Schedule &

Program

Day One

Saturday, 31 July 2021

 

John Lloyd: IQ versus QI

10 am - 10:45 am, £10

In this session kicking off the Festival, Joanne Ooi, EA Festival founder, will interview John Lloyd, the UK’s most celebrated comedy producer, responsible for national treasures like Blackadder, Spitting Image and QI. Comedy, however, will not be the central topic. Instead, Lloyd will explain the importance of curiosity, why there’s no difference between culture with a big or little “c” and how he banished boredom a long time ago.

William Sieghart: Why Poetry?

11:30 am - 12:15 pm, £10

The Poetry Pharmacist, William Sieghart, will talk about the healing power of poetry and why he set up National Poetry Day and the Forward Prizes for Poetry. He will also read from his latest anthology, The Poetry Pharmacy Returns: More Prescriptions for Courage, Healing and Hope.

Safiya Kamaria Kinshasa

12:30 am - 1:15pm, £10

Description to come…

Susie Dent: The Future of English

1:30 pm - 2:15 pm, £10

Renowned lexicographer, author and Countdown’s resident word expert, Susie Dent will share her observations about how language has changed over the past twenty years, the pros and cons of tech and what her favourite words are.

Dr. Gavin Francis: Writing as a Doctor

2:30 pm - 3:15 pm, £10

Award-winning doctor-author, Dr. Gavin Francis, recounts the first-hand experiences of COVID-19 that led him to write his most recent book, Intensive Care, published last year. But perhaps more fascinating, he explains how being a medical doctor has moulded his insights and perspective on the human condition.

Mike Figgis: "Can't put this guy in a box"

3:30 pm - 4:15 pm, £10

Mike Figgis is a polymath extraordinaire and legendary auteur on many fronts. Consequently, a conversation with him doesn't deserve to be shoehorned into a single subject, except perhaps "creativity". Among the questions that we will ask him are, why are you obsessed with Asian film? What is responsible for your bottomless drive to create and learn every day? What art form do you enjoy engaging in the most and why? What is your favourite piece of output as a creator and why? On that note, please feel free to send us the questions you'd like us to ask Mike before the Festival at contact@eafestival.com.

Evelyn Glennie & Rosey Chan: The Power of Listening

5 pm - 6:30 pm, £24

A captivating double bill with Evelyn Glennie and Rosey Chan: The first half of the session will feature Evelyn giving a talk and musical demonstration about How to Listen. In the second half, pianist and composer, Rosey, will play piano and electronica across a range of styles and genres. To finish, the two of them will join up and talk to John Lloyd about their careers, music-making and how they both love to collaborate.

Roman Kosyakov: Scintillating Pianism

7 pm - 8 pm, £18

In this intimate recital by the 2018 Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition winner, Roman will treat us to a program comprised of [Liszt][Beethoven] and [Chopin]. (The exact pieces to be performed on the evening will be announced here in May 2021.)

Click here to buy tickets.

Day Two

Sunday, 1 August 2021

Panel: “Let’s talk about sex!”

10 am - 11 am, £12

Rowan Pelling, Daisy Buchanan and Jonny Bayfield compare notes on how behaviour and attitudes towards sex and relationships have changed because of mass media, technology, social media and economic forces. Each panelist brings their unique personal and demographic perspective to bear on the subject, illuminating the dilemmas of dating and loving in today's society.

Panel: Art in East Anglia

11:20 am - 12:15 pm, £10

In this panel discussion, veterans of the East Anglia art scene discuss the challenges of making a living as an artist in the region and funding ground-breaking art projects, all while broadening public audiences and pushing the envelope of creativity and experimentation. In short, what do we need to create or put in place in order to make the regional art scene flourish?

Charles Saumarez Smith: The Future of Museums

12:30 pm - 1:15 pm, £10

In this festival session, Charles Saumarez Smith, one of the world’s most eminent art historians and former director of both the National Gallery and Royal Academy of Arts, introduces his new book, The Art Museum in Modern Times, and explains how the modern museum has evolved to address the changing nature of art appreciation and museum-going. COVID-19 has upended museums’ traditional business model reliant on ticketed exhibitions, so it’s timely to ask, where do these institutions go from here?

The Ethical Carnivore

1:30 pm - 2:30 pm, £10

Description to come…

Sustainable Fashion: Beyond Greenwashing

3:30 pm - 4:15 pm, £10

Best known as a supermodel who has graced the covers of 40+ Vogue titles, Arizona Muse is committed to minimising the environmental impact of the fashion industry. She will appear in conversation with Christina Dean, the founder of the NGO Redress and the R Collective, a social impact and fashion brand, and one of the industry’s biggest thought leaders in reducing waste in the fashion industry. They will share where and how the fashion industry can mitigate climate change - not just its raw inputs but overhauling legacy business models and fashion culture.

Luke Wright: "The Feel-Good Movie of the Year"

4:30 pm - 5:15 pm, £10

Spoken word poet, Luke Wright, treats us to a riveting performance of poems from his newest book, The Feel-Good Movie of the Year, "These poems pull on the ‘tidy hem’ of responsible existence, unravelling the banal frustrations of online outrage and ageing friends ... Wright files through the shackles of cynicism to ask how can we let go without giving up." Bittersweet but always captivating, Wright's genius stems from his ability to marry verbal virtuosity with elegiac observation.

Music: Waiting for Smith

5:30 pm - 6:15 pm, £10

The singer-songwriter will treat us to an acoustic journey that traces his story of personal redemption through music. His concert will comprise new tunes written during COVID-19 combined with well-worn favourites in his trademark style of anthemic folk-pop optimism.

Comedy: Josh Berry & Archie Manners

6:30 pm - 7:15 pm, £12

Description to come…

East Anglia Showcase (Music): Nik Void, Talvin Singh & TAWIAH

8 pm - 9 pm, £20

Talvin Singh, Nik Void and TAWIAH share the stage in this adventurous tripleheader concert which is emblematic of the Festival's approach. Singh, the world's best-known tabla player, will be bookended by the percussive experimental synth of Nik Void and the astonishing pop vocal talent of TAWIAH. Though their musical styles are wildly disparate, what unites them is their defining musical excellence placing them at the vanguard of their respective genres.

Click here to buy tickets.

All-Day Passes

All-Day Pass

31 July, Saturday, £95

Admission for one person to all festival events in the Marquee on Saturday, 31 July, plus parking at Hedingham Castle.

All-Day Pass

1 August, Sunday, £95

Admission for one person to all festival events in the Marquee on Saturday, 31 July, plus parking at Hedingham Castle.

Parking & Other

Paddock Pass

31 July, Saturday, £5

Admission for one person to enter and visit the grounds and keep of Hedingham Castle on Saturday, 31 July. Admission to Marquee not included. (N.B. Admission to Hedingham Castle is usually £8/adult.) Parking excluded.

Paddock Pass

1 August, Sunday, £5

Admission for one person to enter and visit the grounds and keep of Hedingham Castle on Saturday, 31 July. Admission to Marquee not included. (N.B. Admission to Hedingham Castle is usually £8/adult.) Parking excluded.

Parking

31 July, Saturday, £5

Parking at Hedingham Castle for one vehicle from 8 am - 10 pm on Saturday, 31 July. Multiple entry by the same vehicle permitted on the same day.

Parking

1 August, Sunday, £5

Parking at Hedingham Castle for one vehicle from 8 am - 10 pm on Saturday, 31 July. Multiple entry by the same vehicle permitted on the same day.