Peppers venue. It was a free event which pulled in a substantial crowd of people not only showing off their gorgeous motors but also having a leisurely wander around taking in the aesthetic beauty and engineering wonder of vintage cars from across the decades.
Next I hotfooted it to Saint Peter and Saint Paul's Church where there was an art exhibition featuring several local artists including internationally renowned Maz Jackson SGFA, who has spent a lifetime drawing and painting in rural Norfolk but whose work is now exhibited and purchased all over the world. The exhibition offered a wonderful collection of work, most of it available for purchase. Many of the artists had rural subjects as their key theme including some pen sketches of bird life, sculpture of rabbits and sheep, and oils and acrylics of natural landscapes. But there was also a lot of abstract and impressionistic work which added to the characterful and colourful variety.
Next up in my whirlwind tour of Harling was the comedy show Offgridleand at the Sports and Social Club. This was a really inventive claustrophobic piece that blended theatre and stand-up traditions with some innovative technology. Multi-award winning writer/performer Paul Richards starts the play by pressing play on his laptop which then sets an audio file going and the whole piece is performed in real time as he interacts with the various sounds and voices that emerge. It was interesting to see how he times his jerky actions and stuttering speech to fit in chronologically with the recording whilst making it feel completely spontaneous. After the show it was delightful to sit down with him and a band of locals to have a good old chat about theatre, art and culture in the way that really only fringes allow.
Next step was a show that is pulling out all the stops to prepare itself for a transfer to Edinburgh in August. Who Remembers the 90s is an ingenious blend of comedy sketches, parody songs and madcap physical humour providing a nostalgic trail through Tamagotchis, Mr Blobby, Friends, Power Rangers and even the rise of New Labour. Sonic the Hedgehog had a particularly memorable appearance and I had the dubious pleasure of holding up one of his golden rings! An incredibly enthusiastic and quite frankly bonkers performance from Adam Larter which I think the whole enjoy audience enjoyed immensely.
Finally it was my own turn to perform and I headed to the Nag's Head pub to share Tiger Jazz Sings, my joyful rendition of beloved and less well known songs from the Great American Songbook. The set was met with huge appreciation from the Harling audience and I was incredibly touched by the warm welcome and rapturous response they shared with me.
The whole event has arisen courtesy of the magnificent Festival Organiser Sharon Gaffney, who I know well from our work together at the Pumphouse Theatre in Watford. As a founding organiser of the Watford Fringe, now in its tenth incarnation, she has the perfect skill set and experience to make this new Harling Fringe a tremendous success. I wish her every success with this new creative impulse and hope to see it develop, blossom and flourish in the years to come. I certainly can’t wait to return in 2027.
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