- Sesqui 1990
Sesqui 1990 was a
festival that was staged in February, 1990 in the city ofWellington ,New Zealand . A spectacular commercial and administrativefailure , the Sesqui event has subsequently become an icon of corporate mismanagement within New Zealandpopular culture .History
Billed by promoters as 'New Zealand's biggest event ever', the festival was staged in Wellington to mark the
sesquicentenary , or 150th anniversary of the founding of New Zealand. The event was a joint venture between the Wellington Show Association and the Wellington 1990 Trust, a well-funded regional organisation. The Wellington regional and city councils jointly underwrote this event by NZ$1.4 million.The Sesqui festival was planned to include a wide range of
cultural ,trade andscientific exhibits as well asentertainment events andfunfair amusements. It was scheduled to run for six weeks and anticipated to attract 30,000 visitors per day, despite the fact that the population of the entire Wellington region at that time was fewer than 400,000 people.Several weeks before the festival was due to begin, the media reported that the Sesqui organisers had decided to stage their opening celebration simultaneously with the opening celebrations of the 1990
New Zealand International Festival of the Arts . Neither the Sesqui organisers nor the Arts Festival organisers were prepared to alter their plans.The event
NZ$150,000 worth of
fireworks launched Day 1 of Sesqui 1990.The festival organisers had made a decision to split the event between two venues, one at the
Wellington Waterfront and the other at the (then) Wellington Show and Sports Centre in Newtown. Despite the arrangement of a shuttle bus service between these two venues, this decision had the effect of confusing and frustrating potential visitors to the festival, with the result that neither venue attracted visitor numbers beyond an average of 2,500 per day.The organisers had also adopted a policy against advertising the daily schedules for musical and other performances taking place at either venue. This policy was based on the assumption that it would encourage visitors to prolong their stay and to make numerous return visits so as not to miss seeing favourite performers. As a result, a number of popular musicians, singers and other entertainers played to largely empty houses because the public did not know when or where they were performing.
Within days of the opening of the festival, media reports began to suggest that it was faltering. During a radio interview, Wellington City Councillor Ruth Gottlieb maintained that it was "every Wellingtonian's civic duty to attend Sesqui."
The highest attendance figure was achieved during the final days of the event, when 32,000 visitors took advantage of a decision to waive all entry fees, which were widely regarded as being excessive.
Although planned to run for six weeks, Sesqui 1990 closed after only two weeks with debts in excess of NZ$6.4 million.
Aftermath
The collapse of the Sesqui 1990 festival forced a number of small companies that had been contracted to supply various goods and services to the event into receivership and/or
bankruptcy .Two iconic billboards promoting Sesqui 1990 remained standing for a number of months after the event's premature closure, apparently because the organisers could not afford to have them removed. One of these, featuring an image of gleeful Sesqui visitors, was quickly defaced with
graffiti reading "And I laughed and laughed and laughed". The other billboard, a plywood cut-out representing Sesqui mascot "Pesky Sesky" - a sort ofanthropomorphic opossum , or possiblysasquatch - had been erected on a rooftop to welcome visitors to the Show and Sports Centre venue, and eventually disappeared during a wind storm.fact|date=August 2007References
* "Report to Wellington City Council and Wellington Regional Council on their involvement with NZ SESQUI 1990 Festival", 1990
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