Arts minister Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay visited Harrogate to attend the town’s literary festival and discuss the future of the arts.
Lord Parkinson met Fiona Movley and Sharon Canavar, chair and chief executive of Harrogate International Festivals, and attended the Raworths Harrogate Literature Festival on Friday.
The festival is part of the portfolio of events produced by Harrogate International Festivals.
The Conservative life peer also visited the Harrogate 1571 soundscape produced by Harrogate International Festivals for the 450th anniversary of the discovery of spa waters in the town.
He said:
“I was delighted to visit Raworths Harrogate Literature Festival and to see so many people enjoying thought-provoking and entertaining talks – in person – from a range of brilliant writers and speakers.
“It was also a great opportunity to hear about how the government’s support through the Culture Recovery Fund has helped to support much-valued events and organisations such as this, and what more we can do to help them bounce back from the pandemic and continue to flourish.”
Read more:
- New ‘immersive soundscape’ art celebrates Harrogate’s spa history
- Two Harrogate primary schools plan to merge
Ms Movley said the visit was “a timely opportunity to share our strategic plans for the future and the challenges that festivals and arts organisations have faced over the last two years”.
Ms Canavar said:
“It is important that the cultural and economic value of festivals across the UK and that their agility to create exciting programmes and vibrant destinations post-pandemic are recognised. It is key that their location, lack of building and seasonal delivery does not detract from their significance in the cultural landscape.”
Harrogate Internationals Festivals, which was established in 1966, is a year-round arts organisations producing festivals and events within Harrogate and the north.
Ed Miliband and Kate Vigurs heading to Harrogate for literary festivalFormer Labour Party leader Ed Miliband, historian Dr Kate Vigurs and Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York, are to visit Harrogate for one of the north of England’s leading literary festivals.
They are due to appear at Raworths Harrogate Literature Festival live event, which is being held at Harrogate’s Crown Hotel from October 21 until October 24.
The line-up also includes BBC Newsnight presenter Gavin Esler, Costa Book of the Year winner Monique Roffey and Channel 5’s ‘Dogfather’ Graeme Hall.
The festival will begin with a literary lunch featuring BBC correspondent and BAFTA award-winning journalist, Paul Kenyon.
Mr Miliband, the MP for Doncaster North, will be following in the steps of his political adversary, former Prime Minister David Cameron, who headlined the festival in 2019, when he appears at the opening night.
Other writers appearing over the four days include Dr Waheed Arian, Robin Ince, Led By Donkeys founders James Sadri and Oliver Knowles, Dr Kate Vigurs, Dr Alastair Santhouse, Amy Jeffs and Melanie King
Read more:
- Author ‘over the moon’ after winning Harrogate festival’s crime novel of the year
- Jespers of Harrogate reopens after two-month refurbishment
Sharon Canavar, chief executive of Harrogate International Festivals, which organises the event, said:
“This festival has become one the country’s most important literary events, which gives an array of writers – which this year features leading politicians, academics, journalists, historians and activists, the chance to share their stories.
“The programme we have curated for this long weekend, set in the wonderful setting of The Crown Hotel, has been designed to entertain, inspire and surprise.”
Zoe Robinson, Raworths managing partner, said:
“Over the years, well-known figures from the world of politics, sport, acting and writing have graced the Raworths Harrogate Literature Festival stage, and this year is no exception.”
Further information about the event will be published on Harrogate International Festivals’ website here.
Harrogate Festivals chief angered by removal of promotional banners
The chief executive of Harrogate International Festivals has vented her frustration after banners promoting a major event were promptly removed by North Yorkshire County Council.
Yesterday was the first day of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, which attracts hundreds of crime writing fans to Harrogate.
The four-day festival, which is attended this year by the likes of Ian Rankin and Richard Osman, is one of the first events since the pandemic that the arts charity has been able to full stage.
So Sharon Canavar was less than impressed by what she regarded as a lack of support from the county council after numerous banners put up across town on Wednesday were removed by midday yesterday,
Ms Canavar tweeted:
“When you put your banners up welcoming guests to Harrogate last night and North Yorkshire County Council are snipping them down before midday this am. How come everyone else gets away with it for weeks?
