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Your essential guide to the extraordinary theatre, dance, music and visual arts coming to Wellington for the 2012 New Zealand International Arts Festival. Visit festival.co.nz to book your tickets.
Citation preview
festival.co.nz
300 ARTS EVENTS. 24 DAYS. WELLINGTONExtraordinary music, dance, theatre and literature – it’s all here, so start exploring!
Play Where you see the sign watch the video footage on our website.
Wild at Heart Weekends This icon makes it easy to schedule your stay in Wellington.
festival.co.nz Not sure what to see? Head to our website and use our handy show selector, plus find more info and reviews.
A FEW FESTIVAL FAVOURITESTelstraClear Festival Club The tent is back – this time in Odlin’s Plaza. Join us at the heart of the Festival (see pages 34-37).
Writers & Readers Week Enjoy a top-shelf literary line-up from 9 – 14 March (see pages 54-57).
Family Friendly Treat the kids when you see the icon.
Art on the Move The arts come to you as we take events to Greater Wellington (see pages 58 & 59).
WHAT’S NEW IN 2012Town Hall Gigs Love live music? We’ve got a stellar international line-up (see pages 30-33).
Bard Wired Celebrate all things Shakespeare.
Downstage Solos Experience the power of one with these amazing solo shows (see pages 48 & 49).
NO CASH? NO PROBLEM Free Look for this icon and you’ll enjoy world-class arts without paying a cent.
1 SELECTYOUR SEAT IS WAITINGBook Now Tickets go on sale on Monday 14 November by web, mail, phone or in person (see page 41).
WAYS TO SAVETickets for most Festival events start at around $38-$48 so you can see more, for less. Plus there are other great ways to save, head to our website to find out more about:
Friends of the Festival Want to get close to the Festival? Join the Friends today and enjoy great benefits.
Tix for Twenty Get tickets to sold-out Festival shows for just $20 (see page 65).
The New Wave Under 35? Sign up, get free stuff and hang out with your mates and other arts addicts. Stay and play late for some hot post-show happenings.
Make First Contact Never been to a Festival event before? Go to First Contact 2012 live or online (see pages 4 & 5) and get the chance to try a taster – especially for first-timers!
2 BOOKYOUR FESTIVAL JOURNEY STARTS HERE
COVER IMAGES / Beautiful Burnout Image: Ela Wlodarczyk / Cantina Image: Sean Young / Leo Image: Heiko Kalmbach / Parabelo/Onqotô Image: José Luiz Pederneiras
At Festival time nothing gives me more pleasure than
seeing thousands of New Zealanders and international visitors enjoying the
best of the arts in the world’s coolest little capital, Wellington. At the heart of
every Festival is our special family of loyal Partners and Patrons. Your commitment and
generosity in these challenging times enables us to present this incredible programme.
KERRY PRENDERGAST Executive Chair
Everyone who is involved in making the Festival happen does so for the love of
the arts and for the joy of bringing this incredible event to life for audiences in
Aotearoa. We are privileged and grateful to have such a dedicated team of staff,
interns and volunteers. To our audiences from the whole Festival team – it’s your
festival, enjoy!
SUE PATERSON Executive Director
STAY IN THE LOOPIt’s easier than ever to keep up with the latest Festival goings-on. Follow us on Twitter, like us on Facebook and watch videos on our YouTube channel. Plus there’s our free e-newsletter where you’ll get great previews and prizes. You’ll find all the details at festival.co.nz.
EAT, SHOP, SLEEPFill your belly, recharge your batteries and get your shopping fix at some of Wellington’s best eats, sleeps and shops. Check out the Top 10 section for just a few of the options (see pages 66-69).
ARTS MAD? GET MORE...Artists Register Are you a New Zealand artist or creative? Anyone that signs up online can get access to ticket prize vouchers and connect with our team and artists.
Art Talk You loved the show, now get the inside info in our free sessions with the artists (see page 63).
ACCESS FOR ALLYour Festival is for everyone. We’re working to make the Festival as accessible as we can for all New Zealanders (see page 64).
ENJOY3 CONTENTS30-33 Town Hall Gigs
34-37 TelstraClear Festival Club
38-39 Festival Calendar
40-42 Map and Bookings
48-49 Downstage Solos
50-51 For Kids
54-57 Writers and Readers
58-59 Art on the Move
60-62 Visual Arts
63 Art Talks
HAERE MAI — WELCOMEOver the course of 24 extraordinary
days the 2012 Festival will take you from the deserts of the Sahara to the
cultural centres of the world, welcoming back favourite artists from past festivals
alongside others new to New Zealand – all key in shaping the cultural future of our
time. I’m very grateful to these astounding artists who bring this festival to life.
