Sydney Writers' Festival
Sydney Writers' Festival | |
---|---|
Genre | Literary festival |
Begins | May |
Frequency | Annual |
Location(s) | Sydney, New South Wales, Australia |
Years active | 27 |
Inaugurated | 1997 |
Participants | 300 |
Attendance | 100,000 |
Website | http://www.swf.org.au |
The Sydney Writers' Festival is an annual literary festival held in Sydney, with the inaugural festival taking place in 1997. The 2020 event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia.
The festival's interim artistic director since August 2020 is Michael Williams.
The Sydney Writes Festival moved its location from Walsh Bay to Carriageworks in Redfern, Sydney. In 2023 the SWF resumed in person attendance.
Previous SWF artistic directors include Chip Rolley. 2023 artistic director is Ann Mossop.
History
The festival began in January 1997,[1][2] with most events initially held at the State Library of New South Wales. The first independent Sydney Writers' Festival ran from 12 to 17 May 1998, with 169 participants appearing in venues in, and around, the centre of Sydney.
Since then, the Festival has rapidly expanded. The Festival moved from Walsh Bay to Carriageworks in May 2018 (Walsh Bay is undergoing a major refurbishment). Events were also held at venues stretching across Sydney, from the City Recital Hall and Sydney Town Hall in the city centre, into suburban Sydney and the Blue Mountains.
Held mid-to-late May each year, the Festival now involves over 400 participants and presents over 300 events in renovated piers at Walsh Bay. Other festival locations include Roslyn Packer Theatre, Sydney Town Hall, City Recital Hall, and Sydney Opera House. Events are also regularly held in regional and suburban locations including Parramatta, Ashfield, Auburn, Blacktown, Bankstown, Campbelltown, Hornsby, Penrith, the Blue Mountains and Wollongong.
Approximately one-third of all Sydney Writers' Festival events are free of charge. Festival attendances have reached over 90,000 each year since 2007.[citation needed]
The 2020 event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia.[3]
Sydney Writers' Festival Limited is a not-for-profit company with an independent board of directors. The chairs of the festival have been:[citation needed]
- 1997–2000: Geraldine Doogue
- Late 2000–Dec 2011: Sandra Yates AO
- Jan 2012–Jan 2018: Deena Shiff
- Feb 2018– : Mark Scott
Artistic directors for festival years:[citation needed]
- 1998: John Nieuwenhuizen, with Meredith Curnow the Program Director. Meredith Curnow became Festival Director for the period *1999–2002: Meredith Curnow
- 2003–2006: Caro Llewellyn (AD & CEO)
- 2007-2009: Wendy Were (AD & CEO)
- 2010–2012: Chip Rolley
- 2013–2016: Jemma Birrell
- 2017–2020: Michaela McGuire (appointed November 2016)[4]
- 2021– 2022 : Michael Williams, interim director (since August 2020)[5]
- 2022– : Ann Mossop
Executive directors & other CEOs:
- 2009–2014: Ben Strout[citation needed]
- 2015: Jo Dyer ED from 2015; promoted to CEO in November 2016, when she also joined the Festival board of directors.[4]
- 2018–2021: Chrissy Sharp, CEO[4] [6]
- 2021– Brooke Webb
Past international guests
Past guests have included:
- 1999 – Alan Duff,[7] and Peter Porter[8]
- 2002 – Jodi Picoult,[9] Lloyd Jones, Giles Milton and Neil Hanson[10]
- 2003 – Antony Beevor, Jonathan Franzen, Catherine Millet, Janette Turner Hospital, Nicholas Shakespeare, and CK Stead[11]
- 2004 – Alan Bennett, Alain de Botton, Hilary Mantel, Tim Krabbe, Susanna Moore, Jane Campion, Louis de Bernières, Salam Pax, John W. Dean, Harvey Pekar, Alexei Sayle, ZZ Packer, and David Sedaris[12]
- 2005 – Lewis Lapham, Alan Hollinghurst, Deirdre Bair, Professor Harold Bloom, Tariq Ali, David Suzuki, Jared Diamond, Suad Amiry, Michael Winter, Colin McAdam and Miriam Toews[13]
