Cheltenham Festivals news

Cheltenham Festivals news archives

Book It! for schools — booking now open!

1 year
3 months ago

Book It!

The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival schools programme is now open for booking.

view the Book It! brochure
and
book online

Read our earlier news post for highlights of this years programme featuring the biggest names in children’s literature.

Further booking details and a printable form are available in the back of the brochure. For more information contact Nicola Tuxworth on 01242 775822.

We’ve tagged this post with , , , on Wednesday 10 June 2009.


Book It! for schools — another fantastic programme

1 year
3 months ago

Book It!

The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival — this year sees another Book It! school programme bursting at the seams with some of the biggest names in children’s literature.

The versatile literary superstar Anthony Horowitz, author of the Alex Rider series is back after an absence of several years, and if you missed Anne Fine and Michael Morpurgo’s sell-out appearances last year, you will be delighted to know that they are both back in 2009. Also returning is Julia Donaldson, the legendary creator of The Gruffalo, with her new show, Songbirds.

Michelle Paver previews the last installment of her hit Chronicles of Ancient Darkness series, and Gillian Cross talks about why she can’t shake off the Demon Headmaster. The unique Philip Ardagh takes us on a visit to Henry’s House, and Rose Impey and Shoo Rayner perform a delightful double act as they go Animal Crackers! With wacky mathematician Kartjan Poskitt, eco-warrior Nicola Davies and the creator of the Mortal Engines series, Philip Reeve, to name but a few, we are sure that you will find something to delight and intrigue your pupils in our programme.

A new option for this year is our packages, which combine an event with a workshop. You can find out more about them on page 3 of the programme. Places are strictly limited, and will be allocated on a first-come first-served basis.

Booking opens on Wednesday 10 June at 8:30am
view the Book It! brochure
and book online

We look forward to receiving your booking form and welcoming you to this year’s Festival.

We’ve tagged this post with , , , on Wednesday 27 May 2009.


Time Will Tell on the radio!

1 year
4 months ago

Time Will Tell

April 27th saw the launch of Time Will Tell, our major education project in association with BBC Outreach for the 60th Times Cheltenham Literature Festival.

Time Will Tell involves pupils from six schools each writing a short story to celebrate one of the six decades of the Festival. Leading author Philip Ardagh will help the children write their stories, and actor and director Fiona Ross will shape the stories for the stage.

Time Will Tell will be performed at Cheltenham Town Hall on October 12.

Teachers and pupils from Chosen Hill, The Crypt, Balcarras, Cotswold, Rednock and Maidenhill schools squeezed into the BBC Radio Gloucestershire studio, along with author Philip Ardagh and presenter Jon Rockley. Jon drew each school’s decade out of a hat live on air, and interviewed Philip Ardagh and Nicola Tuxworth about the project.

Time Will Tell

More about the Time Will Tell project on the BBC Radio Gloucestershire web page.

We’ve tagged this post with , , , on Monday 27 April 2009.


Literature Festival 60th anniversary programme launched

1 year
4 months ago

Ten Guest Directors

Ten Guest Directors will be creating events for this year’s The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival as part of a programme celebrating 60 years of the event.

The full Festival programme will be available in August.

Monica Ali Simon Armitage Jonathan Coe Richard Eyre Anthony Horowitz Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Rageh Omaar Alice Roberts Sandi Toksvig Mark Watson

The Guest Directors:

  • Monica Ali
  • Simon Armitage
  • Jonathan Coe
  • Richard Eyre
  • Anthony Horowitz
  • Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
  • Rageh Omaar
  • Alice Roberts
  • Sandi Toksvig
  • Mark Watson

“We’re really delighted to be working with such a wide range of Guest Directors, who will each programme 2–3 events over the Festival’s ten days.”

Sarah Smyth, Literature Festival Artistic Director

cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature

We’ve tagged this post with , on Thursday 23 April 2009.


Martin Horwood MP celebrates Cheltenham Festivals

1 year
5 months ago

Martin Horwood MP

Listen!

Martin Horwood MP, Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for Cheltenham dropped into Festival HQ to celebrate British Tourism Week.

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Cheltenham’s MP caught up with Festival organisers about the 2009 events and found time to tell us why Cheltenham Festivals are so important to the region’s tourism.

We’ve tagged this post with , , , , , on Tuesday 31 March 2009.


