A kick up the arts! New Zealand Festival
A kick up the arts! New Zealand Festival celebrates 30th anniversary and launches 2016 line-up
Artistic Director Shelagh Magadza today announced the New Zealand Festival’s programme of events taking place in Wellington over three weeks from 26 February – 20 March 2016.
Founded in 1986, the New Zealand Festival is Aotearoa’s largest celebration of cutting-edge arts and culture. One of the five biggest festivals in Australasia, it has sold approximately two million tickets across the past 15 Festivals and drawn a total attendance of more than five million people to its free and ticketed events. Known in New Zealand as a trailblazer and champion of art in all its forms, the Festival celebrates its 30 year anniversary in 2016 with a programme designed to “kick up the arts!”
Shelagh says, “For this milestone Festival we’ve pulled together the very best international artists. We’re creating experiences you wouldn’t be able to enjoy without flying across the world, and bringing them right to your doorstep. We seek out the very best for our audience, from those who have been to every Festival since 1986 to those joining us for the very first time next year. We encourage everyone to discover what great art can do for you”.
The 2016 Festival programme celebrates an array of iconic artists. One of the USA’s top 25 most influential people according to Time magazine, trumpeter and band leader Wynton Marsalis is the biggest name in jazz. The ensemble he leads, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, make their home in the 16-acre global hub of art and performance in Manhattan, New York City. The JLCO and Wynton Marsalis will be staying in Wellington for nearly a week for a special Residency, performing Marsalis’ Swing Symphony with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, a jazz concert, and delivering an education programme for Kiwi students.
Adored by celebrities from Alan Rickman to Madonna and considered one of the most important artists of all time, the life and art of the late dance-maker Pina Bausch will be recognised through a series of events. Including the first ever appearance in New Zealand of her extraordinary company Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch, it also features a selection of films and a limited release of the Academy Award-winning Wim Wenders documentary Pina! in November.
On the theatre stage, the surreal world of painter Salvador Dalí is brought to life through the extraordinary imagination and dazzling acrobatics of Compagnie Finzi Pasca in La Veritá; acclaimed UK theatre company Kneehigh brings its madcap musical Dead Dog in a Suitcase, which featured in The Guardian’s Top 10 shows of 2014; and a striking two-tier stage is built in the Opera House for cinematic theatre showCineastas.
Indie lovers will have much to enthuse about when Sufjan Stevens brings fans songs from his acclaimed new album and his “truly spectacular” (The Guardian) stage show. Music legends Paul Kelly and Archie Roach join the Black Arm Band collective of indigenous musicians for dirtsong – a night of music and film which comes from the heart and people of Australia.
The songbooks of American idols Tom Waits and Joni Mitchell are given fresh takes by quirky Canadians, L’orchestre D’Hommes-Orchestres and Kiwi songstress Julia Deans. And anyone who went to university in Otago in the 80s will want to secure a ticket for a tribute to Flying Nun records Dunedin Double: two nights of nostalgia and great music as The Chills and The Verlaines play a one-nighter apiece.
In classical music, a visionary of the 17th century, Claudio Monteverdi’s sublime Vespers is performed by Italian baroque masters Concerto Italiano. And US composer John Luther Adams’ meditative open air performance Sila: The Breath of the World will appear on the Wellington waterfront, in a large-scale free music event.
Some of New Zealand’s most influential performers are also heading to Wellington for the anniversary celebrations. Dame Kiri Te Kanawa will give a one night only concert with Voices New Zealand; dance iconDouglas Wright stages his startling and sensual A Kiss Inside and the Royal New Zealand Ballet returns to the Festival for the first time in a decade. New Zealand Arts Foundation icon Ross Harris joins forces with Vincent O’Sullivan to commemorate WWI with the world premiere season of Brass Poppies; while fellow Laureate John Psathas has gathered together 150 musicians from across the world for his monumental “love letter to peace”, No Man’s Land.
