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Old Pueblo Playwrights - Short Plays

  • January 9 - 11, 2026
  • The Scoundrel & Scamp Theatre

    738 North 5th Avenue
    Tucson, Arizona 85705
Ticket Price $15.00 Buy Tickets
Description

Each of our two shows in the Fringe Festival present staged readings of different short plays. Each show is different, so see them both!

Friday night, Jan. 9, is David Rochon's play "Boredom is Hell" - a 45-minute play about angels, demons, existential angst… and pie.

Saturday night, Jan. 10, we present three plays:

"Randy" by Mel Hector - a 10-minute play about the responsibility of dog ownership.
"Honey Nuts" by Mel Hector - a 30-minute play about bucking the trend in our society of humanizing monsters.
"Child Free" by Leslie Powell - a 10-minute play in which a mother's decluttering reveals a daughter's long buried secrets.mity?

Content Warning: 13+.

Artist Bio: Old Pueblo Playwrights is a Tucson writers’ group for playwrights. We incorporated as a 501(c)(3) non-profit in 1987. We meet every Monday night at 7:00 pm, usually in-person and on Zoom, where we read, critique, and develop new plays. Once a year, we put on a New Play Festival, where we present the best plays we worked on that year. All our meetings are open to the public — please see our website, oldpuebloplaywrights.org, for more information.

Date & Time

Jan 9 - 11, 2026

Venue Details

The Scoundrel & Scamp Theatre

738 North 5th Avenue
Tucson, Arizona 85705 The Scoundrel & Scamp Theatre
Tucson Fringe

Fringe is…

Fearless Expression
Resourceful Imagination
Genuine Novelty

 

Our Mission

To produce an annual unjuried, uncensored festival of theatre and performing arts events in Tucson that provide accessible and inclusive opportunities for artists and audiences.

Our Vision

To cultivate a vibrant community of theatre and performing artists in Tucson and increase awareness of local artists to the greater Tucson community.

Our Values

Tucson Fringe is founded in equal opportunity for all. We believe diversity fuels the spirit, fosters meaningful connections, and cultivates a beautifully creative and conscientious community. We value everyone’s unique self and understand each person has different abilities and capacities. We are committed to inclusion across identity including but not limited to ethnicity, culture, gender, age, religion, orientation, and experience.

Our Story

Since 2011, following tenets established by the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Tucson Fringe has provided artists with low-risk, low-cost opportunities to perform by using economies of scale to reduce venue rental costs and by taking only 20%, and sometimes 0% of the artist’s earnings. Tucson Fringe also provides the Tucson arts community with avant-garde, non-traditional performing arts at low-cost ticket prices.

The festival does not curate or select the performances, maintaining an environment in which everyone and anyone can perform. This ensures that underrepresented artistic voices, such as people of color, the LGBT+ community, women, and other marginalized genders, are championed in our community.

The festival takes place in January every year across multiple venues in Tucson. On average, artists receive $500+ in ticket revenue.


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