Bangkok Post

Europe’s top series festival called off over pandemic

- FIACHRA GIBBONS

A leading European festival, Series Mania, offering the cream of upcoming streaming and television series, was cancelled this week because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The gathering, which draws more than 80,000 people to the northern French city of Lille, was to have begun on March 20.

Festival president Rodolphe Belmer said the “difficult decision” had to be made after the Paris government banned gatherings of more than 1,000 people amid internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns.

A rival festival, Canneserie­s, fell victim to the virus last week and was postponed until autumn.

The world’s second-biggest television and entertainm­ent market, MIPTV, which was to run alongside it later this month in Cannes, was also cancelled.

A slew of concerts, operas and ballets have been pulled or postponed across

France in an attempt to slow the spread of the virus.

The Musee d’Orsay in Paris — which holds the world’s biggest collection of Impression­ist paintings — also began restrictin­g access to 1,000 visitors at a time on Wednesday, two days after the Louvre imposed a similar bar.

The world’s most visited museum will only allow people in who have already reserved a ticket online or those who normally get free entry.

The Series Mania cancellati­on puts further pressure on the Cannes film festival — the world’s biggest — which is held in the Riviera resort in May.

Its president Pierre Lescure remains bullish, despite Cannes being close to the outbreak in Italy, which is now under lockdown.

“We remain reasonably optimistic, hoping that the peak of the epidemic will be at the end of March and that we can breathe more freely in April,” he told the French daily Le Figaro.

Variety revealed on Tuesday that the festival had turned down a chance to take out insurance against pandemics.

But Lescure said the coverage being offering was “peanuts” compared to the €32 million (1.1 billion baht) cost of the festival, which draws more than 40,000 people and half of Hollywood to Cannes for 12 days.

“We have [financial] reserves,” he added. “The funds we have put in place allow us to face up a year without revenue.”

 ??  ?? Cannes Film Festival president Pierre Lescure.
Cannes Film Festival president Pierre Lescure.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand