HAY FESTIVAL UNVEILS 2021 PROGRAMME

From: Hay Festival
Published: Tue Apr 20 2021


Speakers include novelists Ali Smith, Lisa McInerney, Isabel Allende, Deborah Levy, Rachel Cusk, Colm Toíbín, Ethan Hawke, Jojo Moyes, Sjón, Maggie Shipstead, Val McDermid, Raven Leilani, Brit Bennett, Caleb Azumah Nelson, Marian Keyes, Tahmima Anam and Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa; artist David Hockney; poets Simon Armitage, Hollie McNish, Lemn Sissay, Michael Rosen, Benjamin Zephaniah, Gillian Clarke and Mererid Hopwood; Global Teacher Prize winner Andria Zafirakou; economists Daniel Kahneman and former Bank of England governor Mark Carney; lawyer Gina Miller; journalists and commentators Anne Applebaum, Gary Younge, Laura Bates, Bonnie Greer and Caitlin Moran; rapper Guvna B; scientists Suzanne Simard, Nobel Laureate Didier Queloz, Pragya Agarwal, Alice Roberts, Heidi Larson and the world's first human cyborg Peter Scott-Morgan; historians Natalie Haynes, Malcom Gladwell, Sathnam Sanghera and Kehinde Andrews; philosopher Noam Chomsky; former Australian PM Julia Gillard, former British PM Gordon Brown and politicians Vince Cable, Ed Miliband, Jess Philips, and COP-26 president Alok Sharma; comedians Mel Giedroyc, Robert Webb, Frank Skinner and Graham Norton; actors Russell Tovey, Michael Sheen and Stephen Fry; Reverend Richard Coles; and children's writers and illustrators Frank Cottrell-Boyce, Patience Agbabi, Cressida Cowell, David Walliams and Radzi Chinyanganya; while star lineups for the two Festival galas will be revealed on Saturday 1 May

Hay Festival has today revealed its free digital programme for its 34th spring edition, bringing writers and readers together for an inspiring array of conversations, debates, workshops and performances online, Wednesday 26 May to Sunday 6 June

Over 12 days, more than 200 acclaimed writers, global policy makers, historians, poets, pioneers and innovators will take part in this year's Festival, launching the best new fiction and non-fiction. It will interrogate some of the biggest issues of our time, from building a better world post-pandemic to tackling the compound crises of climate change, inequality, and challenges to truth and democracy.

Landmark Festival conversations will consider a series of momentous anniversaries and ongoing global issues: one year on from the killing of George Floyd, poet Lemn Sissay presents a three-part series in his name, exploring racism and the systemic changes we need to see in the UK and around the world; 300 years since Great Britain appointed its first prime minister, a series of PM300 panels explores issues of leadership and the global crisis of democracy; ahead of COP26, the Festival's Hay-on-Earth programme spotlights what's at stake; and Everyday Sexism founder Laura Bates leads a trio of discussions on gender equality.

Winners of Hay Festival Medals 2021 will be celebrated, daily Festival lectures will offer thought leaders and experts the platform to dive deeper into their chosen subjects, and the Festival celebrates debut writers changing the world in its 10@10 series at 10pm every day.

Each morning will begin with HAYDAYS sessions for young people and families, while a series of creative digital workshops runs throughout the Festival. Plus, the Programme for Schools will once more be beamed to pupils across the UK, offering primary and secondary pupils the chance to enjoy the Festival's programming free anywhere, 24-28 May.

Events will be broadcast live from temporary studios in Richard Booth's Bookshop, Hay-on-Wye, to hayfestival.org/wales. Registered users will have the opportunity to interact with fellow audience members online and pose their questions to speakers. All events will be closed captioned and available to watch free for 24 hours after the live broadcast before being added to the Festival's subscription archive at hayfestival.org/hayplayer.

Hay Festival 2021 is supported by lead sponsors Visit Wales and Baillie Gifford, and by grant funding from Arts Council England's Cultural Recovery Fund. While events are free to attend, donations to Hay Festival Foundation will be welcomed throughout at hayfestival.org/donate to support upcoming projects and secure the Festival for generations to come.

