News Archive

Peter Read wins the
2007 John Tripp Award for Spoken Poetry

Peter Read by Brian Gaylor

On 28 November 2007 a packed Celebrity Restaurant at St David’s Hall played host the Grand Final of the John Tripp Award for Spoken Poetry. The build-up to the final comprised heats in Cardiff, Merthyr, Swansea and Wrexham. The scene was set, the finalists chosen, the judges poised and the bar fully stocked.  

MC Ifor Thomas opened the event by reading one of John Tripp’s own poems and then led an evening full of diverse and original poetry performances from 16 new and familiar faces to the performance scene. Judging were Herbert Williams, 2004 John Tripp Award winner Clare Potter, broadcaster Nicola Heywood Thomas and 2006 Dylan Thomas Prize long-listed author Matthew David Scott. The atmosphere was tense as the poets took to the microphone to deliver their greatest performance in the hope of being crowned Wales’s best performance poet.

However it was Swansea poet and playwright Peter Read who took the eye and ear of the four judges and was named the winner of the 2007 John Tripp Award for Spoken Poetry. His set which included the three very diverse subjects of his father’s ghost, writing poetry and sex education won him the title and the first prize of £500

On winning Peter Read said: The sense of euphoria is only just starting. It feels wonderful to have won  such a prestigious, national prize. I am also pleased that it bears the name of John Tripp, one of my literary heroes. It was great to see the competitors chatting and supporting each other. I think that contributed to the wonderful atmosphere in the final.

Mab Jones and Peter Finch - Photo by John Briggs  Martin Daws - Photo by John Briggs

The audience also got the chance to have their say last night as they voted for the winner of the Audience Prize. This was a close run contest with a second vote having to be taken as a tie emerged between Mab Jones and Martin Daws. Mab Jones from Splott in Cardiff, clinched the second vote by a whisker and was presented her Audience Prize award by Academi Chief Executive Peter Finch. Martin Daws, a finalist in the Wrexham heat was also chosen as the judge’s runner up in the competition. 

Click here to find out more about our winners and to read their poems