Delve into the pages of this brochure and you will find an abundance of stories from fairytales to
Shakespearean tragedies, a return of the much loved festival tent, spine-tingling sounds from the Baroque
to the 21st century, a heart-pumping season of Town Hall Gigs and plenty more to entertain, excite and savour.
LISSA TWOMEY Artistic Director
COVER IMAGES / Beautiful Burnout Image: Ela Wlodarczyk / Cantina Image: Sean Young / Leo Image: Heiko Kalmbach / Parabelo/Onqotô Image: José Luiz Pederneiras
gold sponsorsPrimary positive - colour Primary positive - black & white
Primary reverse - colour Primary reverse - black & white
silver sponsors
major grants
principal supporter
bronze sponsors
CORE FUNDERS
special friendsRoderick & Gillian Deane / Penny Deans & Andrew Gawith / Hon Marion Frater / Brett Gawn & Fay Paterson / Ruth Graham / Prof. Les Holborow / Christine & John McGrath.
INTERNATIONAL PARTNERSArts Council England Arts Council IrelandAsia New Zealand FoundationAustralia Council for the ArtsAustralian High CommissionThe Banff CentreBritish CouncilCanada Council for the ArtsCreative ScotlandCulture IrelandEmbassy of FranceEmbassy of SpainEmbassy of the United States of AmericaFlemish GovernmentFulbright New Zealand Goethe-InstitutOntario Arts CouncilScottish Government International Touring Fund
CORPORATE PATRONS ArmourguardChapman TrippCraigs Investment PartnersBERL
Building SolutionsDeloitteG K Shaw and Wellington Waterfront Ltd.Jackson Stone and PartnersMojo Coffee CartelMoore Wilson’sPhantom Billstickers Ltd.Ricoh NZ Stoneleigh
GRANTSGreytown Trust Lands Hutt City CouncilInfinity FoundationJohn F. Kennedy Memorial FellowshipKapiti Coast District CouncilMana Community Grants FoundationMasterton District CouncilMasterton Trust Lands TrustPelorus TrustPorirua City CouncilPub Charity South Wairarapa District CouncilTe Puni Ko
_kiri
The Southern TrustYouthtown
PATRONSPlatinum
Eyal & Antonietta AharoniGeoff & Vivien AtkinsonEugene Bowen & Elizabeth EllisTim Brown & Gael WebsterIan Cassels & Caitlin TaylorErrol & Jennifer ClarkJohn & Deb FeastPeter & Carolyn DiesslAnne Gaskell & Mike CampClive & Dawn HeskethSanne Korinth & Ruben EingaertnerStephen Kós & Jocelyn AffordJulie Nevett & Lloyd MorrisonCollin Post & Brenda Young Mary Scholtens & John LuxtonLiz Stringer & Rob MorrisonAdam & Kate ThorntonJohn & Teena ToddMark & Sally VerbiestSir James Wallace
Gold
Denis & Verna AdamJohn & Jackie ArchibaldPaul & Sheryl BainesKaye & Maurice ClarkRoderick & Gillian Deane
Gold cont.
Sir David Gascoigne & Patsy ReddyDavid Goddard & Liesle TheronChris Parkin & Michelle RobertsonDavid & Jan RenwickPaul Ridley-Smith & Felicity WongRoy & Renate SavageRichard Stone & Dennis RobertsLindy & Sandy Thomson
Silver
John Allen & Janie PackRichard T. Nelson HE Paul O’Sullivan AO & Mrs Merrilyn O’Sullivan
Bronze
Phillipa & Russ BallardTimberly Hughes & Allan RansleyJay KaimalJohn & Helen MeehanMark O’Regan & Nicola SakerCelia & Ashley SmoutAnonymous (4)
thechurch.co.nz / Festival Brand Development, Communications and Publication Design
®�
The iSite Season of
“ I want to extend the surrounding stories of these objects which were once contemporary in themselves, by reawakening sound, giving new life to historical images and text again through motion” Michel Tuffery
Michel Tuffery (New Zealand)
First Contact 2012 VISUAL ARTS
4
The Festival begins in truly breathtaking style as one of Wellington’s most iconic buildings is transformed into a living, moving canvas by acclaimed New Zealand artist Michel Tuffery.
‘Larger_than_life’ doesn’t quite do this work justice. The beauty and history of the South Pacific come to Wellington in a big way with First Contact – a giant digital artwork projected upon the western wall of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.
By bringing the ‘inside out’ from Te Papa’s extensive collections, Tuffery breathes new life into historical material recorded by the Polynesian ambassador Tupaia, and the scientists and artists from Captain James Cook’s three epic voyages – linking them with his own distinctive works and 21st century visual and sound bites.
