Glastonbury festival âwas due to closeâ in the 90s
Glastonbury founder Sir Michael Eavis wanted to pull the plug on the festival in the 1990s, his daughter Emily has told the BBC.
Sir Michael founded the festival on his Somerset farm in 1970, and saw it grow into one of the worldâs most prestigious music events.
By the 1990s, it was attracting world-class headliners like Oasis, Bob Dylan and Radiohead â but the plan was to call it a day when he reached retirement age.
âMy parents were always like, âThis is the last oneâ,â Emily Eavis told the BBCâs Sidetracked podcast.
âEveryone thought it was some sort of stunt to sell tickets but it wasnât. They were genuinely like, âWell, we probably wonât do another.ââ
In those days, the decision to extend the festival was taken on a year-by-year basis, she said.
It was only when Sir Michaelâs wife, Ruth, died in 1999 that the event became a permanent fixture.
âMy dad was like, âOh, I think I might need the festival nowâ,â Eavis told Annie Mac and Nick Grimshaw. âBecause they were going to retire and go on long cruises and things like that.
âMy dad was like, âListen, letâs keep it going.â
âI was like, âYeah, Iâll help youâ. Never did I think Iâd still be here a few decades on.â
Sir Michael, who is now 88, is still involved with the festival, but the bulk of the organisation â including booking the main stages â is handled by Eavis and her husband Nick Dewey.
They open the gates for this yearâs event on Wednesday, 26 June. Headliners include Dua Lipa, SZA and Coldplay â who top the bill for a record-breaking fifth time.
Eavis told the BBC that there would also be a call for peace, led by performance artist Marina AbramoviÄ, on the festivalâs main stage.
âItâs just a few minutes of silence, with her on the stage, and thatâs going to be a beautiful moment.â
Fallow year incoming
After criticism of last yearâs all-male, all-white headliners, this yearâs Pyramid Stage line-up has a 50:50 split between male and female acts, with two women topping the bill for the first time in the festivalâs history.
Eavis is particularly excited about giving Dua Lipa her first headline slot in the UK.
âWeâre creating this moment for her, and thatâs really as exciting as anything,â she told Sidetracked.
Asked about her favourite ever Glastonbury, Eavis picked 1995 â when Oasis and Pulp headlined â âbecause I just finished my GCSEs [and] it was the first year that I was allowed to campâ.
She also recalled her dad joining her at the side of the stage to watch Stormzyâs historic performance in 2019, and abandoning the backstage area during Sir Elton Johnâs set last year.
âI was so pleased to see him here and I just had to walk into the crowd,â she explained. âItâs much better to watch from the field.â
Eavis said her dream headliner would be Kate Bush, even though she hasnât performed live since 2011.
âI hope it will happen one day. I mean, Elton was a pipe dream and it happened, so you never know.â
With this yearâs festival almost upon us, Eavis is already thinking about 2025. No headliners have been confirmed, she said, but she has âa vague ideaâ of who they might be.
Meanwhile, she said the festival would probably take one of its periodic fallow years in 2026.
âThe fallow year is important because it gives the land a rest, and it gives the cows a chance to stay out for longer and reclaim their land,â she said.
âAnd I think itâs quite good not to be seen to be cashing in.â