Chichester Observer

Fabulous 10th Festival of Chichester offers glorious line-up this summer

- By Phil Hewitt Festival of Chichester chairman

A fabulous line-up will celebrate the tenth Festival of Chichester this summer – a tenth festival which sits very happily amongst a raft of landmark anniversar­ies of arts organisati­ons in the area this summer.

For the festival organisers it will be the happiest return to something very close to normal – and proof positive that we have more than survived an astonishin­gly tough couple of years.

In truth, we were always very confident that we would. This is a festival which grew out of the community and retains the strongest, deepest roots it can in that community.

I remember very clearly the moment it dawned on me that a Chichester summer without a festival was just unthinkabl­e.

Amid great sadness and a fair amount of recriminat­ion the old Chichester Festivitie­s went into liquidatio­n in the autumn of 2012 and the liquidator very kindly extended an invitation to us at the paper to attend the meeting which pretty much wound everything up.

It was never going to be a happy meeting but what was particular­ly striking was the sense that the Festivitie­s staff felt the Festivitie­s board could and should have held out longer but it was all too late by then. I dashed back to the office, started writing a report of the meeting and on the spur of the moment turned round to our then editor and said: “Do you know what, it’s up to us at the paper to start a new festival” – to which the editor replied with three simple words: “Go on then!”

In the meantime Barry Smith, who has been our festival co-ordinator throughout (I am the chairman) was independen­tly thinking along very similar lines. He too could not bear the thought of a Chichester which did not have a festival and so we got together and called a public meeting.

Our little stroke of genius was that we got Kate Mosse to chair it. The other stroke of genius was to ask Chichester City Council – who have been fabulous friends to the festival since the moment of its inception – to let us hold our public meeting in the council chamber.

It was packed. We even had a waiting list. The response was emphatic. A huge number of groups and organisati­ons, of creative people of all kinds were right behind us on our new adventure, and so we started to plan the inaugural Festival of Chichester for summer 2013.

Rapidly we assembled a fantastic committee of people and we have met every month since then. It is a measure of our continuity that to this day our committee still retains three of those founders: me; our absolutely indefatiga­ble Barry; and Anne Scicluna, former mayor of the city, a city councillor and someone who mixes wonderful common sense with a total knowledge and understand­ing of Chichester.

Our committee is the bedrock of the festival and as we approach our tenth festival it’s fair to say that we have got probably the strongest line-up we have ever had.

We have always enjoyed a very close relationsh­ip with the cathedral and the Rev Canon Dan Inman keeps that friendship alive; Katie Bennett is a total whizz with social media and a bundle of energy; Simon O’hea has brilliantl­y overhauled our festival website and superbly keeps all our minutes, making sure we always remember to do what we plan to do! Completing the committee is our treasurer Nick Sutherland, a hugely reassuring presence, a very experience­d businessma­n who ensures we are always on track financiall­y.

But not even the finest committee could achieve terribly much without brilliant support all around, and we have been incredibly fortunate to have the Chichester Observer right behind us every step of the way. I often think that there isn’t a single newspaper anywhere else in the country that is so enthusiast­ically and supportive­ly behind its key community festival.

Also central to our hopes and all our activities is the very strong bond of friendship I’m hugely proud to say we share with Chichester City Council who are not just generous financiall­y but also completely and instinctiv­ely understand everything we are trying to do as a festival.

We are also incredibly lucky to count Dame Patricia Routledge as our patron. No one understand­s the value of the arts better than Dame Patricia does, and her encouragem­ent and warmth of personalit­y are integral to all our endeavours. She remains as ever an inspiratio­n.

Put this all together and we are in an excellent position as we contemplat­e our tenth festival this summer – a huge achievemen­t, an achievemen­t secured because we have remained so tightly connected to the community and because we have been blessed with such excellent support on the back of our own hard work.

And so, we are nearly there. The festival runs from June 11 to July 10, and if you look at our website it will even tell you to the second just how long it is until we open. Maybe more importantl­y the website will give you a full run-down of everything that’s happening and let you know how to get your tickets. festivalof­chichester.co.uk.

This year’s programme includes Jess Gillam, the Bournemout­h Symphony Orchestra, the Stradivari­us Piano Trio, the Camarilla Ensemble, She’koyokh, Chichester’s David Bathurst singing every Beatles song from memory at Boxgrove, Olivia Stevens at Chi Inn and Pavlos Carvalho’s Greek Band at St Paul’s.

 ?? ?? This year’s programme launch at The Novium - pic by Katie Bennett
This year’s programme launch at The Novium - pic by Katie Bennett
 ?? ?? This year’s programme - pic by Katie Bennett
This year’s programme - pic by Katie Bennett
 ?? ?? Festival patron Dame Patricia Routledge
Festival patron Dame Patricia Routledge

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