Event 394

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Tim Smit talks to John Elkington

If Capitalism is Broken - What’s the Fix?

Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage
Read more
Even leading capitalists admit that capitalism is broken. Green Swans is a manifesto for system change designed to serve people, planet, and prosperity. In his twentieth book, John Elkington—dubbed the “Godfather of Sustainability”—explores new forms of capitalism fit for the twenty-first century.
If Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s “Black Swans” are problems that take us exponentially toward breakdown, then “Green Swans” are solutions that take us exponentially toward breakthrough. The success—and survival—of humanity now depends on how we rein in the first and accelerate the second.
Tim Smit, the co-founder of The Eden Project and The Lost Gardens of Heligan is not a run-of-the mill chief executive. As a capitalist Tim has been searching for mechanisms that enable business to be a genuine driver of wealth through nesting a wide range of stakeholders’ interests alongside our own in a circular system. Today there are 20 ‘New Edens’ being built worldwide, all with the same mission–to restore wild sites, nurture communities and bring once dilapidated environments back to life.

This event has taken place

Event 255

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Tracey Emin and Dylan Jones in conversation

Venue: Baillie Gifford Stage
Read more

Turner Prize-winner and maverick artist Tracey Emin experienced an unexpected and extraordinary creative rebirth after being diagnosed with bladder cancer, having the organ removed and being fitted with a stoma. She talks candidly to Dylan Jones, former editor of GQ magazine, about her work, career and brush with death. Emin, once known as the enfant terrible of the Young British Artists in the 1980s, is now a Royal Academician, and in 2011 was one of the first two women professors since the Royal Academy’s founding in 1768. Jones’ latest book is Faster Than a Cannonball, an oral history of the music of 1995.

This event has taken place
 

Event 256

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Julian Baggini in conversation with Daniel Hahn

How to Think Like a Philosopher

Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage
Read more

Philosopher Julian Baggini, author of How to Think Like a Philosopher, talks to writer and translator Daniel Hahn about conveying big ideas, the importance of broadening audiences for big subjects and the value of simplicity while also holding on to complexity. He uses everyday examples and contemporary political concerns – from climate change to implicit bias – to explore the techniques, methods and principles that guide philosophy, and how they can be applied to our own lives, proving that philosophical thought can promote incisive thinking.

This event has taken place

Event 257

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Amy Jeffs

Wild: Tales from Early Medieval Britain

Venue: Wye Stage
Read more

Evoking an atmospheric world of whales, wolves, caves, cuckoos and reeds, in Wild Amy Jeffs journeys both on foot and through medieval texts to offer an insight into a world at once distant and profoundly close to home. She hauntingly retells venerable tales and the places where she finds them reflected in Britain today, from the bat-haunted darkness of ancient barrows to the cacophony of a pub wassail, accompanied by her original wood engravings. Jeffs is an art historian and artist and worked in the British Library’s department of Ancient, Medieval and Early Modern manuscripts.

This event has taken place

Event 258

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Bureau of Lost Culture featuring Rosie Boycott, Joe Boyd, Craig Sams and Stephen Coates

Whatever Happened to the Counterculture?

Venue: The Hive
Read more

Journalist and feminist Rosie Boycott, veteran music producer Joe Boyd, organic food pioneer Craig Sams join Bureau of Lost Culture podcast host Stephen Coates in a conversation about how the visions and values planted in the heady days of the 1960s and 1970s have flowered in the decades since.

This event has taken place

Event 259

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Charlotte Williams with Darren Chetty, Angela Hui and Hanan Issa

Thinker in Residence: Representing Wales

Venue: Marquee
Read more

Cultural critic Charlotte Williams talks to Hanan Issa (Mud is Memory), Angela Hui (Takeaway) and Darren Chetty (Welsh (Plural)) about writing Wales, Welsh identity, and creative and cultural representation.. Williams is a Welsh-Guyanese author and academic. As Hay Thinker in Residence she is committed to exploring the ways in which Wales and its multivarious Welsh identities are represented at the Festival.

This event has taken place

Event 260

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Margaret Atwood, Elif Shafak and Douglas Stuart talk to Alex Clark

Salman Rushdie Panel: Victory City

Venue: Baillie Gifford Stage
Read more

One of Britain’s greatest living storytellers, Salman Rushdie is back with a magical realist feminist tale in Victory City, a novel presented as an abridged translation of a fictitious and previously lost Sanskrit verse saga. The novel’s final line, “words are the only victors”, seems more relevant than ever following a brutal attack on Rushdie in 2022, which left him injured. Three of his friends and admirers – novelists Margaret Atwood, Elif Shafak and Douglas Stuart – speak to journalist and editor Alex Clark about the power of Rushdie’s storytelling and celebrate the wonder of Victory City.

