The sixth outing of Granite Noir, Aberdeen’s International Crime Writing Festival, came to a close last night.
Organisers were delighted with the success of the Festival, which returned to Aberdeen with a packed programme of sold‐out, live, in‐person events, workshops and performances.
Granite Noir enjoyed an attendance of almost 7,000 together with an additional 3,000 visits to the Grit in the Granite exhibition at the Music Hall and Lemon Tree.
The enthusiastic Aberdeen audience was swelled by visitors from as far afield as Germany and Ireland while visitors dropped in from all over the UK ranging from London, Liverpool and Lincoln. Audiences for the seven events which were livestreamed online tuned in from Norway, Switzerland and Canada making it a truly international event.
Granite Noir welcomed over 60 speakers including Ann Cleeves, Jenni Fagan, forensic anthropologist Professor Sue Black and Norway’s bestselling crime writer Kjell Ola Dahl. Audiences also enjoyed hearing about debut novels from Ewan Gault, Leela Soma, A J West, Rosie Andrews and Oyinkan Braithwaite.
Dr Julia Shaw and Sofie Hagan examined the case of Helen Priestly, a child who was killed on Aberdeen’s Urquhart Street in the 1930’s, in a live recording of their popular Bad People podcast, and Ten Feet Tall productions, an Aberdeen based theatre company, staged performances of a specially commissioned play Witch Hunt in the atmospheric Kirk of St Nicholas.
In addition to a wide range of crime fiction events audiences enjoyed escape room activities, a fast and furious adaptation of The Hound of the Baskervilles and a rousing closing concert of criminal tunesfrom the BBC Big Band.
The Grit in the Granite, a free exhibition in The Music Hall and Lemon Tree which shone a light on the darker side of Victorian Aberdeen with documents and photographs drawn from the Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Archives, attracted national attention.
Granite Noir is produced by Aberdeen Performing Arts on behalf of partners Belmont Filmhouse, Aberdeen City Libraries and Aberdeen City & Aberdeenshire Archives. Aberdeen Performing Arts chief executive, Jane Spiers said: ‘It has been wonderful to see so many people out enjoying our first ‘in person’ Granite Noir in two years, and to welcome viewers to our live streamed events. Last year’s virtual festival showed us that the sky is the limit with people tuning in from all corners of the world, but there is only one place for Granite Noir and that is right in the heart of Aberdeen.
‘The granite sparkled all weekend as we welcomed international best‐selling authors, Scotland’s finest and the very best emerging home‐grown talent from right here in the North East. It was wonderful to reconnect and to feel the sense of community that we’ve missed so much over a packed weekend of author panels, films, escape rooms, exhibitions, theatre and music. We are so happy to be back. A huge thank you to our authors and audiences who joined usin Aberdeen from acrossthe UK and Europe to make it so memorable.’
Granite Noir 2022 is supported by Aberdeen City Council and Creative Scotland and EventScotland.
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