Festival gift vouchers

1 year
5 months ago

Festival gift vouchers

Treat your mum this Sunday with gift vouchers to any of our four fantastic festivals.

With over 450 events a year crossing the boundaries of jazz, science, music and literature let them find an event that is right up their street.

Call Cheltenham Town Hall box office on 0844 576 7979 to order your vouchers.

We’ve tagged this post with , , , on Friday 20 March 2009.


A festival introduction from our Chief Executive

1 year
6 months ago

Budvar Cheltenham Jazz Festival

28 April – 4 May 2009, booking opens on Monday 2 March

Budvar Cheltenham Jazz Festival 2009

The opening event of the 2008 Jazz Festival was one of the best I can remember. It turned out to be Eartha Kitt’s last public performance in the UK and we were honoured to have hosted her in Cheltenham.

This year too, we have a very special opening for a different reason. It will be in Gloucester, in partnership with the University of Gloucestershire and will feature The Ruach Mass choir with Mica Paris, Ian Shaw, Alex Wilson and Jason Yarde. There will be workshops in local schools beforehand and those children will be invited to take part.

The BBC Concert Orchestra will again delight Town Hall audiences, working with the Guy Barker Big Band and guests including Michael Brandon, Madeleine Bell and Ian Shaw, recreating the life of Billy Strayhorn and his relationship with Duke Ellington.

The sensation of Cheltenham as a Jazz Town, really kicks off with the arrival of Hugh Masekela performing on Friday evening in the Town Hall and Pat Martino and Julian Arguelles in the Everyman. From then on until Nigel Kennedy closes the Festival, music and dancing will engulf the town. The talented pianist Alex Wilson has wooed many audiences with his past appearances at Cheltenham, with both Jazz Jamaica and last year Courtney Pine. This year he will bedazzle the Town Hall with his own Salsa Band.

One of my favourite events of the Jazz Festival is the Family Breakfast. It can provide parents with a few treasured minutes to read the Sunday Papers whilst their offspring are either entranced by the musicians or dancing happily to the rhythm. Although it is very unusual for Jazz musicians to perform at such an early hour, this year the alarm clock has been given to The Homemade Orchestra with Michael Rosen who received excellent reviews from the London Jazz Festival.


The Times Cheltenham Science Festival

3–7 June 2009, booking opens on Monday 30 March

The Times Cheltenham Science Festival 2009

I can hardly believe that it is almost time to finalise the programme for another Science Festival when the outstanding 2008 events are still ringing in my ears.

The theme for 2009 is heresy and we will be looking at some of the most famous scientists who were considered heretics and discussing who we think are today’s heretics. We will be celebrating the International Year of Astronomy and how the work of Darwin has affected the way we live and think. As always the programme will address what science and engineering is doing to tackle some of the biggest challenges facing the world today such as climate change, plus considering some more unusual questions such as why do you feel pain and does curry have health benefits?

As always, our younger audiences will be treated to a packed programme full of high-voltage, mind-expanding excitement and the ever-popular Discover Zone will offer an opportunity to touch, play, talk and learn.

We are delighted that Carol Vorderman has agreed to be the Guest Director this year.


HSBC Cheltenham Music Festival

3–18 July 2009, booking opens on Monday 20 April

HSBC Cheltenham Music Festival 2009

The Music Festival was the original Cheltenham Festival and had bold beginnings in June 1945, a good two months before the end of World War II. It was ahead of Edinburgh, Salzburg and Aldeburgh and was dedicated to promoting British music and British composers. Meurig Bowen, our Director has chosen to celebrate the 65th Anniversary by reminding us of some of those wonderful Cheltenham premieres including Britten’s Four Sea Interludes [the very first Cheltenham premiere] and the orchestral version of Thomas Ades opera score, Powder her Face.

Taking his cue from the bicentenary of the birth of Mendelssohn, Meurig thought an interesting area for the Festival would be to consider other composers through the years with Jewish connections. The Jewish strand will contain a huge range of music from medieval Sephardic chant to Hollywood film scores via Schoenberg, Mahler, Barber, Finzi, Reich and many more.

The beautiful acoustic of the Pump Room will again be used to the full when quartets from across the world perform in the Pump Room in honour of the father of the string quartet – Haydn.

