William Sieghart
William Matthew Timothy Stephen Sieghart CBE (born 1960) is a British entrepreneur, publisher and philanthropist[1] and the founder of the Forward Prizes for Poetry. He is former chairman of the Somerset House Trust.[2]
William Sieghart | |
---|---|
Born | William Matthew Timothy Stephen Sieghart 1960 (age 62–63) |
Nationality | British |
Education | St Anne's College, Oxford |
Occupation(s) | Entrepreneur, publisher |
Known for | Founder of the Forward Prizes for Poetry |
Education and career
Born in 1960, son of barrister Paul Sieghart, a human rights lawyer, and Felicity Ann Sieghart, chair of the National Association for Gifted Children, magistrate and later managing director of the Aldeburgh Cinema, William is the older brother of Mary Ann Sieghart.[3] He was educated at St Anne's College, Oxford.
In 1986, he founded Forward Publishing with a business partner Neil Mendoza, an independent contract publisher, publishing magazines, children's books and poetry books. He is the author of The Poetry Pharmacy and The Poetry Pharmacy Returns, as well as various other poetry anthologies and a book on golf, The Swing Factory. Sieghart presented a weekly TV programme for Bloomberg for three years. His interests include foreign travel and cricket. In addition to his work in poetry and the Middle East, Sieghart also founded Big Arts Week and Street Smart, the initiative whereby diners give a percentage of their restaurant bill to the homeless. He was a member of Arts Council England 2000–06, and was chair of its Lottery Panel. From 2015 to 2021, Sieghart was Chair of Somerset House Trust.
Work
In 1992, Sieghart established The Forward Prizes for Poetry to help raise the profile of contemporary poetry by new and established poets.
In 1994, he founded National Poetry Day,[4] a day of celebration of verse on the first Thursday of October, which has become an established fixture in the cultural calendar. Events take place in schools, pubs, arts centres, bookshops, libraries, buses, trains and Women's Institutes, and the day is the focus for media attention for poetry.[5]
The Forward Arts Foundation (a registered charity) was established in 1995 to administer the Forward Prizes and National Poetry Day.[6]
His initiative Winning Words was a public art project during the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. It aimed to enable everyone to experience poetry in exciting ways and to create a legacy of inspiring words for the nation to enjoy. Winning Words comprised both permanent and temporary poems throughout the Park, made up of site-specific poems commissioned from local poets, as well as poems suggested by the public and chosen by a panel.[7]
He is founder and Chair of Forward Thinking, a charity that seeks to mediate conflict in the Middle East and to improve relations between the Islamic and Western worlds. He is Vice-President of the Hay Festival of Literature, Chair of CIVIC Libraries Initiative, founder and Chair of Street Smart, Action for the Homeless, Founding Trustee of the Forward Arts Foundation and Trustee of the Grenfell Foundation. He is a former Council Member of the Arts Council England and Chair of its Lottery Panel. He has been a Trustee of the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, The Arts Foundation, the RSA, the British Human Rights and Reprieve, among other voluntary posts.
Sieghart chaired and authored An Independent Review of E-Lending in Public Libraries in England[8] published by Department Culture, Media and Sport, 2013 and was subsequently jointly commissioned by Ed Vaizey, Minister for Culture, DCMS, and Brandon Lewis, Minister for Communities & Local Government, DCLG, to consider and report on Public Library services in England. The "Independent Library report for England"[9] was published by DCMS in December 2014. In September 2015, Sieghart was appointed Chairman of Somerset House Trust.
He was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2016 New Year Honours for services to public libraries.[10]
Sieghart has published many books and is a regular broadcaster. His most recent books are The Poetry Pharmacy, published in September 2017 by Penguin,[11] and 100 Prized Poems – 25 Years of the Forward Books, published by Forward in association with Faber & Faber 2016.[12] In September 2019, Vol. II, The Poetry Pharmacy Returns was published in the UK and Vol III The Poetry Remedy published in the USA by Penguin Random House in October 2019.
Sieghart founded Forward Publishing in 1986, with Neil Mendoza, and turned it into one of the largest publishing agencies in the world. Forward published magazines in 131 countries for some of the world's largest corporations. The business was sold to WPP in 2001.
References
- Kellaway, Kate (October 2017). "William Sieghart: 'I want people to drop their fear of poetry'". The Guardian.
- "Our Team". September 2016.
- Treneman, Ann (28 April 1997). "Media Families: 11. The Siegharts, Mary Ann Sieghart, and her daughter, Evie Prichard; William Sieghart and his wife, Molly Dineen". The Independent.
- "William Sieghart CBE". The Forward Arts Foundation. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
- "National Poetry Day". Forward Arts Foundation. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
- "William Sieghart: 'I want people to drop their fear of poetry'". TheGuardian.com. October 2017.
- "London 2012 Olympic poetry: Winning words".
- "An Independent Review of E-Lending in Public Libraries in England".
- "Independent Library Report for England".
- "No. 61450". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 2015. p. N10.
- "The Poetry Pharmacy". Penguin Books.
- "100 Prized Poems: Twenty-five Years of the Forward Prizes | Forward Arts Foundation". www.forwardartsfoundation.org. Archived from the original on 27 December 2016.
External links
- "We must adjust our distorted image of Hamas" The Times, December 2008.
- "Me and my partner: William Sieghart and Neil Mendoza" The Independent, June 1999.
- "The Progress 1000: London's most influential people 2015 - Artists & Curators", Evening Standard, 16 September 2015.
- "The Power of Poetry", Intelligence Squared.
- Fiona Macdonald, "The words that can make us calmer", Culture, BBC, 27 September 2017.
- "From Publishing To Promotion 3: William Sieghart", poets.org, via YouTube.