Salman Rushdie will join this event in a pre recorded digital interview with Alex Clark.
This event has taken place
 

Event 261

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Sally Adee talks to Glyn Morgan

We Are Electric: The New Science of Our Body’s Electrome

Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage
Read more

We are familiar with the idea of our body’s biome – the bacterial fauna that populate our gut and can so profoundly affect our health. The next frontier of scientific understanding is discovering our body’s electrome. Every cell in our bodies – bones, skin, nerves, muscle – has a voltage, like a tiny battery. This bioelectricity is why our brains can send signals to our bodies, why we develop the way we do in the womb and how our bodies know to heal themselves from injury. When bioelectricity goes awry, illness, deformity and cancer can result. But could there be an undo switch for cancer to flip malignant cells back into healthy ones; the ability to regenerate cells, organs, even limbs; to slow ageing?

The science writer explores the history of bioelectricity, from Galvani’s epic 18th century battle with the inventor of the battery, Alessandro Volta, to the medical charlatans claiming to use electricity to cure pretty much anything, to advances in the field helped along by the unusually massive axons of squid.

This event has taken place

Event 262

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Jacqueline Yallop

Into the Dark: How we Imagine and Understand the Dark Around us

Venue: The Hive
Read more

What does absolute darkness feel like? Not the kind that comes from switching off lights in your house, or stepping out in the city at midnight, but true, deep darkness. Dr Jacqueline Yallop delves into the enigma of darkness with this lecture. Looking at how science, art, literature and psychology have shaped our understanding of darkness, and how our imaginations continue to be inspired by it, she considers what darkness means to us, as individuals and societies, now and in the past. Yallop teaches prose and creative writing at the University of Aberystwyth. She is the author of two novels and three works of non-fiction.

This event has taken place

Event 263

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Bureau of Lost Culture featuring Sam Lee, Jude Rogers, Joe Boyd and Stephen Coates

The Radical Power of Song: Can Music Still Change the World?

Venue: Marquee
Read more

The Bureau of Lost Culture’s Stephen Coates hosts a live podcast recording debating the countercultural power of music in modern times. Join Mercury Prize nominated singer and activist Sam Lee, influential music journalist Jude Rogers and pioneering record producer Joe Boyd, who has worked with a multitude of artists from Pink Floyd to REM.

This event has taken place

Event 264

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Georgina Moore talks to Stephanie Merritt

Debut Discoveries: The Garnett Girls

Venue: Hwyl Stage
Read more

Publicist Georgina Moore has worked in publishing for more than 20 years, and offers a unique perspective on being a published author. Set on the Isle of Wight, her debut The Garnett Girls is about three sisters kept from finding true happiness by their mother Margo’s refusal to speak about their father, who walked out on her. Rachel is desperate to return to London, but is held hostage by responsibility for Sandcove, the beloved but crumbling family home; dreamy Imogen feels the pressure to marry her kind, considerate fiancé; wild, passionate Sasha is trapped between her fractured family and controlling husband, and weighed down by a secret that could shake the family to its core. Moore talks to critic and writer Stephanie Merritt.

This event has taken place

Event 265

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Hay Community Choir

Earth Song Project: Sounds That Reflect Natural Murmurations

Venue: St Mary’s Church
Read more

Hay Community Choir’s ‘Earth Song’ is a collaborative piece with poet Francesca Kay and musician Alice Phelps, as well as their director Fiona Evans. Inspired by Scottish Gaelic psalm singing, the choir explores the elements and celebrates all that it means to live on this planet, creating a work that the Earth itself has inspired.

This event has taken place

Event 266

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Prue Leith

Nothing in Moderation

Venue: Baillie Gifford Stage
Read more

Nothing is off the menu in this frank, revealing and very funny show. In her first ever live performance, Prue Leith will take us through the ups and downs of being a successful restaurateur, novelist, businesswoman and Great British Bake Off judge – feeding the rich and famous, cooking for royalty and even poisoning her clients.

In the second half of the show she’ll be joined on stage by Clive Tulloh, who will chair a Q&A giving you the chance to ask those questions you’ve always wanted to hear Prue’s take on. She says: “I’ve never done a stage show before and at 82 I’m probably nuts to try it, but it’s huge fun, makes people laugh and lets me rant away about the restaurant trade, publishers, TV and writing, and sing the praises of food, love and life.”

This event has taken place

Event 267

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Joanna Cannon, Tracy Chevalier, Catherine Cho and Jen McPherson

Will You Read This, Please?

Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage
Read more

Edited by author and ex-psychiatrist Joanna Cannon, Will You Read This, Please? contains 12 real-life stories of NHS mental health service users, written by 12 authors, telling the stories of mental illness and the NHS from the truest and most honest source: the patients themselves. Cannon talks to novelist Tracy Chevalier (A Single Thread, Girl With a Pearl Earring) and Catherine Cho (author of Inferno, about her experience of postpartum psychosis) about how they became involved in the collection and the challenges and privileges of helping someone else to share a story that was previously unheard. They are joined by Jen McPherson, who worked closely with Cho to share her story in the collection, and talks about why she was compelled to share her experience of psychosis.

