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VEVEY

Charlie Chaplin museum gains French backer

La Compagnie des Alpes, a French ski resort and leisure park operator, is set to invest 9.5 million francs in a proposed Charlie Chaplin museum near Vevey in the canton of Vaud, according to media reports.

Charlie Chaplin museum gains French backer
Charlie Chaplin's former home near Vevey. Photo: Charlie Chaplin Museum

The information, not officially announced, has filtered through municipal councils in the Riviera region surrounding Vevy, the ATS news service and Tamedia newspapers reported.

The long planned project involves an attraction celebrating the famous silent movie star and director at the home where he lived for the last 25 years of his life.

Chaplin moved to Switzerland in the early 1950s after leaving the United States, where he was accused of being a communist sympathizer.

He lived at Le Manoir de Ban, a mansion in Corsier-sur-Vevey, a municipality located on a hillside above Vevey, where he died on Christmas Day in 1977.    

The canton of Vaud has promised to lend backers of the project 10 million francs interest-free, provided 10 municipalities in the region agree to guarantee the loan up to eight million francs.

The municipal council of Vevey just approved its share of the financial guarantee for the project, while the Montreux council will decide at a meeting on January 30.

Backers of the Chaplin’s World museum, initially launched in 2002, have met legal roadblocks and funding problems in their bid to get the 55-million-franc project off the ground.

Michael Chaplin, the actor’s son, is a supporter of the project, along with other family members.  

Investors from Luxembourg, who acquired the home, are also involved in the project, while Nestlé, whose worldwide headquarters are housed in Vevey, is a partner.

The reported involvement of La Compagnie des Alpes has raised hopes that the project may finally have found the financial underpinning it needs.

The company operates such French Alpine ski resorts as Tigne, Les Arcs and Flaine, as well as the Musée Grevin waxwork museum in Paris and Parc Asterix, a theme park near the French capital.

Under the reported deal, the French company would obtain a 30 year permit to operate the Chaplin museum for 1.5 million francs a year, plus 2.5 percent of its revenues

The museum’s promoter Philippe Meylan said if all the necessary approvals are received, construction on the museum can start in May, the ATS news service said.

Meylan is hopeful the museum can open its doors by late 2015 or early 2016.

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UNESCO

Swiss winegrowers festival granted Unesco status

The Fête des Vignerons, a huge winegrowers’ festival that takes place every 20 years in Vevey, on the shore of Lake Geneva, has been inscribed on Unesco’s ‘intangible heritage’ list.

Swiss winegrowers festival granted Unesco status
Photo: Fête des Vignerons

The festival was granted its new status on Thursday at a Unesco meeting in Addis Ababa alongside 11 other cultural traditions from around the world, including a fishing festival in Nigeria, an equestrian tradition in Mexico, Romanian wall-hangings and puppet theatre in Slovakia.

Held only five times a century, the Fête des Vignerons brings together local winegrowers and residents of the town of Vevey to celebrate its wine heritage and pass on knowledge from one generation to the next.

The festival has its origins in the 17th century when a local winegrowers association organized a yearly pageant.

Since then it has grown into a large spectacle featuring parades, theatre, music and dance held around Vevey’s market square. The last one, in 1999, attracted 16,000 people to its main arena.

The next Fête des Vignerons takes place in 2019.


Photo: Fête des Vignerons

In a statement Unesco said the festival was “part of Vevey’s living traditions” and that it “reinforces community spirit, encourages artistic life and stimulates winegrowers’ knowledge”.

The Swiss federal culture office said Unesco cited the festival’s links with the nearby Lavaux vineyards, a Unesco World Heritage site since 2007.

Switzerland presented the festival to Unesco as a candidate for ‘intangible heritage’ status in March 2015, the first item on a list of eight Swiss traditions the country wishes to see inscribed.

The others include yodelling, watchmaking, Basel’s Fasnacht festival, Easter processions in Mendrisio, alpine livestock traditions and the Helvetica font.

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