The opening evening will be a wonderful celebratory evening out for the whole family. We will welcome John Wilson and his orchestra to play a series of Hollywood film themes that will appeal across the generations from Gone with the Wind to Harry Potter via Star Wars. The next day, Saturday 4 July, Fiesta in the Park features free musical entertainment all afternoon in Pittville Park.

Last year, we introduced greater variety into our Pump Room concerts with a Venezualan Band and a cabaret evening. We will be repeating the pattern this year with a Jewish Klezmer Band, Kol Simcha and a cabaret evening with Kit and the Widow. When you hear Kol Simcha you imagine that you are part of a Jewish wedding and immediately want to dance.

Fittingly, the Anniversary Festival will close with a performance by the Halle (the festival’s orchestra in residence for several years) conducted by rising star, Edward Gardner, who went to school in Gloucester.


The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival

9–18 October 2009, booking opens early August

The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival 2009

In 2009, the Literature Festival will celebrate its 60th Anniversary. It is the longest-running Literature Festival in the world.

It is too early to be able to give you much insight into the programme but our celebrations mean that we are going to invite 10 Guest Directors, one for each day of the Festival. The line-up will include authors, comedians and scientists and we will be revealing all to you a little later in the summer.

Donna Renney
Chief Executive, Cheltenham Festivals

We’ve tagged this post with , , , , , , , on Friday 6 March 2009.


Celebrate a 60th anniversary

1 year
7 months ago

After another record-breaking Literature Festival in 2008, with over 450 authors participating in more than 350 events, attracting an audience of 100,000, we are now looking forward to celebrate The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival’s 60th anniversary with you!

The world’s oldest Literature Festival was founded in 1949 and witnessed many political and cultural changes. We would like to take the opportunity in 2009 not only to talk about the past, but also to look at the future ahead of us. Literature, history, politics, medicine — what got people talking, what events changed the course of history and people’s lives in the past six decades? And what does the future hold?

Join us for another celebration of great literature and poetry, spell-binding storytelling, fascinating talks and discussions and much more — from 9 to 18 October 2009!

We’ve tagged this post with , on Friday 6 February 2009.


The Wellcome Trust Book Prize launches today

1 year
11 months ago

The Wellcome Trust Book Prize: A new award celebrating medicine in literature. The first literary prize to put a spotlight on health and medicine with Jo Brand as the Chair of judges and £25,000 to the winning writer.

What do Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Love in the Time of Cholera, Jean-Dominique Bauby’s The Diving Bell and the Butterfly and Ian McEwan’s Saturday have in common? All three acclaimed works would have met the criteria for a major new book prize launching today.

The Wellcome Trust Book Prize is open to outstanding works of fiction and non-fiction on the theme of health, illness or medicine. The £25,000 annual award, created by the Wellcome Trust, is the first of its kind to bring together the traditionally diverse fields of medicine and literature.

Comedienne and former psychiatric nurse Jo Brand will act as Chair of the 2009 judging panel which includes BBC science journalist Quentin Cooper, Welsh poet and non-fiction writer Gwyneth Lewis, physician and author Raymond Tallis and Professor of Medicine in the Arts Brian Hurwitz.

Jo Brand says

“Good and bad health are pretty fundamental to all our lives, so it’s no surprise these themes crop up fairly often in literature too. The Wellcome Trust Book Prize recognises writers who have incorporated medicine in such a way as to really engage readers with the subject, exploring our understanding of what it means to be healthy or sick. I’m sure there are going to be plenty of wonderful books for me and the other judges to read. I just hope we can reach a final decision without too much damage to our own health.”

Jo Brand

The prize will be open to books published in the UK and works published in English translation.

A shortlist of six works will be announced at The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival in October 2009.

The winner will be announced at a prestigious ceremony in November 2009 at the Wellcome Collection in London – the Wellcome Trust’s renowned cultural venue for Medicine, Life and Art.

“There’s always been a thirst for books that combine excellent writing with accurate and compelling medical stories. We hope this prize will stimulate even more interest, excitement and debate about medicine and literature. Our award reflects the Wellcome Trust’s aim to broaden the appeal of medicine and reach new audiences – from literature lovers to science enthusiasts alike.”

Clare Matterson, Director of Medicine, Society and History at the Wellcome Trust

We’ve tagged this post with , , , , on Saturday 11 October 2008.