This event has taken place
 

Event 268

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Arooj Aftab, Vijay Iyer and Shahzad Ismaily

Love in Exile

Venue: Wye Stage
Read more

Three Grammy-winning, world-class American musicians – vocalist Arooj Aftab, pianist Vijay Iyer and multi-instrumentalist Shahzad Ismaily – recorded Love in Exile in their adopted hometown of New York City. The album sees them create a unified voice, despite their distinct backgrounds. Bask in their singular, gorgeous sound with this performance of their work. Aftab is the first Pakistani to win a Grammy; Iyer is a MacArthur genius and Grammy nominee; and Ismaily’s sensitivity and technical acumen has made him a legend among musicians like the late Lou Reed, for whom he was a session player.

This event has taken place

Event 269

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Tara MacLean

Music and conversation

Venue: The Hive
Read more

The Canadian singer/songwriter is fiercely honest about her 25 years as a recording and touring artist in her memoir Song of the Sparrow. To celebrate its release, and its accompanying album, Tara MacLean shares tales from her book, interspersed with guitar music and song, for a uniquely intimate evening of storytelling.

This event has taken place

Event 270

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Bone Music featuring Sam Lee and Stephen Coates

Bureau of Lost Culture

Venue: Marquee
Read more

Bureau of Lost Culture podcast host Stephen Coates tells the extraordinary story of how forbidden songs cut onto records made from x-rays defied the censor in the Cold War-era Soviet Union. The talk will be followed by a demonstration of the art of making an x-ray record and a special performance by singer and activist Sam Lee.

This event has taken place

Event 271

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Morning Yoga with Kanga Wellbeing

Venue: Hwyl Stage
Read more

Start your day with a morning yoga class designed to reinvigorate your energy and spirit. Enjoy a grounding, energising, alignment‐based yoga practice, using the breath and sound to rediscover and rejuvenate the body and mind. Beginners and experienced students are most welcome. Yoga mats and props are provided.

Please contact Kanga Wellbeing on spa@kangaevents.com for any questions relating to these classes. As capacity is limited, we recommend booking in advance to avoid disappointment.

Kanga Wellbeing will also be onsite throughout the Festival offering wellbeing and a wide range of holistic massage therapies. Therapies will be held in cosy lotus belle tents with heaters and fans. For more information or to book, please visit www.kangaevents.com/hay-festival. For enquiries, please email spa@kangaevents.com.

This event has taken place

Event 272

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Planet Assembly 7: Biodiversity – What Must Change?

A Thought Laboratory

Venue: The Hive
Read more

Bring your best ideas to this solutions-focused workshop session. Facilitated by sustainability entrepreneur Andy Middleton, Chief Exploration Officer at the TYF Group, and joined by Anna Swaithes, Head of Sustainability, Crown Estate , we’ll look at the key issue of biodiversity. We’ll discuss the scale of the issue and a range of solutions, how to action them, how they might impact on their lives and how to manage the change.

Biodiversity is the collective term for the full variety of life on Earth. We’ve lost 69% of wildlife over the past 50 years, and at last we’re realising the consequences. The COP15 summit in Montreal last December was a remarkable and unexpected success but most businesses have little knowledge of nature risks and no plan to restore biodiversity. How can we mobilise joined up, local-to-global action by business, society and governments on biodiversity, at a speed and scale fast enough to matter?

This workshop is part of our Hay Festival Planet Assembly, a daily, inclusive conversation over ten days involving lay people, scientists, commentators and experts. We want to empower everyone to be accelerators and multipliers for the dramatic policy transformations that are needed immediately to tackle the acute climate and biodiversity emergencies.

Sign up to our free Planet Assembly daily briefing.

This event has taken place

Event 273

Events taking place live 25 May–4 June 2023

Trevithel Court Farm Walk

Cider and Honey on a Traditional Mixed Farm

Venue: Meeting Place on Site
Read more

Agronomist Jonathon Harrington and vet Barney Sampson lead a tour of Trevithel Court, a traditional mixed farm with orchards supplying apples for Bulmers, Westons and other cider producers in Herefordshire and Wales. Walk among the apple trees and learn about cider production; look inside a beehive and learn how bees make honey and store it for the winter, and why they are so essential for pollination. You can sample some of the cider and honey produced on the farm. See the quality beef cattle fed with the grass and arable crops grown on the farm and the machinery used for crop production and harvesting. Trevithel Court is run by David James in partnership with his son Will James, the fourth generation of the family to farm here.

With thanks to David & Catherine James and family for welcoming us to their farm.

Please wear walking boots or Wellingtons and waterproof clothing in case of inclement weather. These are visits to real working farms and are suitable for anyone interested in learning more about food and farming. Families are welcome but children must be supervised at all times.

This event has taken place

Explore All Genres