Hay Festival will host an all-star cricket match as part of the first Hay Festival Sports Day on Wednesday, May 29.
Umpired by actor, author and national treasure Stephen Fry, the match will see Hay Town take on an all-star cricket team, featuring broadcaster Adam Rutherford; writers Robert Macfarlane and Charlie Campbell; comedians Marcus Brigstocke and Carrie Quinlan; musician and actor Johnny Flynn; and professional cricketers Claire Taylor and Azeem Rafiq.
Many of the players come from the Authors Cricket Club - a wandering amateur English cricket club founded in 1892 and revived most recently in 2012. Prominent British writers including Arthur Conan Doyle, P.G. Wodehouse, A.A. Milne and J.M. Barrie have been featured as players on the club team, the Authors XI. More recently, they have played against Indian Premier League (IPL) players, the Vatican and the national teams of Japan and Iceland.
The event is the latest addition to the Hay Festival Sports Day, organised to mark this Olympic year with leading thinkers and sports stars showcasing their creative talents in conversations and interactive free activities across the Festival site with appearances from footballer and broadcaster Gary Lineker, tennis coach Judy Murray, ecologist Madeleine Orr, former athlete and politician Lord Sebastian Coe, and more.
Tickets to the match and other events are on sale at hayfestival.org/hay-on-wye
The day forms part of a packed programme of activities at Hay Festival 2024, with a line-up of more than 600 events from May 23 to June 2.
Hay Festival Global CEO Julie Finch said: “Worlds collide at Hay Festival Hay-on-Wye with events that offer a detour from the day to day. In this thrilling year of international sport, our first ever Sports Day seeks to explore its interconnections with the arts and their dual roles in promoting wellbeing.
“We are delighted to welcome this all-star cricket team and Hay Town onto our programme, and grateful to Festival president Stephen Fry for ensuring a fair game. Do join us for a special session to remember. And may the best team win!”
Writer and batsman Adam Rutherford said: “On Wednesday, May 29, the cricketers of Hay-on-Wye will feel the full force of seven middle aged writers and a couple of comedians. And two ex-professionals. Our sledging will be eloquent.”
Hay Festival Hay-on-Wye 2024 is supported by lead sponsors Baillie Gifford, Welsh Government, Arts Council England and Arts Council Wales, lead media partner the BBC and digital media partner TikTok.
Launching the best new fiction and non-fiction, while offering insights and debate around significant global issues, the programme sees writers, policy makers, pioneers and innovators take part from around the world, offering big thinking and bold ideas.
Events offer something for all, beginning with the free Schools Programme, May 23-24, and including a vibrant strand for families throughout.
New projects woven through the Festival include The Platform for new creatives, the daily News Review offering analysis of the latest events and Hay Festival Green, prompting innovative solutions to the climate crisis.
Late nights at the Festival are given over to great music, comedy and entertainment, while a host of free pop-up activities and performances around the site keeps audiences entertained between sessions.
Events will take place across eight stages in the redesigned free-to-enter Festival site at Dairy Meadows – which also offers a range of spaces for audiences to explore and enjoy, including the Bookshop, Wild Garden, Make & Take Tent, a host of exhibitors and market stalls, cafés and restaurants, and the new Family Garden where young readers can kick-start their creative journeys – as well as in and around Hay-on-Wye, including performances all week at St Mary’s Church.