“Don’t have time to follow him round to get them back for use this weekend. So £s wasted. Great, like this gig isn’t hard enough at the moment.”
The events industry has been hit hard during the pandemic. Large events are only just beginning to go ahead as lockdown restrictions ease.
Ms Canavar said last month it was nerve wracking making decisions on events due to the uncertainty of the roadmap out of lockdown.
Read more:
- The Prime Minister has welcomed the news that the Convention Centre has hosted it first events post-pandemic
- Harrogate town centre mural takes shape
The county council said it supported local events, especially after the pandemic, but road safety was paramount.
Melisa Burnham, highways area manager, said:
Chris Whitaker wins top crime novel award in Harrogate“Banners attached to barriers or fencing beside the highway can create a safety hazard. At such locations, banners can distract drivers and other road users or obstruct visibility.
“We assess the risks before taking action to remove such banners, and high-risk areas such as those mentioned are prioritised.
“If event organisers contact the highways office, we will always be happy to advise them.”
Chris Whitaker’s book has won the prestigious crime novel of the year award on the opening night of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival in Harrogate.
The four-day event, organised by the arts charity Harrogate International Festivals, is widely recognised as the biggest in crime writing.
We Begin at the End, a story of crime, punishment, love and redemption set in California, is credited by Whitaker for saving his life after he was mugged and stabbed as a teenager.
Whitaker, who received the prize at the Old Swan Hotel tonight, was nominated for the award for the first time. He was chosen by a public vote, the prize academy and a panel of expert judges.
He received £3,000 and an engraved oak beer cask.
Northern Irish author Brian McGilloway’s political thriller The Last Crossing, which explores The Troubles from the perspective of former operatives who like to think they have moved on, was highly commended.
Read more:
- Richard Osman coming to Harrogate for Theakston Crime Writing Festival 2021
- Programme revealed for Harrogate’s crime writing festival
Simon Theakston, executive director of T&R Theakston, said:
“The contest for this year’s Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year award has been fiercely fought – a reflection of the outstanding quality of all the longlisted and shortlisted crime fiction published within the last year.
“I offer Chris Whitaker my hearty congratulations for clinching the title on his first ever nomination for his powerful and insightful We Begin at the End.”
Special presentations were also made to Ian Rankin and Mark Billingham, the winners of the outstanding contribution to crime fiction award for 2021 and 2020 respectively.
Mr Rankin said:
“It’s such a privilege and an honour to receive this award, and especially to be in Harrogate to receive it in person.
“I’ve been a published writer for over thirty years but this past year has been uniquely challenging – for writers, readers and booksellers. It’s heartening to see the Theakston festival rise like a phoenix. Books continue to provide us with that wonderful mix of food for thought and escapism. I couldn’t be prouder to be a crime writer.”
The festival continues until Sunday. Special guests include Mark Billingham, Ann Cleeves, Elly Griffiths, Mick Herron, Clare Mackintosh, Val Mcdermid and Richard Osman.
Programme revealed for Harrogate’s crime writing festivalThe full programme for the world’s largest crime writing festival, which will bring household names to Harrogate next month, has been revealed.
Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival will be held at the town’s Old Swan Hotel from July 22 to 25.
The hotel is synonymous with the genre because it is where Agatha Christie disappeared to in 1926.
This year’s lineup Pointless star Richard Osman, espionage expert Mick Herron, mystery maestro Elly Griffiths and fan favourite Ann Cleeves.
The winner of the crime novel of the year award will be revealed on July 22.
Panel discussions will take place on the following days on historical crime fiction, the rise of science and tech and the genius of Agatha Christie.
The programme has been curated by festival programming chair Ian Rankin, who said:
“After nearly a year-and-a-half of successive lockdowns and restrictions, it is going to be absolutely marvellous to be able to safely gather together and celebrate the genre that we all love so dearly.”
The past 18 months have been full of ups and downs for the festival industry. Sharon Canavar, chief executive of Harrogate International Festivals, said:
“It has been a real journey to bring this year’s festival to life – working in festivals during covid is not for the faint-hearted! Ian Rankin has brought together a killer line-up.
“We are so grateful and proud that – after so many challenges – we are at long last able to share this programme with the public.”
