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My name is Rhys, a first time dad blogging about my adventures and experiences of being a parent. [email protected]

LGBTQ+ champion and creative producer made an honorary fellow

UWTSD Vice-Chancellor Professor Medwin Hughes, CBE, DL with Berwyn Rowlands.

LGBTQ+ champion and creative producer, Berwyn Rowlands, has been made an Honorary Fellow at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David’s (UWTSD) graduation ceremony held in Carmarthen today.

Berwyn Rowlands is the founder of the Iris Prize LGBTQ+ Film Festival, a Cardiff-based LGBTQ+ short film festival which celebrates and champions LGBTQ+ titles and filmmakers with messages which are positive and uplifting.  He has also made a significant contribution to the creative arts in Wales.

On receiving his award Bewyn Rolwands said: I feel humble receiving this a fellowship from the UWTSD but at the same time very proud to be recognised in this way for my contribution to the Cultural life of Wales and LGBTQ+ visibility through the Iris Prize and other projects. Reflecting on the past 40 years, I feel proud that Wales is today a country that celebrates diversity – this was not possibly always the case.”

In presenting Berwyn Rowlands to the congregation, Shone Hughes, Chief of Staff at UWTSD said:  “I’m delighted to present Berwyn Rowlands to receive an honorary fellowship of the University.  Berwyn has made an outstanding contribution to the creative arts in Wales particularly in relation to equality and diversity within the arts.  He is an entrepreneur who has not been afraid to push boundaries and it is no surprise to me that he has been recognised with so many accolades.  As a fellow native of Anglesey, I know that Berwyn has worked tirelessly to make a difference to the cultural life of Wales.”

A former pupil of Ysgol David Hughes, Anglesey, Berwyn demonstrated his entrepreneurial skill at an early age, setting up Urdd groups as well as a magazine while he was at still at school..

While living in Aberystwyth he established Cwmni Cadwyn, a theatre-in-education company which toured Wales with commissioned productions and in 1990 with the then director of Aberystwyth Arts Centre, Alan Hewson, produced the Welsh International Film Festival until 1998. In 1995 he produced the feature length drama for S4C Llety Piod starring Bill Nighy and Sandra Dickinson.

Berwyn’s talent and love for publishing continued from his school days with such titles as Ffocws, a bi-monthly bilingual magazine for the Welsh media industry, from 1994 until 1998.

In 1997 he was appointed as the chief executive of Sgrîn, the Media Agency, and during his tenure Sgrîn co-ordinated the establishment of a pan-Wales film location service, Wales Screen Commission and the National Screen & Sound Archive in partnership with the National Library of Wales.  He was Director of the Welsh International Film Festival from 1989 to 1997.

In 2006 he left Sgrîn and established The Festivals Company.  Through this company he set up the Iris Prize, an international competition for LGBTQ+ short films awarded annually in Cardiff.

The Festivals Company has grown from strength to strength, with public recognition being awarded to Berwyn through numerous awards including outstanding contribution to LGBT life in the 2020 LGBT Awards.  He has been recognised as an influential LGBTQ+ person in Wales, earning a place on the Western Mail’s Pinc List each year since the list was first published in 2015.

In 2015 he was also listed in the Wales Arts Powerlist as one of fifty people making a mark on Welsh culture due to the success of the Iris Prize.

He was presented with a St David Awards award for Culture by the First Minister of Wales in 2022 recognising his work with the Iris Prize.