(Berlin) The American Tricia Tuttle will take charge from April 2024 of the Berlin International Film Festival, one of the main cinematographic events which is preparing to scale back for financial reasons, announced Tuesday the German Minister of Culture.
Mme Tuttle, 53, is a seasoned film industry expert. She has worked for the British Film Academy Bafta and directed the London Film Festival (BFI).
She is currently Head of the Feature Filmmaking Department at the National Film and Television School (NFTS) near London.
“Tricia Tuttle brings 25 years of experience in film and film festivals. Under his leadership, the BFI has not only seen its audience grow, but has also gained in profile and importance internationally,” Minister of Culture Claudia Roth emphasized at a press conference.
Mme Tuttle will take over from Mariette Rissenbeek and Carlo Chatrian, who have run the festival as a duo since 2020.
The latter will still organize the next edition in February 2024 (from 15 to 25), the jury of which will be chaired by Mexican-Kenyan actress Lupita Nyong’o.
After the announcement by Mme Rissenbeek upon her retirement, the minister declared that she wanted to return to a single direction, and de facto pushed the artistic director Carlo Chatrian, who enjoys a good reputation among directors, to throw in the towel.
The affair had caused some commotion. In an open letter, more than 200 directors, including Martin Scorsese, Paul Schrader, Claire Denis and Ryusuke Hamaguchi, asked Mme Roth to extend Mr. Chatrian’s contract, in vain.
Mme Tuttle said he’s excited to soon be “part of the team.”
The Berlinale is “a festival that shows that cinema is an extremely vibrant, often magical art form that can change the way we see the world and the way we understand each other,” she said. .
His arrival should restore shine to a festival in decline.
The 2024 edition will see a reduction in the number of films shown to around 200, compared to 287 in 2023, due to an increase in costs.
“The fact that Mme Tuttle has a good network in the American film industry could help him attract a little more Hollywood glamor to Berlin again which (the festival, editor’s note) would really need after years of lean times,” noted the daily South German Zeitung.