Alongside the big names are a series of experiences to transform the capital, explains Shelagh Magadza: “What we’ve learnt over 30 years is that the Festival isn’t just about what happens on stage. It’s about what happens when art brings people together. Wellington is the perfect stage for our Festival, one of the reasons I believe it has such enduring success – and will get better and better. So, for Wellingtonians on this birthday year, we’ve got two special gifts in store…
“Opening night in Civic Square on 26 February is going to be a big free dance party, with the incredible mass dance Le Grand Continental®, featuring 150 local dance stars and partnered by Kiwibank. We’re also building you a parent-powered junkyard fairground, full of fun and food. The Contact Festival Playground is free to attend and will run throughout the Festival in Frank Kitts Park, designed for kids - and adults who don’t want to grow up!”
Another family-friendly night out will be the Wellington Airport Season of For the Birds, an avian-inspired light and sound experience at Otari-Wilton’s Bush reserve, brought to the Festival by the same artists who delighted 22,000 people at Power Plant in the Botanic Gardens in 2014.
The New Zealand Festival also boasts a major literary and ideas festival. 2016 Writers Week (9-14 March) programme is revealed on 28 January 2016, but early announcements include award-winning US film-maker and author Miranda July, prolific scholar Simon Winchester, brain surgeon Henry Marsh, scientist Adam Rutherford, novelist Patrick deWitt, and cartoonist Kate Beaton.
2016 New Zealand Festival
Highlights
Dance
•
Australian dance company Chunky Move
perform their unique dance/theatre collaboration,
Complexity of Belonging, an
exploration of identity, freedom and connectivity.
•
Acclaimed New Zealand choreographer Douglas
Wright’s meditation on the human search for
ecstasy, The Kiss Inside, will run
for two nights at Wellington’s Opera House.
•
The Royal New Zealand Ballet will premiere
three contemporary dance works under the artistic
directorship of Francesco Ventriglia.
Theatre
• Canadian
sensation Hawkesley Workman will bring his
sexy cabaret The God That Comes to
Hannah Playhouse for five nights.
• Set on
stunning two-tier stage, part play, part film
Cineastas traces the works, lives
and loves of the Argentine filmmakers.
• Alice
Mary Cooper’s delightful theatre production
Waves traces the story of Elizabeth
Moncello, inventor of the ‘dolphin’, more commonly known
as the ‘butterfly stroke.’
• Fresh from the
success of The Bookbinder, Trick of the Light
theatre company’s new play The
Devil’s Half-Acre, is set in the Dunedin
slums of the 1860s, and will run for five nights in
March.
• Armed only with a few pieces of chalk
and their wits, Chalk About
performers Christine Devaney and Niels Weijer
take a playground game and turn it into a playful, funny and
often moving look at how we fill in the outlines of each
other’s identities.
Music
•
A sell-out hit at the 2010 Festival, Calexico
return with their “desert noir” sound to the
festival for a one-off show on 19 March.
• A one
night only concert at the Michael Fowler Centre:
Dame Kiri Te Kanawa with Voices New
Zealand Chamber Choir and Pianist Terence
Dennis.
• The Modern Māori
Quartet bring their fresh take on Aotearoa’s old
favourites to the Festival for one night only.
•
Both Sides Now, the songbook of
legendary Joni Mitchell, will be performed by former Fur
Patrol front-woman Julia Deans in March.
• East
meets West in a cutting-edge fusion of modern and
traditional music when New Zealand’s most experimental
composers collaborate with three of Japan’s most virtuosic
performers, theMiyata-Yoshimura-Suzuki
Trio.
Free Events
•
Inspired by a mix of line and contemporary dancing, the free
mass dance event Le Grand Continental®
will kick the 2016 Festival off in style in Civic
Square on 26 February when 150 amateur dancers show off the
results of 6 months rehearsing with Sylvain Emard
Danse.
• The Contact Festival
Playground is a gift to the city to celebrate the
Festival’s 30th birthday on the waterfront near Frank
Kitts Park. It will host the fantastic parent-powered
junkyard fairgroundArquitectura de Feria
and Tiffany Singh’s beautiful Fly
Me Up to Where You Are flags.
•
John Luther Adams’ unique composition for
outside spaces, Sila: The Breath of the World
will be performed by 60 Orchestra
Wellington musicians in Civic Square on 5 and 6
March.
• After its hit run at Wellington’s
Capital 150 celebrations, the Festival is bringing
Page Turners back free of charge for
those who missed it.
TICKETS:
Tickets go on sale to Culture Club supporters from 23 October and to general public from 2 November. Early Bird prices end 30 November.
ENDS