Signed books from Festival speakers are available to order now from the Festival bookshop at hayfestival.org/shop along with new lines of merchandise with proceeds supporting Hay Festival here and around the world.
Heather Salisbury, Hay Festival artist manager, said: "The support for Hay Festival over the past year has been overwhelming, with our Haymakers, partners, funders and sponsors giving us an incredible opportunity to reinvent what a Festival can be. This spring we beam our programme to you from Richard Booth's Bookshop in the heart of Hay-on-Wye, welcoming writers, readers, thinkers and dreamers together from around the world to join our digital party. We'll meet this moment of challenge and change with inspiration and vision, and place our trust in the wisdom of writers to guide us through. Join us."

PROGRAMME IN DEPTH

HEADLINE GALAS
Hay Festival 2021 kicks off Wednesday 26 May with the inaugural Opening Night Gala: a night of literary delights as we celebrate the power of words to offer hope in our darkest times with a selection of star readings hosted by Natalie Haynes. On Saturday 5 June, a special From Women to the World Gala sees women writers, thinkers and performers read excerpts from The Penguin Book of Feminist Writing and From Women to the World: Letters for the Female Century. Performers for the two galas will be revealed on Saturday 1 May.

LITERARY GEMS
The Festival launches some of the best new fiction with an exclusive film screening by Ali Smith (Summer) and conversations with Lisa McInerney (The Rules of Revelation), Lionel Shriver (Should We Stay or Should We Go), Rachel Cusk (Second Place), Ethan Hawke (A Bright Ray of Darkness), Jo Lloyd (The Earth, Thy Great Exchequer, Ready Lies), Val McDermid and Kathryn Briggs (Resistance), Robert Jones Jnr (The Prophets), Brit Bennett (The Vanishing Half), Tahmima Anam (The Startup Wife), Sjón (Red Milk), Mel Giedroyc (The Best Things), Annie Macmanus (Mother Mother), Jon McGregor (Lean, Fall Stand), Monique Roffey (The Mermaid of Black Conch), Sarah Winman (Still Life), Rivers Solomon (Sorrowland), Hafsa Zayyan (We Are all Birds of Uganda), Jessie Greengrass (The High House), Dylan Moore (Many Rivers to Cross), Maggie Shipstead (Great Circle), Alice Albinia (Cwen) in conversation with Lily Cole, and Graham Norton launches his new book club with Marian Keyes (Grown Ups) and Richard Osman (The Thursday Murder Club). There's standout poetry with Simon Armitage (A Vertical Art), Hollie McNish (Slug) and Creative Wales Hay Festival International Fellow Mererid Hopwood. Plus, critically acclaimed writers share their memoirs including Horatio Clare (Heavy Light) and Deborah Levy (Real Estate).

10@10 DEBUT NOVELISTS
Each night of the Festival is dedicated to the best debut fiction, showcasing the Festival's selection of future award winners alongside some established interviewers at 10pm:

Catherine Menon (Fragile Monsters) in conversation with Colm Toíbín Raven Leilani (Luster) in conversation with Pandora Sykes Ailsa McFarlane (Highway Blue) in conversation with Thea Lenarduzzi Natasha Brown (Assembly) in conversation with Meena Kandasamy Sam Riviere (Dead Souls) in conversation with Megan Nolan (Acts of Desperation) Rebecca Watson (Little, Scratch) in conversation with Thea Lenarduzzi Robert Webb (Come Again) in conversation with Georgina Godwin Julianne Pachico (The Anthill) in conversation with Rosie Goldsmith Caleb Azumah Nelson (Open Water) in conversation with Candice Brathwaite Patricia Lockwood (no one is talking about this) in conversation with Nina Stibbe.
HAYDAYS AND YA WONDERS
Morning sessions for children and young adults feature Baroness Floella Benjamin, David Walliams, Radzi Chinyanganya (Move Like a Lion), Pamela Butchart (The Broken Leg of Doom), Michael Morpurgo (The Puffin Keeper), Chris Riddell, Dapo Adeola, Cressida Cowell (The Wizards of Once), Benjamin Zephaniah (Windrush Child), Nadia Shireen (The Slug in Love), Angie Thomas (Concrete Rose), Julian Clary and David Roberts, Michelle Paver (Skin Taker), Isabella Tree (When We Went Wild), and Laura Dockrill, while Joe Wicks presents Joe's Family Foods in conversation with The Happy Pear twins David and Stephen Flynn and the winner of the YA Book Prize 2021 talks to Sarah Crossan. A series of digital workshops run throughout the Festival at hayfestival.org/education where audiences can get creative at any time. Meanwhile, the digital Programme for Schools runs 24-28 May (see overview below).