Read more:
Full Festival Programme:
Thursday, July 22
8pm – THEAKSTON OLD PECULIER CRIME NOVEL OF THE YEAR 2021 AWARD CEREMONY
The shortlist includes Chris Whitaker with We Begin at The End, Rosamund Lupton with Three Hours, Elly Griffiths with The Lantern Men, Abir Mukherjee with Death in the East, Brian McGilloway with The Last Crossing and Trevor Wood with The Man on the Street.
Friday, July 23
9am – SPECIAL GUEST MICK HERRON INTERVIEWED BY N.J. COOPER
10.30am – GUNG-HO ACTION HERO
Join A.A. Dhand, Holly Watt, Simon Kernick, Steph Broadribb and Charles Cumming as they discuss the rise and fall of the gung-ho action man hero (and heroine). What is next for this well-worn and much beloved crime character?
12pm – HISTORICAL CRIME FICTION
Abir Mukherjee, Antonia Hodgson, Laura Shepherd-Robinson, S.G. MacLean and S.J. Parris join forces to discuss the future of historical crime fiction, taking Philip Kerr’s (alternative) history novels as a starting point.
2pm – PLANNERS VERSUS PANTSERS
Readers are often incredulous when certain crime writers say they do hardly any planning, preferring to see where a story and its characters takes them. Other authors absolutely need to know every twist and turn before starting to write. There are no hard and fast rules of course and this playful panel of Erin Kelly, Helen FitzGerald, Mark Edwards, Sarah Pinborough and Luca Veste will explore the merits and pitfalls of both routes.
3.30pm – WHO KILLED THE POLICE PROCEDURAL?
A panel of Mari Hannah, Olivia Kiernan, Parker Bilal, Will Dean and James Oswald will ask can the police procedural as we’ve known and loved it survive?
5pm – SPECIAL GUEST ANN CLEEVES INTERVIEWED BY STEPH MCGOVERN
8.30pm – SPECIAL GUESTS: CL TAYLOR AND CLARE MACKINTOSH IN CONVERSATION
10pm – TOP OF THE COPS
Elly Griffiths, Ian Rankin OBE, Mark Billingham, Martyn Waites and Abir Mukherjee to debate who’s ‘Top of the Cops’. Once they decide on a shortlist – the audience will crown the winner by show of hands. Who will it be? Marple or Columbo? Morse or Tennyson?
Saturday, July 24
9.00am – SPECIAL GUEST ELLY GRIFFITHS INTERVIEWED BY JOE HADDOW
10.30am – NAPOLEONS OF CRIME
Join C.J. Tudor, Craig Robertson, Liz Nugent, Luca Veste and Barry Forshaw as they consider what makes a great villain.
12.00pm – NEW BLOOD
Val McDermid’s sought-after New Blood panel returns on Saturday 24 July, with this year’s hotly-tipped debut authors including Anna Bailey, Greg Buchanan, Patricia Marques and Lara Thompson.
2.00pm – THE WRITING LIFE SCIENTIFIC
Panellists Fiona Erskine, Lin Anderson, Sarah Vaughan, Lesley Kelly and Professor Niamh Nic Daeid together explore the science behind a good crime novel, forensics to pathology.
3.30pm – WATCHING ME, WATCHING YOU, AHH HA
Join Chris Brookmyre, Denise Mina, Louise Candlish, Matt Wesolowski and Mark Lawson as they explore the impact of new and rapidly evolving technology on the fiction we read.
5.00pm – PLEASURES AND PITFALLS OF THE SHORT STORY
We ask our panellists Cath Staincliff, Jane Casey, Stuart Neville, Susi Holliday and Ian Rankin to share their perspectives of the pleasures and pitfalls of the short story.
8.30pm – SPECIAL GUEST MARK BILLINGHAM INTERVIEWED BY IAN RANKIN
10.00pm – LATE QUIZ NIGHT: VAL MCDERMID AND MARK BILLINGHAM
Sunday, July 25
9.30am – CHRISTIE’S ENDURING ALLURE
We ask Ragnar Jonasson, Ruth Ware, Sarah Phelps, Stuart Turton and Elly Griffiths to discuss the highs and lows of the crime genre’s Grand Dame: Agatha Christie, who famously disappeared from the festival’s home, the Old Swan Hotel.
