NEWS RELEASE
FOR PUBLICATION
20 JUNE 2008
Where Is Maori Theatre Now?
Matariki Playwrights
12noon - 5.30pm, Saturday 28 June
Limelight Room, Level 3, Aotea Centre. The Edge.
Contemporary Maori playwriting has played a vital role in the examination and celebration of our culture in recent
years, and in the development path for some of New Zealand’s most celebrated work in film and television. Maori
Television is now well established, yet we are arguably seeing less Maori voices reaching our theatres than we were 15
years ago, and few new voices. Where is Maori theatre now?
This will be one of the questions considered as part of the inaugural Matariki Playwrights, a forum for new voices and
the future of Maori theatre in Auckland. All are invited to an afternoon of discussion, play-readings and
information-sharing, organised by Playmarket, New Zealand’s playwrights’ organisation, in partnership with Auckland City
Council, and with the support of ASB Community Trust and THE EDGE.
Matariki is about remembrance, harvest and preparing the ground for the new season ahead. Playmarket is about
representing and developing playwrights. This is Playmarket’s first forum for Maori playwrights and the theatre that
will help give their work life. Present will not only be new Maori voices but the voices of those who have trailblazed
the way and continue to shine the light for Maori Theatre.
The afternoon begins with a reading of a brand new Maori playwright’s work, Ariki Spooner, directed by leading actor and
playwright Rawiri Paratene (Whale Rider), and closes with a reading of another new playwright’s work Renae Maihi called
Nga Manurere, directed by well-known actor and director Waimihi Hotere.
Rawiri Paratene will also host a discussion looking to the many different ways that a Maori writer’s voice may be heard
in our theatre, the rich legacy that others have given, and the opportunities for new beginnings Auckland currently
offers. Speakers will include Rore Hapipi (Death of the Land, a play first produced by Hapipi in the early 1970s),
Willie Davis (Manawa Taua, Savage Hearts), Kirk Torrance (Strata), James Ashcroft (Taki Rua), Albert Belz (Te Karakia),
Miria George and Jamie McCaskill (He Reo Aroha).
In “Show me the Money” Creative New Zealand, Auckland City Council, Manukau City Council and THE EDGE, talk about how
they seek to enable theatre getting from page to stage through funding and developing resources and relationships, and
we also have presentations from visiting playwrights
Yvette Nolan (Canada) and Tammy Anderson (Yirra Yaakin, Australia) talking about writing from an indigenous perspective.
Anderson and Nolan are in New Zealand as part of the Honouring Theatre indigenous theatre exchange,
For further programme information visit: http://wwwplaymarket.org.nz/opportunities/matariki_and_pasifika
ENDS