Carol Ann Duffy, Richard Dawkins, Grayson Perry and Alan Bennett are amongst a string of high-profile names speaking at the 25th Charleston Festival. Set up to reflect the intellectual and creative ideals of Bloomsbury group artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, the original inhabitants of Charlest
Carol Ann Duffy, Richard Dawkins, Grayson Perry and Alan Bennett are amongst a string of high-profile names speaking at the 25th Charleston Festival.
Set up to reflect the intellectual and creative ideals of Bloomsbury group artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, the original inhabitants of Charleston, the Festival retains its distinctive sense of intimacy and unique cultural context.
Today’s Festival echoes the hub of ideas which the house became in the early twentieth century, when it hosted John Maynard Keynes, Virginia Woolf, T S Eliot and E M Forster. Visitors to the Festival this year can look forward to an equally stellar line-up.
Events with availability include:
• A debate on the most significant cultural moments in the past 25 years, with a panel including Peter Bazalgette and Nicholas Kenyon
• Celebrated Northern Irish poet Paul Muldoon reading from across the range of his work and that of his friend and mentor, the late Seamus Heaney
• Award-winning American author Lorrie Moore discussing her work and writing in the short form with Lynne Truss
An array of novelists of international repute include Ian McEwan, Robert Harris and Edward St Aubyn; Alison Macleod and Maggie Gee on being inspired by Virginia Woolf; global titans of literature Karl Ove Knausgaard and Tim Winton; Michael Ondaatje on his writing life beyond The English Patient.
Discussions of history and politics range from Jung Chang in conversation with Jon Snow about China’s Iron Lady to James Naughtie and Ben Macintyre on espionage. Charleston was established as a haven for writers and artists who were conscientious objectors in WWI, and speakers looking at the war from the perspective of a century’s distance include Max Hastings, Mark Bostridge, Helen Dunmore and Michael Morpurgo.
Moving towards the late May bank holiday weekend, other highlights with a few seats left include Christopher Hampton and William Nicolson on transforming recent history into literature, film and drama, and Rachel Cooke and Ben Watt discussing our image of the 1950s.
Diana Reich, Artistic Director of the Festival, said:“Eighty years after Virginia Woolf famously discerned a seismic shift in the human condition – ‘on or about December, 1910, human character changed’ – the Festival was born with the aim of making Charleston once again a centre for exploring new ideas and a hub of artistic and intellectual life. As we celebrate a landmark anniversary, we look forward to a bonanza Festival and to continuing to set the agenda, whilst remaining in touch with our unique heritage.”
Tickets are available from Brighton Dome Ticket Office, open 10am – 6pm Monday – Saturday.