11.00am – THE POLITICS OF CRIME
Join Brian McGilloway, Doug Johnstone, George Alagiah, Sarah Vaughan and Alan Johnson as they explore the rise and rise of the political drama, asking if uncertain political landscapes increase the desire for Machiavellian novels?
12.30pm – SPECIAL GUEST RICHARD OSMAN INTERVIEWED BY MARK BILLINGHAM
‘Nerve wracking’ decisions for Harrogate International FestivalsHarrogate International Festivals has said the lack of certainty around the roadmap has dampened its confidence and raised questions about future events.
The four-week delay to the roadmap means Harrogate International Festivals (HIF) is having to decide whether to gamble or play it safe.
The charity’s headline event, Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, is set to go ahead from July 22 which is three days after the new date for the end of restrictions.
So the HIF faces a dilemma – does it stay with a smaller event in line with current restrictions or does it gamble on all restrictions being over by then and sell more tickets.
But without insurance to cover any losses another change to the roadmap could mean HIF loses its investment.
With a “significantly lower” number of tickets sold and the extra costs to make it covid-safe, the event is already expensive for the charity.
Read more:
- Richard Osman headline act for Theakston Crime Writing Festival 2021
- Harrogate Fake Festival cancelled
Sharon Canavar, chief executive said:
“I’ve been nervous since we went back into lockdown in December. We didn’t really trust the June 21st date so we’ve set up the festival in line with restrictions from May 17th. But now we have to decide whether to stick with what we have or expand capacity. It’s nerve wracking making these decisions.”
HIF isn’t alone with many event companies, across the country, having to make difficult decisions.
Ms Canavar said it will wait for government assurances before adjusting its tiered ticket structure to increase capacity.
Brass band to give free live performance on Harrogate Stray tonightA brass band will give a free live performance tonight on the Stray in Harrogate from 7pm.
Harrogate Band will play hymns and gentle music alongside the In Memoriam artwork that was installed last week on West Park Stray as a memorial to NHS workers who have died due to covid.
In Memoriam, which is the first of a series of art installations organised by Harrogate International Festivals this summer, will be available to see until June 7.
Harrogate International Festivals organised tonight’s live music.
Harrogate Band consists of 25-30 members and has been performing for 51 years.
Band chairman Ed Dennis said;
“The band are delighted to be back performing after 14 months of not seeing each other of being able to make music together.
“We’re so pleased to be working with Harrogate International Festivals once again on this very special project.”
Catch them tonight in front of the memorial on the Stray from 7pm to 7:40pm.
Outdoor Shakespeare theatre returns to Harrogate’s Harlow Carr next monthLive theatre will make its comeback in Harrogate next month when Shakespeare is performed in the grounds of RHS Harlow Carr.
The family-friendly adaptation of The Comedy of Errors will be performed as part of Harrogate International Festivals.
Oddsocks Productions, which is known for its high-energy performances of Shakespeare classics, will tell the story of a servant and master from Syracuse in search of their long-lost twin brothers.
As the name suggests there are plenty of twists and turns leading to a happy ending which defies all probability.
The production company is staging the play in the grounds of the gardens on July 6 and 7, and promises lots of audience participation.
Sharon Canavar, Harrogate International Festivals chief executive, said:
“As an organisation that is best known for delivering a wide range of cultural events and festivals, the last 15 months have been particularly challenging for us.
“Oddsocks Productions have been a firm favourite of ours for decades and I couldn’t think of a more fitting play than The Comedy of Errors to help bring some much-needed laughter to the town.
“So pack your picnic and join the crazy theatre troupe for a festival of music, magic and mayhem.”
Read more:
- Shakespearean theatre will also arrive in Ripon
- Longlist revealed for Harrogate’s crime-writing competition
The audience is advised to prepare for all types of weather during the outdoor event, with rugs and deckchairs highly recommended.
Tickets can be bought here. Adult tickets cost £22.
Giant public artwork coming to the Stray remembers NHS covid deadA huge art installation that commemorates NHS staff and care workers who died from covid will come to West Park Stray in Harrogate this month.
In Memoriam measures 36 metres in diameter and features more than 100 flags made from hospital bed sheets arranged in the form of a medical symbol.
