Dame Patricia Routledge praises the arts as “the soul of the nation”

Dame Patricia Routledge praised the arts as “the soul of the nation” as she declared the box office open for the 2025 Festival of Chichester.

Event organisers and festival supporters gathered at the Novium as festival chairman Phil Hewitt and the festival committee launched this year’s programme.

Dame Patricia spoke to the gathering as the festival’s inspirational and always-encouraging patron: “What a privilege to be invited to set off this 13th year of the Festival of Chichester.

“Last Saturday night, after a superb concert by the Chichester Symphony Orchestra, I had a conversation with a gentleman and we asked each other what brought us to Chichester in the first place.

“In my case, I was invited in 1969 to be part of the Festival Theatre programme and I came down here to be in three plays. And I asked the gentleman what brought him here because he’d had a busy working life elsewhere in the country and he said, quite simple, the arts. And that of course is true.

“I think we go beyond the famous Cheltenham. They have several arts occasions, celebrations. We have those celebrations all in one, at the same time (in Chichester).

“The variety of programmes is quite astonishing and also the prices that are asked for seating are extraordinary. Really amazing. I don’t know how you keep things going really on £7 a seat, £12, even £20. A friend of mine was in the West End the other week where he often goes up to London

and in the afternoon he thought he’d see a show and the price asked for a ticket was £235.

Absolutely disgraceful. Now at the theatre here we know that costs are going up and inflation goes on abounding. But everything is available within our limits and I always think you spend your money where your heart is. There is a wonderful variety of events and a larger variety than ever.

“The arts are the soul of the nation and we honour them here more than anywhere else, I think, in the country. So God bless and on we go and Bob’s your uncle!”

This year’s festival will be a bumper year with the Festival of Chichester offering its biggest programme in years, packed full of events all celebrating the great city we are privileged to live and work in.

Related articles

Keeping up appearances Patricia Routledge “I don’t recommend adultery”

Patricia Routledge, now playing Lady Bracknell in London’s West End, is the picture of decorum. But her image conceals a headstrong woman whose passions have drawn her…

A look back at Richard Wilson as Victor Meldrew in ‘Keeping up appearances’

If you are a fan of British sitcoms, then you have probably heard of the hit series “Keeping Up Appearances.” The show, which aired from 1990 to…

Patricia Routledge’s dig at BBC over ‘desperate’ Keeping Up Appearances spin-off

Acting legend Dame Patricia Routledge had some choice words when the BBC created a prequel to her iconic sitcom, Keeping Up Appearances. The spin-off Young Hyacinth, which aired in 2016,…

Keeping Up Appearances Actors You May Not Know Passed Away

Corrie actor Geoffrey Hughes, 68, dies after two year cancer battle Former Coronation Street actor Geoffrey Hughes has died of cancer. He was 68. The Merseyside-born star…

35th Anniversary of Keeping Up Appearances

She was one of the snobbiest characters in British television history but it’s 30 years today since we first met Hyacinth Bucket in Keeping Up Appearances. The programme,…

BBC Keeping Up Appearances cast now – Damehood, famous children and tragic deaths

Keeping Up Appearances was a huge hit with viewers from 1990 to 1995, but what happened to the cast after the show ended? It’s been more than…