Cannes
Film Festival postponed due to coronavirus, organizers
say
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[March 20, 2020] PARIS
(Reuters) - The Cannes Film Festival, the world's
largest, was forced to postpone its latest edition in
May due to the spread of the coronavirus, organisers of
the annual event on the French Riviera said on Thursday.
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The postponement follows weeks of speculation over whether the
festival, which draws thousands of filmmakers, celebrities and
executives to the city, would be able to go ahead between May
12-23.
"At this time of global health crisis, our thoughts go to the
victims of the COVID-19 and we express our solidarity with all
of those who are fighting the disease," the statement said.
France is in its third day of a lockdown aimed at containing the
spread of the coronavirus. Almost 11,000 cases have now been
officially diagnosed and 372 people have died.
The organisers, who had announced U.S. director Spike Lee as
president of this year's jury, said that several new dates were
under consideration, including the end of June-beginning of
July.
It is not the first time the festival has been postponed. Its
inaugural event in 1939 was cut short after the opening
screening of the "Hunchback of Notre Dame" because of Germany's
invasion of Poland the next day. The prizes were eventually
awarded in 2002.
It was also interrupted in May 1968 amid student and labour
protests sweeping across France.
The announcement is another blow to the film industry. Beyond
the star-studded glitzy screenings, production and distribution
firms head to the Cote d'Azur to complete deals, while
executives from across the world gather to represent their
nations' film industries.
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According to the U.S. entertainment industry union IATSE
(International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees) about 120,000
people have already lost their jobs in Hollywood as a consequence of
the outbreak.
The Cannes festival is the latest event in the entertainment
industry to be postponed or canceled. New York's Tribeca Film
Festival was put back earlier this month as was the release of big
budget movies including "Mulan" and the latest James Bond movie "No
Time to Die".
Music festivals Glastonbury and Coachella have been cancelled and
theatres in London and on Broadway have been closed.
"As soon as the development of the French and international health
situation will allow us to assess the real possibility, we will make
our decision known," the Cannes organisers said.
(Reporting by John Irish in Paris and Jill Serjeant in Los Angeles;
Editing by David Gregorio and Lisa Shumaker)
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