- 2006 – Naomi Wolf, Anna Politkovskaya, Michael Burleigh, Andy Borowitz, Susan Orlean, Aleksandar Hemon, Hendrik Hertzberg, Mark Danner, Haifa Zangana, John Banville, Edmund White, and Maya Angelou[14]
- 2007 – Andrew O'Hagan, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Bei Dao, Will Hutton, Antony Beevor, William Dalyrmple, Lionel Shriver, Richard Ford, Andrei Makine, Rachel Seiffert, Mohsin Hamid and Steven Hall[15]
- 2008 – Jon Lee Anderson, Andrew J. Bacevich, Michael Pollan, John Gray, and Jeanette Winterson[16]
- 2009 – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Alex Ross, and Kazuo Ishiguro[17]
- 2010 – John Carey, Colm Tóibín, Lionel Shriver, Yiyun Li, John Ralston Saul, Bill McKibben, and Raj Patel[18]
- 2011 – Ingrid Betancourt, Howard Jacobson, A. A. Gill, Anthony Bourdain, Téa Obreht, Izzeldin Abuelaish, Kei Miller, Kader Abdolah, Michael Cunningham, David Mitchell, AC Grayling, Michael Connelly, Gail Dines, and Daniel Altman
- 2012 – Hisham Matar, Jeffrey Eugenides, Dava Sobel[19]
- 2013 – Molly Ringwald, Ruby Wax, Claire Messud[20]
- 2014 – Irvine Welsh, Vince Gilligan, Alice Walker
- 2015 – Michael Connelly, Anthony Horowitz, Douglas Coupland, Norman Doidge, Alan Cumming, Atul Gawande, David Walliams, Michael Frayn, James Patterson (out of season event)
- 2016 – Gloria Steinem, Jonathan Franzen, Marlon James, Julian Barnes, William Boyd, Jeanette Winterson, Kae Tempest, Yanis Varoufakis, Hanya Yanagihara, Paul Muldoon, Yeonmi Park
- 2017 – Anne Enright, Henry Marsh, Ian Rankin, George Saunders, A. N. Wilson[21]
- 2018 – André Aciman, Min Jin Lee, Alexis Okeowo, Masha Gessen, Jennifer Egan, Tayari Jones
- 2019 – Fatima Bhutto, Rachel Kushner, Susan Orlean, George Saunders, Nana Kwame Adjei–Brenyah, Meg Wolitzer, Akala, Andrew Sean Greer, Alexander Chee
Past local guests
- 1997 – Robert Dessaix,[1] Andrew McGahan, Matthew Condon, Bernard Cohen, Christos Tsiolkas, Gillian Mears[2]
- 2001 – Lee Tulloch[22]
- 2002 – Geoffrey Atherden, Bernard Cohen[10]
- 2003 – Sonya Hartnett, David Malouf, Danny Katz, Louis Nowra[11]
- 2005 – Bob Carr and John Kinsella[13]
- 2006 – Alex Miller, Robert Drewe, Kate Grenville, Les Murray, Tegan Bennett Daylight, Peter Singer, Tim Flannery, Gail Jones[14]
- 2007 – Raimond Gaita[15]
- 2008 – Mem Fox, Peter van Onselen, Michelle de Kretser, Gail Jones, Drusilla Modjeska[16]
- 2009 – Elizabeth Farrelly
- 2010 – Peter Carey, Les Murray, Alex Miller, Ross Garnaut, Clive Hamilton[18]
- 2011 – Suelette Dreyfus, Annette Shun Wah, David Hicks
- 2012 – Kathy Lette[23]
- 2013 – Brendan Cowell,[20] Elizabeth Farrelly, Claudia Karvan,
- 2014 – Christos Tsiolkas, Michelle de Kretser, Robert Dessaix
- 2015 – Richard Flanagan, Annabel Crabb, Leigh Sales, Helen Garner, David Malouf, Les Murray, Andy Griffiths, Julia Gillard
- 2016 – Elizabeth Harrower, Anna Funder, Magda Szubanski, Stan Grant, Kerry O'Brien, Bob Brown, Charlotte Wood
- 2017 – Julia Baird, Jimmy Barnes, Peter Corris, Clementine Ford, Liane Moriarty[21]
- 2018 – Michelle de Kretser, Jane Harper, Helen Garner, Christos Tsiolkas, Julia Gillard
- 2019
- 2021- Melissa Lucashenko, Tara June Winch, Evelyn Araluen (Opening Night)
- 2022
- 2023 - Alexis Wright, Patrick Abboud, Thomas Hedley, Kate McClymont, Ghassan Hage
Closing address
- 2011 James Gleick 'Perish the thought'
- 2012 Dava Sobel
- 2013 Claire Messud[20]
- 2014 Emma Donoghue
- 2015 Helen Macdonald
- 2016 Hanya Yanagihara
- 2017 Susan Faludi[24]
- 2018 Jennifer Egan
- 2019 Fatima Bhutto
- 2020
- 2021
- 2022
- 2023 Richard Flanagan
Organisational structure
The festival is led by CEO Brooke Webb and programmed by the Artistic Director, Michael Williams.[25]
As of March 2022[update] the directors of the Festival are:[26]
- Mark Scott (Chair)
- Kathy Shand (Deputy Chair)
- Nikki Christer
- Annabel Crabb
- Michael Dagostino
- Amelia Lester
- Sheila McGregor
- Su-Ming Wong
See also
- List of festivals in Australia
- New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards
