A very merry Christmas from Cheltenham Festivals...

A Very Merry Christmas from Cheltenham Festivals...

'Tis just weeks before Christmas, and here at Cheltenham Festivals we're beginning to feel distinctly, well, Festive! To celebrate this jolliest of seasons we asked the stars of this year's Literature Festival to share with us a special Christmas Memory.

Every day of advent we'll be unwrapping a different Christmas Memory for your delight and delectation. And as an extra-special treat, every Festive-Friday we'll be hearing from our Festival Directors and giving away Festive-al prizes galore!

So sit back, grab a mince pie and unwrap a very special Festive-al memory...


Thursday 18 August 2011

Into the archives

Yesterday, our Marketing Executive Candice Pearson set out on her own journey of discovery. Her quest for an ancient recording of Joseph Heller in Cheltenham took her deep into the festival archives...

The irreplacable Heller tapes

Searching the archives is always an experience; be it frustrating, disappointing or elating.

Our archive is located in the deepest darkest corner of Town Hall’s warren-like basement. It’s stacked high with posters and programmes and, most interestingly, thousands of recordings of past events, many of which were done by eminent authors who are no longer with us.

I was looking for recordings of Catch-22 author Joseph Heller, who first appeared at Cheltenham in 1962. He later appeared in 1993 and then 1999, just two months before his death.


The cassette tapes (remember those?) proved surprisingly easy to find, getting a tape player to listen to them however was not so simple. Pressing the clunky rewind and fast forward buttons, I was seized by a forgotten fear: what if the tape got chewed? These tapes are literally irreplaceable.

Listening to Heller’s thick Brooklyn accent ringing out from Cheltenham’s past seems almost magical, and formatting these recordings so everyone can share the experience is now on our to-do list. Keep an eye on The Bonne Maman Big Read page for uploads.

After listening to Heller, I moved on to an interview with another solider, inspiring amputee Guy Disney. He will be at this year’s Festival with fellow wounded soldiers, talking about their recent unaided trek to the North Pole. (You may have seen coverage on television, particularly when Prince Harry joined them for a few days).

Coincidentally Guy is an old school friend of mine and so it was with added awe that I wrote about his astounding achievments. People show extraordinary courage and tenacity everyday, but when it is someone you remember from school, their feats are all the more astonishing. I look forward to hearing from his comrades at the Festival.

Candice Pearson
Marketing Executive



Friday 12 August 2011

New Kid on the Blog

What's it like to be the new boy on the festival block? The latest member of the team, Charles Haynes, tells all about his first five days working on the world's oldest literature festival.

This year I’m the proverbial new kid on the literature festival team. Many of the others are dab-hands at this, some of them 6 or 7 years into a life stretch, but this year’s festival will be a fresh experience for me. Even still - I’m not the only one feeling the excitement leading up to the festival; it’s quite palpable in the office.

The more experienced team members regale me with tales of mid-festival camaraderie, half-shared sandwiches between events, favourite authors of years’ past and stories that start with the enigmatic ‘you should have been there…’.


Among all this talk of legendary festivals though, they say this year will be special. Old stories include bedraggled queuing in the rain; even older stories include long forgotten venues across town. This year though, we’re compact, we’re concise… we’re all covered-up. We’re in the festival quarter!

In a single, albeit large corner of Cheltenham we’re planning a literary paradise, and everyone’s invited. So, whether this is my first literature festival or my twenty-first, there’s a feeling that this may very well be the best.

The festival's just eight weeks away now, and I absolutely can't wait....


Charles Haynes
Festival Manager

Wednesday 10 August 2011

The journey begins...

We invited Cheltenham Festivals Members to join us yesterday for a very special event to launch  the Literature programme. Membership Manager Laura Brand spills the beans...

We hosted a fantastic Director's Picks LIVE evening over at Cheltenham Waterstone's last night. Lots of Cheltenham Festivals members came along to meet Artistic Director Sarah Smyth and the Festival team to hear their insights, personal picks and recommendations from the programme. With a special late night opening of the Cheltenham store, and a glass of wine in hand, it was a book lover's dream!

All of our Members  received an advance copy of the programme earlier this week, and it was great to find out what you're all looking forward to booking. Here are some of my favourite shots from the evening.

A private view in a bookshop - what could be better?!


























Wine and nibbles were served...















Members met the team who put the programme together


















Thanks everyone for coming to a brilliant night, and thank you to Waterstone's for looking after us so well. And my personal picks? I'll be indulging my English high-life obsession - Downton Abbey, Nancy Mitford and Wallis Simpson. I can't wait! 


Laura Brand
Membership Manager

Director's Picks LIVE was a free event for Cheltenham Festivals Members – visit www.cheltenhamfestivals.com/membership to find out more and become a Member today.

Tuesday 9 August 2011

Joy, Terror and Exhaustion…

Behind the scenes with the Literature Festival Artistic Director Sarah Smyth as she sees the final Festival brochure for the very first time...

The Festival brochure
I have been asked to write 250 words on what it's like to open the  brochure for the first time. Well that seems a simple enough brief. Something enthusiastic, a few words of reflection, an exhortation to read the brochure, enjoy it and join us at the Festival. Job done. But what does it really feel like?

When I started work in publishing one of my first jobs was to unpack and hand over the newly-minted books - sometimes into the hands of the authors themselves. The pride, elation and terror I feel as I open the first  brochure always reminds me of the look on their faces as they held their own novel for the first time. I remember one day opening the package to find a book printed upside-down, another time finding one with entirely blank pages and - most memorably - with the author's name missed off the jacket entirely. Nothing like that has happened at the Festival - yet - but I still get an echo of that anxiety as I nurse the very first copy.

Opening the brochure marks a crossroads for us - the translation of all those events from the minds of those of us who've worked on them into a solid reality. The dawning realisation that the Festival will actually happen, that there’s no going back and the feeling of pride in what we've achieved so far. Every year someone always compares the arrival of the brochure to having a baby. Painful but worth it. And - just like having children - here at the Festival we seem genetically programmed to forget the joy, terror and exhaustion and in a years' time to want to do it all over again.

With best wishes,

Sarah Smyth
Artistic Director of The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival  

The full programme for The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival 2011 is available to view and download online now.  


Thursday 4 August 2011

Welcome to The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival Blog 2011...

Meet the organisers, share your views and get behind-the-scenes gossip

Check back soon for updates....

The Team @ Cheltenham Festivals