Access All Areas Winter Issue | Page 21

WINTER | REVIEW Young ambition With champions including Meghan Markle and Bob Geldof, One Young World has become a global phenomenon, meaning the pressure is on for event agencies Private Drama and MCI A s 2,500 aspirational young people descended on the capital on 23 October, the pressure was building in the Albert Hall, where Access caught up with Private Drama’s CEO Adam Blackwood as Brit School students put the final preparations into their impending performance. With Greta Thunberg capturing the world’s attention, it couldn’t be a more appropriate time to draw attention to the issues close to young people’s hearts, Blackwood tells Access. “As the event enters its tenth anniversary, young people are coming to London to talk about the issues that matter to them from microplastics and carbon footprints, to FGM. Private Drama is proud to curate a show for this young, inclusive, multi ethic audience from around the world.” True to the spirit of the event, Blackwood’s curation celebrates diversity of talent and inclusivity. “Everything we perform has a resonance of one of the event’s key issues, like gender fluidity – which is handled in [a performance from musical] Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, or the celebration of the common man, in the musical number Ain’t No Mountain High Enough,” he says. “Everything you see and hear here we have curated. I work with a producer, but we have very good contacts with the disabled community via Graeae Theatre Company and Candoco, we work with the National Centre for Circus Arts, the Guildford School of Acting, ArtsEd, Brit School, and we drew them together to make sure its inclusive and representative.” Time was very much of the essence for Blackwood and his team, with the tendering process, which took place in February, still fresh in the memory. As we spoke on the day of the big event, he talked us through the tight turnaround times. “It’s incredibly challenging. We got into the Albert Hall at 4am this morning, and we’re putting together a two-hour show, akin to West End musical, in about eight hours. We have 250 performers and 700 people backstage, including the flag bearers. It’s a huge operation.” Despite Blackwood’s experience at ‘almost every venue in London’ this was his first time at the iconic Kensington concert hall. “It’s been a learning curve as it’s a huge space and you need a lot of people to make it work,” he says. Of course, given the venue and the city’s prominence, Private Drama were keen to inject some of the local atmosphere. “We open with the poem All The World’s a Stage, by Shakespeare, which is fitting as we’re in the city that houses The Globe and so much literary history. We then go into London’s Calling by The Clash. It’s a way of saying, ‘we’re here and we want to change the world’. I look at other year’s events and wanted to One Young World facts 10,000 At the end of the Summit, Delegates become One Young World Ambassadors, accessing the global network of 10,000+ young leaders to accelerate existing initiatives or establish new ventures 20.9million 20.9 million people have been positively impacted by Initiatives led by One Young World Ambassadors since 2010 180+ One Young World partners with 180+ global businesses, NGOs and educational institutions One Young World boasts the largest corporate footprint of any organisation in the third sector Companies sending Delegates include Accenture, Audi, BMW, BNP Paribas, Chanel, Citigroup, Coca-Cola, Deloitte, Facebook, GE, Google, Johnson & Johnson, L’Oréal, McKinsey, Unilever and Verizon 21