CROSSING BORDERS
Collaborations with Hay Festival events around the world include conversations with Chilean writer Isabel Allende; Canadian anthropologist Wade Davis; Peruvian Nobel Prizewinner Mario Vargas Llosa and Canadian politician Michael Ignatieff; Granta Magazine presents a special showcase of Spanish writers and the winner of the International Man Booker Prize 2021 discuss their work; Book Aid International hosts a conversation between Lord Paul Boateng, pioneering library founder Ahmed Dahir Elmi and Somali-born British journalist and writer Rageh Omaar; and we mark 100 years of English PEN in a discussion around free speech with writers Lydia Cacho and Philippe Sands.

GEORGE FLOYD: ONE YEAR ON
Author and poet Lemn Sissay curates a special three-part Festival series to mark the one-year anniversary of George Floyd's killing: diaspora writers Maaza Mengiste and Aida Edemariam discuss the ways fiction can change the non-fictional world; acclaimed memoirists Nadia Owusu (Aftershocks) and Hannah Pool (My Fathers' Daughter) discuss the power of writing one's own story; and AmericanBritish playwright, novelist, critic and broadcaster Bonnie Greer OBE, talks about her life in writing and activism. Meanwhile, a Still Breathing event features actresses Suzette Llewellyn and Suzanne Packer and
athlete Colin Jackson.

HAY-ON-EARTH: COUNTDOWN TO COP26
The latest environmental science, sustainable policies and creative responses to the climate crisis are brought into focus in a 22-part Hay-on-Earth series with COP-26 president Alok Sharma along with researchers, writers and campaigners Suzanne Simard (Finding the Mother Tree), Peter Wohlleben (The Heartbeat of Trees), Owen Hewlett and Emily Shuckburgh, Jemma Wadham (Ice Rivers), Helen Scales (The Brilliant Abyss), Ray Mears (We Are Nature), Jojo Mehta, Chris Packham & Megan McCubbin (Back to Nature), Danny Dorling (Slowdown), Dieter Helm (Net Zero), George Monbiot, Jay Griffiths (Why Rebel?), Elizabeth Kolbert (Under a White Sky), Patrick Barkham (Wild Child), Anna Jones (One: Pot, Pan, Planet), Diane Cook (The New Wilderness), Imbolo Mbue (How Beautiful We Were), Rob Penn (Slow Rise), Lucy Jones (Losing Eden), Jonathan Drori (Around the World in 80 Plants), Colin Tudge (The Great Re-Think), Richard Walker (The Green Grocer), J. B. MacKinnon (The Day the World Stops Shopping) and more. Festivalgoers are also encouraged to share their own creative responses to the climate crisis via the new Write for Change project at hayfestival.org/write-for-change.

