Belfast Telegraph

Elton gig was planned months before Agreement

- By Michael Mchugh

MO Mowlam planned Sir Elton John’s Stormont concert months before the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, archived documents show.

She discussed the gig with Tony Blair amid ambitious efforts to transform the use of the Stormont Estate and make it more publicly accessible.

Sir Elton performed the first open-air show at the venue in 1998, weeks after negotiator­s clinched the Belfast Agreement, at the special request of the then Prime Minister.

It came the weekend after a massive Yes vote in the referendum on the peace deal, which led to devolved powershari­ng at Stormont. Ms Mowlam wrote to Mr Blair about the event in December 1997.

She said: “Security considerat­ions remain a significan­t factor and will continue to be borne in mind in general planning and in managing specific events.

“I need to take the local politician­s along with us in these measures. Nationalis­ts are likely to be sceptical and unionists will be concerned about devaluing the standing of Stormont.

“Local residents will be apprehensi­ve about events which attract large numbers of people.”

She intended to invest a “relatively modest” amount of public money in providing new assets like a historical exhibition and children’s play area.

In an archived letter from 1997, she said: “The aim will, however, be to ensure that musical events are run on a commercial basis, with perhaps the venue being free in the first year.”

About 14,000 people attended Sir Elton’s show, news reports from the time said.

It had been nearly a decade since Sir Elton had last performed in Belfast.

Both he and the show’s promoter donated their services free, it was reported at the time.

Ms Mowlam told the Prime Minister of her plans for classical and popular musical events in Stormont’s parklands.

‘I need to take local politician­s along with us in these measures’

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