- Man Booker International Prize – 2011
- Sydney Writers Walk
References
- ^ a b Dessaix, Robert (24 January 1997). "After The Plague". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
- ^ a b Tom, Emma (11 January 1997). "The Best Young Australian Novelists 1997". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
- ^ Sydney Writers’ Festival cancelled for 2020 Mumbrella 17 March 2020
- ^ a b c "McGuire appointed SWF artistic director". Books + Publishing. 10 November 2016. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
- ^ Steger, Jason (17 August 2020). "Michael Williams joins Sydney Writers' Festival as interim director". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
- ^ "Sharp steps down from SWF; new head of sales, publicity manager for Hachette". Books+Publishing. 14 July 2021. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Alan Duff on Both Sides of the Moon". Book Talk on Radio National. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 22 May 1999. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
- ^ "Program Summaries and Transcripts". Books and Writing on Radio National. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 1999. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
- ^ "Events". Festival News 2002. University of Technology Sydney. 2002. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
- ^ a b "Program Summaries and Transcripts". Books and Writing on Radio National. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2002. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
- ^ a b "Highlights from Festival 2003". Festival 2003. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2003. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
- ^ "Highlights from Festival 2004". Festival 2004. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2004. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
- ^ a b "Highlights from Festival 2005". Festival 2005. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2005. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
- ^ a b "Highlights from Festival 2006". Festival 2006. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2006. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
- ^ a b "Highlights from Festival 2007". Festival 2007. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2007. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
- ^ a b "Highlights from Festival 2008". Festival 2008. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2008. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
- ^ "Highlights from Festival 2009". Festival 2009. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2009. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
- ^ a b "Highlights from Festival 2010". Festival 2010. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2010. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
- ^ "Festival Nights". Festival 2012. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2012. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
- ^ a b c Haroldson, Peter. "Sydney Writers' Festival 2013". Sydney Life. Destination New South Wales. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
- ^ a b "Sydney Writers Festival 20–28 May 2017" (PDF). Sydney Writers Festival. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
- ^ "Program Summaries and Transcripts". Books and Writing on Radio National. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2001. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
- ^ "Highlights". Festival 2012. Sydney Writers' Festival. 2012. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
- ^ "2017 Closing Address : Susan Faludi". Sydney Writers Festival. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
- ^ "Executive office". Sydney Writers Festival. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
- ^ "Board". Sydney Writers Festival. Retrieved 22 March 2022.