RESET: OUR POST-COVID FUTURE
Festival speakers discuss the impacts of the pandemic and share their thoughts on our post-Covid future as Reverend Richard Coles (The Madness of Grief) leads an event on grief in the time of Covid19; Peter Ricketts (Hard Choices) and Matthew D'Ancona (Identity, Ignorance and Innovation) talk the future of politics; Noam Chomsky presents Consequences of Capitalism, Rachel Clarke presents Breathtaking: Inside the NHS in a Time of Pandemic alongside Michael Rosen (Many Different Kinds of Love) and Jim Down (Life Support); Andria Zafirakou (Those Who Can, Teach) discusses the future of education; Ed Miliband presents Go Big: How to Fix Our World; Jess Philips joins Gina Miller and Francesca Martinez for a discussion on This is how we Come Back Stronger with James Plunkett; Pandora Sykes talks How Do we Know We're Doing it Right?; Martin Robinson (You're Not the Man You're Supposed to Be) and Guvna B (Unspoken) discuss toxic masculinity with poet Owen Sheers; former Culture Minister Ed Vaizey chairs a discussion on the future of arts funding with The Whitechapel Gallery's Iwona Blazwick, the government's Commissioner for Cultural Recovery and Renewal, Lord Neil Mendoza and Nina Plowman of CulturalComms; and Alastair Campbell (Living Better) and Ruby Wax discuss mental health.

GENDER EQUALITY IN THE TIME OF COVID-19
Everyday Sexism founder Laura Bates leads a series of discussions around motherhood and the ways Covid-19 has impacted it: journalist Caitlin Moran, data scientist Pragya Agarwal and activist Joeli Brearley join Bates to look at the growing gender divide; and writers Margaret Reynolds, Nell Frizzell and Donna Freitas talk to Emma Gannon about how our ideas of motherhood are changing

PM300: DEMOCRACY IN CRISIS
It's 300 years since the UK first appointed a prime minister. A Festival series draws on lessons from the past to inform solutions to the global crisis in democracy in conversations with former Australian PM Julia Gillard (Women in Leadership), Mary Ann Sieghart (The Authority Gap), Sir Anthony Seldon (The Impossible Office) and Jim Naughtie, Steve Richards (The Prime Ministers), Vince Cable (Money and Power) and Grace Blakeley, Carole Walker (The Lobby Life) and more.

THE PAST REIMAGINED
Historians share their fresh takes on past events: Alice Roberts talks Ancestors; Malcom Gladwell talks The Bomber Mafia: A Story Set in War; Sathnam Sanghera (Empireland) and Kehinde Andrews (The New Age of Empire) discuss Britain's hidden history; Lucasta Miller (Keats) and Jonathan Bate (Bright Star, Green Light) mark 200 years of Keats with Miranda Seymour; Nick Crane talks Latitude; Helena Attlee talks Lev's Violin; and the Wolfson History Prize presents this year's shortlisted writers.

SCIENCE AND WONDER
The world's first human cyborg Peter Scott-Morgan talks to Stephen Fry; a special event with The Royal Society showcases the best new science writing with Gaia Vince, Jim Al-Khalili, Camilla Pang and more; Daniel Kahneman, Olivier Sibony and Cass R. Sunstein talk to Angela Duckworth for the British Academy Platform; Jennifer Lucy Allan talks The Foghorn's Lament; and Nick Hunt (Outlandish) and Emma Gregg (The Flightless Traveller) discuss the future of travel.

DAILY FESTIVAL LECTURES
Thought leaders deliver headline think pieces throughout the Festival, tackling some of the biggest questions of our times, including the Pulitzer Prizewinning journalist Anne Applebaum (Christopher Hitchens Lecture); Gary Younge (Aneurin Bevan Lecture), Gordon Brown (Raymond Williams Lecture) with Seven Ways to Change the World, former Bank of England governor Mark Carney (The Friends Lecture) with Values, Welsh poet Gillian Clarke (Anthea Bell Lecture) with The Gododdin, Jojo Moyes (The Reading Agency Lecture), Heidi Larson (John Maddox Lecture), Jini Reddy (the inaugural Jan Morris Lecture) with Wanderland, and Margaret McMillan (British Pugwash Lecture).
Leading universities share their latest research in the Festival's new Lunchtime Lectures series: actor Michael Sheen joins Daniel G. Williams and Leanne Wood to discuss Raymond Williams at 100; Nobel laureate Didier Queloz talks exoplanets; Michael Bresalier, lecturer in the history of medicine talks living with Covid-19; geography and earth sciences expert Siobhan Maderson talks about designing a post-pandemic future; professor of history Suzanne Schwarz talks histories of enslaved Africans; politics lecturer Jennifer Mathers talks women in leadership; neuroscientist Becky Inkster looks at the mental health of young people; Duncan Westbury talks sustainable food production; Abigail Rokison-Woodall, Tracy Irish, Angie Wootten and Charlotte Arrowsmith present Signing Shakespeare; Rebecca Ruth Gould and Kayvan Tahmasebian discuss translation as a form of activism; and cultural historian Karen Harvey explores an early example of #FakeNews with The Imposteress Rabbit Breeder

