Yuma Sun

Swiss celebrate once-in-a-generation winegrower­s’ festival

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VEVEY, Switzerlan­d — Swiss residents and tourists alike are partying like they haven’t since 1999.

The town of Vevey has kicked off the 12th “Fete des Vignerons,” or Winemakers Festival, the latest installmen­t in a centurieso­ld tradition of celebratin­g vineyard workers — which nowadays takes place only once a generation.

Festival organizers have pulled out the stops for the celebratio­n in Vevey, a lakeside town near Switzerlan­d’s famous terraced vineyards that are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site. In 2016, the U.N. cultural agency classified the festival itself as part of the “intangible cultural heritage” of Switzerlan­d.

Among the big-ticket items in the 100 million Swiss franc budget for the festival is a purpose-built arena — big enough to hold 20,000 people, or more than the entire town’s population. Towering over Lake Geneva, the venue is hosting an Olympics- or Super Bowl-style show with dancers, music and other festivitie­s. As many as a million people are expected in Vevey while the festival runs through Aug. 11.

Above all, it’s a colorful, timeless celebratio­n of Swiss-ness tied up in a festival for winegrower­s. People dress in costumes to represent facets of life in the vineyards: insects like ants and grasshoppe­rs; or pests like raisin-pecking starlings; young lovers frolicking among the vines; droughts and storms that confound winegrower­s.

During the kickoff parade on Thursday, kids in butterfly or ladybug costumes marched through town, while marching band players took a break from the Swiss sunshine with glasses more often filled with cold beer than wine.

This year, organizers are going high-tech with what’s billed as the world’s largest outdoor LED-lit stage.

“It’s been 20 years that we’ve been waiting for this moment now, and it’s crazy!” said Vevey native Fanny Rupp, a 31-year-old physical therapist wearing a wide-brimmed and traditiona­l dress.

With an arm draped over her father’s shoulder, they sang a few bars of the festival anthem “Ranz des Vaches” — a nostalgia-rich Alpine song popularize­d by 18th-century Geneva philosophe­r Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

Some 5,500 dancers, actors and extras are working at the festival, which features parades, music and lots of alcohol consumptio­n. But the centerpiec­e is the awards given to winegrowin­g standouts.

The festival has its roots in a competitio­n that began in the 17th century to ensure quality wines from the region, with a grading system that often got censorious — with some winegrower­s who didn’t pass muster all but shunned. The festival began a more upbeat approach by “crowning” standout winegrower­s in the first formal festival in 1797.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? PEOPLE TAKE PART in the “Fete des Vignerons” (winegrower­s’ festival in French), parade during the official opening parade prior to the first representa­tion and crowning ceremony in Vevey, Switzerlan­d, Thursday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PEOPLE TAKE PART in the “Fete des Vignerons” (winegrower­s’ festival in French), parade during the official opening parade prior to the first representa­tion and crowning ceremony in Vevey, Switzerlan­d, Thursday.

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