It’s been designed by award-winning artist Luke Jerram and will be on the Stray from May 28 until June 7 before being transported to Edinburgh, Fleetwood and Weston-super-Mare.
Work installing it on the Stray will begin on May 24.
In Memoriam will be the first in a series of installations and events delivered in the months ahead by Harrogate International Festivals, which this year celebrates its 55th anniversary.
Read more:
- Another seven covid cases in Harrogate district
- Communities thanked for covid response with commemorative plaques
Sharon Canavar, Harrogate International Festivals chief executive, said
“Two years ago, we were lucky enough to bring Luke’s Museum of the Moon to St Wilfrid’s Church, which was one of the highlights of that summer’s international festival, and was visited by more than 10,000 people.
“As an arts charity delivering festivals and events, we were first to close and will be the last to open, but we can’t just open the doors on our venues and go straight back to normal.
“We wanted to create something unique in Harrogate that acknowledged the last year whilst allowing us to create a safe, outdoor event for the town.
“We don’t want people to just look at In Memoriam from afar, we want people to experience it; we want individuals, families and friends to walk into the heart of it; we want them to sit under the flags and quietly reflect the events of the last 15 months.”
In Memoriam is being supported by Hornbeam Park, Harrogate BID, and Swainsons Funeral Directors.
Longlist revealed for Harrogate’s top crime-writing prizeIan Rankin and Mark Billingham are among those on today’s longlist for the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year award.
Organised by Harrogate International Festivals, the award is widely regarded as the most prestigious in crime fiction.
This year’s 18-person longlist transports readers around the world from California to Sweden and Calcutta to a remote Irish island and explores every subgenre from Scandi noir to murderous families.
The line-up of returning champions is led by crime fiction titan Ian Rankin, who has received a nod for his A Song for The Dark Times, Mark Billingham, hoping for a third win with his Cry Baby, and Steve Cavanagh looking to beat the competition with Fifty Fifty.
Elly Griffiths has received her seventh nomination for The Lantern Men.
New names include Lucy Foley with her number one Sunday Times Best Seller ‘The Guest List’ and Chris Whitaker with ‘We Begin at The End’.
The winner of the awards, which are being held for the 17th year, will be announced on July 22 at the opening evening of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival.
Read more:
- Northern Aldborough Festival set to return this June
- Harrogate International Festival appoints new honorary president
People can vote for the winner here.
The longlist was selected by an academy of crime writing authors, agents, editors, reviewers and members of the Theakston Old Peculier crime writing festival programming committee. Representatives from sponsors T&R Theakston Ltd, the Express, and WHSmith also took part.
The winner receives £3,000 and a handmade, engraved beer barrel from Theakston Old Peculier.
The full longlist for the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year 2021 is:
- Cry Baby by Mark Billingham (Little, Brown Book Group, Sphere)
- The Other Passenger by Louise Candlish (Simon & Schuster)
- The Cutting Place by Jane Casey (HarperCollins, HarperFiction)
- Fifty Fifty by Steve Cavanagh (The Orion Publishing Group, Orion Fiction)
- Black River by Will Dean (Oneworld Publications, Point Blank)
- Between Two Evils by Eva Dolan (Bloomsbury Publishing, Raven Books)
- The Guest List by Lucy Foley (HarperCollins, HarperFiction)
- The Lantern Men by Elly Griffiths (Quercus, Quercus Fiction)
- The Big Chill by Doug Johnstone (Orenda Books)
- Three Hours by Rosamund Lupton (Penguin Random House UK, Viking)
- Still Life by Val McDermid (Little, Brown Book Group, Sphere)
- The Last Crossing by Brian McGilloway (Little, Brown Book Group, Constable)
- Death in the East by Abir Mukherjee (VINTAGE, Harvill Secker)
- Our Little Cruelties by Liz Nugent (Penguin, Sandycove)
- A Song For The Dark Times by Ian Rankin (Orion, Orion Fiction)
- Remain Silent by Susie Steiner (HarperCollins Publishers, The Borough Press)
- We Begin At The End by Chris Whitaker (Bonnier Books UK, Zaffre)
- The Man on the Street by Trevor Wood (Quercus, Quercus Fiction)