GET CREATIVE
A series of Festival sessions encourage audiences to get creative with Sarah Raven (A Year Full of Flowers) and Carolyn Dunster (Cut & Dry); Robert Diament and Russell Tovey present Talk Art in conversation with Olivia Laing; David Hockney and Martin Gayford talk Spring Cannot Be Cancelled; Charles Saumarez Smith (The Art Museum in Modern Times) talks to Erica Wagner about the art of curation in our Eccles Centre Platform; and Meadow Arts presents a discussion between artists Tom Jeffreys, Alex Hartley and Anne de Charmant.

COMEDY, MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT
Leading comics present their latest work in evening events with Pippa Evans (Improv Your Life), Tom Allen (No Shame), Frank Skinner (A Comedian's Prayer Book) and Marcus Brigstocke, while musician Pete Paphides talks Broken Greek, Sam Lee presents The Nightingale: Notes on a Songbird and the QI Elves close the Festival with an evening of trivia.

PROGRAMME FOR SCHOOLS
KS1 pupils can enjoy performance poetry from Joseph Coelho, outdoor adventures with Michael Holland (I Ate Sunshine for Breakfast), timely tips on How to Change the World with Rashmi Sirdeshpande, Simon Mole (I Love My Bike) and Maria Vegara (Little People, BIG DREAMS).

KS2 pupils will be invited to get creative in events with Matt Lucas and his Very Very Very Very Very Very Very Silly Book of Pranks, to go on location with Frank Cottrell-Boyce (Noah's Gold) and Abi Elphinstone (The Crackledawn Dragon), to join Robert Winston as he explores the world of science, to discover the Earth's Incredible Oceans with Jess French, and to take part in conversations with Patience Agbabi (The Time Thief), Zanib Mian (Planet Omar), Alex Wharton (Daydreams and Jellybeans), Adam Kay (Kay's Anatomy), David Baddiel (Future Friend) and Konnie Huq.
And KS3 and 4 pupils will find inspiration in dynamic events led by authors, poets, illustrators and performers exploring important issues for young people to consider today, from the environment and sustainability to inclusivity, wellbeing and the importance of reading for pleasure. Guests include Benjamin Dean (Me my dad and the end of the Rainbow), Robert Muchamore (The Cherub Series), Liz Kessler (When the World Was Ours), Kiran Millwood Hargrave (A Secret of Birds & Bone), Phil Earle (Surrounded by Stories), Liz Hyder (Bearmouth), Manjeet Maan (The Crossing), Jeffrey Boakye (Musical Truth), Lisa Williamson (First Day of My Life), and Patrick Ness on adaptation and screenwriting.

The Festival is part of a global series of digital initiatives to connect, inspire and entertain book lovers and home educators throughout the year. These include the Hay Festival Podcast, a monthly book club, and release of the free Programme for Schools archive and Beacons Project workshops, while Hay Player continues to offer access to the full Hay Festival audio-video archive.

Keep up to date with Hay Festival news by signing up to the newsletter or follow on:
Twitter: @hayfestival / @hayfestival_esp
Facebook: hayfestival / hayfestivalimaginaelmundo
Instagram: @hayfestival
#HayFestival2021

Sessions in English and Spanish can be rediscovered anywhere in the world on Hay Player, a subscription service offering the world's greatest writers on film and audio for £15/15 per year.
Company: Hay Festival
Contact Name: Candice Pearson
Contact Email: candice@hayfestival.org

Visit website »