Jamaica Gleaner

Gregory Simms - A man of many hats

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1 You are a man who wears many hats, but of all the jobs you have done throughout your life, what has been the most enjoyable?

“I love all my hats and I wear them all proudly. I enjoy the leadership challenges of my job at the JCDC – attempting to fit government bureaucrac­y into creative energy and industry. I cannot do without choral music and my family at the Jamaica Youth Chorale. I like to share and connect with colleagues from across the globe on the World Choir Council. I love the groundbrea­king work of Plié for the Arts and pacing through the challenges of those production­s. I can’t choose one hat although my ‘job-job’ is at the JCDC.”

2 What is the one thing people would be surprised to learn about you?

“That Im a an award-winning athlete and swimmer. I have the medals I earned in grade two to prove it. Otherwise, people are usually surprised by my age (maybe cause mi nuff sometimes). All my life people assume I am older than I really am. I don’t mind that sometimes.”

3 If you could be minister of culture or tourism minister for a day, what would be your first order of business?

“Fast-track and embolden the policy and advocacy thrust around the establishm­ent of a central framework for the regulation and authentica­tion of Jamaican culture, tangible and intangible, which i s now an exploited global phenomena. So if you say that you are teaching Kumina, or cooking Jamaican jerk, there will be an authority that, among other things, that can validate this. Then I’d let them free Buju.”

4 As a key member of the JCDC team, what would you say has been the organisati­on’s most significan­t contributi­on to date (in terms of programmes).

“The National Festival of the Per forming Arts has not only honed skills in the arts — dance, speech, music, trad folk — but has also taught many of us valuable life sk ills. So many thousands of Jamaicans have benefited from participat­ing in this programme. It is amazing to travel the island and meet with the trainers and participan­ts who sometimes sacrifice to keep the arts and Jamaican culture alive through the training and performanc­e opportunit­ies provided by this programme. I am very proud of it, from my own days on the stage. I have had the privilege to share with colleagues and to adjudicate in other similar festivals in the region and can say there is nothing like it. We continue to work at improving it.”

5 Based on the level of interest for certain cultural activities, it seems Jamaicans have lost an appreciati­on for cultural activities. Do you believe so? If yes, why?

I think when many of us say culture, we only refer to traditiona­l ‘ole time sintings.’ Culture also refers to the popular and modern. But, if you are looking through the right lenses, you will quickly realise that our traditiona­l culture continues to be with us. It evolves, it changes its name. Sometimes, it hides in plain sight. The interestin­g thing is that Jamaicans, by nature or nurture, are inextricab­ly and unapologet­ically linked to and appreciate our culture and Jamaicanes­s. A par t of the challenge for us at the JCDC is to honour and present both the traditiona­l and the contempora­ry in a way that they can recognise each other in 140 characters or less.

So, whether you are playing revival on the rattling drum or trapset or dancing in Negril or Manchoniel on August mawnin, you understand the meaning of who we are. The JCDC must also ensure that its cultural activities appeal to a modern aesthetic in this time of connectivi­ty and ‘boundarile­ssness’.

 ??  ?? Gregory Simms
Gregory Simms

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