Sunderland Echo

Sand art honour for fallen soldier

HERO OF GREAT WAR TO TAKE STARRING ROLE IN DANNY BOYLE PROJECT

- Twitter: @KatyJourno

The image of a fallen soldier from Houghton who died in the First World War trenches will be etched in the sand in Roker Beach as part of director Danny Boyle’s remembranc­e event.

It’s been announced that 2nd Lt Hugh Carr will be the main feature of the Pages of the Sea in Sunderland, which will take place from 12pm-3pm on Sunday, November 11.

Sunderland is one of only a handful of coastal cities and towns in the UK chosen to be part of the project, which is being produced by The Beach and Trainspott­ing director, who was also behind the London Olympics’ spectacula­r opening ceremony.

Each event, which is commission­ed by 14-18 NOW to mark the centenary of Armistice Day, involves the drawing of a large-scale portrait of a casualty from the First World War, designed by sand artists Sand In Your Eye, which will be washed away as the tide comes in.

Hugh will be the main portrait in Sunderland’s Pages of the Sea. He was born in 1891 and died in the Ypres Salient in January 1916, aged 25, when a German shell landed near his trench. He’d transferre­d from the Household Cavalry to a Royal Engineers tunnelling company where he was using his experience as a miner. Danny Boyle said: “Beaches are truly public spaces, where nobody rules other than the tide. They seem the perfect place to gather and say a final goodbye and thank you to those whose lives were taken or forever changed by the First World War. I’m inviting people to watch as the faces of the fallen are etched in the sand, and for communitie­s to come together to remember the sacrifices that were made.”

The public is invited to gather on Roker Beach as part of an informal, nationwide gesture of remembranc­e for the men and women who left their home shores during the First World War.

In addition, the public will be asked to join in by creating silhouette­s of people in the sand, rememberin­g the millions of lives lost or changed forever by the conflict.

Poet Carol Ann Duffy has been invited by Danny to write a new poem, which will be read by individual­s, families and communitie­s as they gather on beaches on November 11. Copies of the poem will be available at the beaches around the UK for those who wish to come together or to offer their own personal contributi­on.

The event will also feature a choir led by Catherine Stephens, of The Cornshed Sisters, who also led the choir at the memorable Portolan high-wire walking spectacula­r, one of the highlights of this summer’s visit of The Tall Ships. They will perform a song by Heg Brignall who also created the haunting music at the showstoppi­ng high-wire event.

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