The Tribeca Film Festival said Monday that it plans to hold its 20th edition in-person this June and with outdoor screenings spread throughout New York’s five boroughs.
The springtime festival — cancelled last year due to the pandemic — will instead turn to the summer for its next edition, spanning 12 days beginning on 9 June. Tribeca will screen films at outdoor venues around the city including the Battery, Hudson Yards, Pier 57 Rooftop, Brookfield Place, the MetroTech Commons in Brooklyn and Empire Outlets in Staten Island. The festival will also use a travelling 40-foot HD screen in other areas.
Here's the official announcement
We’ve got news—Tribeca Festival is back with live events! Safely enjoy innovative community screenings across all boroughs and in-person events hosted at notable New York City spots like The Battery, Pier 57, & Hudson Yards. Follow the link to learn more: https://t.co/vfa6CRcuRs pic.twitter.com/exe5jwI3cx
— Tribeca (@Tribeca) March 29, 2021
“The Tribeca Film Festival was born out of our mission to bring people together in the aftermath of 9/11. We’re still doing it,” said Tribeca co-founder Robert De Niro. “And as New York emerges from the shadow of COVID-19, it seems just right to bring people together again in-person for our 20th-anniversary festival.”
Tribeca has gradually broadened the footprint of its annual festival, stretching beyond its downtown namesake. It has regularly hosted outdoor “drive-in” screenings on city streets, something that it expanded nationwide last year in a series of drive-ins held around the country showing classic films.
Major film festivals — the Berlin International Film Festival and the SXSW Film Festival in Austin, Texas — have thus far turned to virtual editions. (Last year, Tribeca put a small section of films online, too.) But with vaccinations increasing and the potential seasonality of the virus, summer is looking more promising for the world’s top film festivals. France’s Cannes Film Festival, usually held in May, is aiming for an in-person festival in July.
Tribeca’s plans were made in concert with the initiative, NY PopsUp, which is working to bring back live entertainment. Tribeca organisers and supporters hope this year’s festival will help stoke the city’s revitalisation.
“This year the festival is once again shining a spotlight on our city’s resilience and creativity, and just as we’ve done from the start, Bloomberg is glad to support this great tradition, which will once again help lift our city’s spirit,” said former New York major Michael Bloomberg and founder of Bloomberg Philanthropies, a regular Tribeca supporter.
(With inputs from The Associated Press)
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