Innovative and utterly transfixing, First Contact will light up Te Papa every evening during the Festival. If you can’t make the live cultural celebrations on opening night or want to experience First Contact in all its glory again, go to festival.co.nz or head along to the First Contact hub outside Te Papa, where you can download a free recording of the live soundtrack.
Artist Concept Image: Michel Tuffery
opening Night Come and celebrate the opening night of the Festival with us on Friday 24 February at First Contact – First Night. Transforming the space outside Te Papa into a bustling Pacific paradise, the beats and sights of this special free event will draw the Festival crowds to the Wellington waterfront. Bring your friends and family to experience First Contact at its most spectacular – with live visuals by Linechecker and music and dance from the Whitireia Performing Arts School, DJ Nomad, Horomona Horo, Rhombus in Dub and Rayjah45.
WHEN 24 February 8.30pm until lateWHERE Te Papa
DURATION 1 hr 30 (live performance)
WHEN 24 February to 18 March, from dusk until late
WHERE Te Papa
Sponsored by With support from
5
“ As ambitious and as heads_down, hair_prickingly exhilarating as modern dance gets” The Daily Telegraph (UK)
POLITICAL MOTHERHofesh Shechter (UK)
DANCE
Supported bySponsored by
6
Following a meteoric rise to become one of the hottest properties in modern dance, Hofesh Shechter brings his unmistakable style to New Zealand for the first time.
Since its debut in 2010 Political Mother has built a collection of glowing reviews that would be the envy of any dance company in the world. This forceful work from Israeli_born and UK_based Hofesh Shechter is that good, that affecting.
Light and dark, hope and despair, tranquillity and chaos, they all crash together as Shechter explores themes of power, repression and war. This is modern
dance for the mainstream – every moment a new and exhilarating assault on the senses.
From its brutally powerful opening scene to the fall of the curtain, Political Mother holds you in its grasp. An ensemble cast of ten dancers executes dazzling sequences of movement; shuffling dejectedly around the stage at one moment, leaping in joyous freedom the next. High above them a band of live musicians delivers Shechter’s electrifying and diverse soundtrack, punctuated by rhythmic military drums and blazing electric guitars.
Political Mother has enjoyed acclaimed seasons on the major dance stages of Europe. Now it’s your chance to experience the production that the world is raving about.
WARNING: CONTAINS STROBE LIGHTING
Image: Gabriele Zucca
WHEN 8–1 1 March 8pmWHERE St James Theatre
TICKETS $38 – $88P$88 / A$78 / B$68 / C$53 / D$38FRIENDS P$83 / A$73 / B$63
DURATION 1 hr 10
7
Sweat, punches, blood and banter. They all fly in this gritty and explosive piece of physical theatre about the most controversial sport of our time.
The square circle – where a single punch can make dreams come true, or leave them pulverised on the canvas. For four young men and one woman from the mean, grey streets of Glasgow it’s that simple, and that hard. But which stars will shine and which ones will fade into darkness?
Returning to the Festival after their 2008 hit Black Watch, the National Theatre of Scotland joins forces with masters of physical theatre Frantic Assembly for this knockout production. Authentic to the extreme, Beautiful Burnout’s young cast spent months in training so every jab, hook and uppercut feels flinchingly realistic.
With the audience seated around a boxing ring, Beautiful Burnout unfolds to the throbbing electronic beats of Underworld. The sublimely choreographed training
and fight sequences simply ooze adrenaline, and the climactic scene – a fight played out in both frantic full-speed and incredible slow motion – is simply breathtaking.
Whether you see boxing as the ‘noble art’ or barbarian brutality, the pace and passion of writer Bryony Lavery’s Beautiful Burnout will leave you gasping for air.
Get your seat ringside.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 14+
WARNING: CONTAINS STROBE LIGHTING
“ A technical knockout, bringing to life the sweat and poetry of boxing” The Sunday Times (UK)
Image: Gavin EvansImage right: Ela Wlodarczyk
Supported by the Scottish Government International Touring Fund
Sponsored by
The TV3 Season of
beautiful burnoutNational Theatre of Scotland / Frantic Assembly (UK)
THEATRE
WHEN 3, 9, 10, 16, 17 March 8pm4, 11, 18 March 2pm & 8pm6–8, 13–15 March at 7pm
WHERE TSB Bank ArenaTICKETS $48 – $68
A$68 / B$48 FRIENDS A$63
DURATION 1 hr 30
8
9
10
Leave reality behind and immerse yourself in a place of dreams, imagination and giant puppets as one of physical theatre’s most celebrated sons unleashes his stunning array of skills.
Few do theatrical spectacle better than multi award_winning artist James Thiérrée. Not surprising really, given that he grew up in a renowned theatrical family and has been perfecting the art of performance since he was knee_high to a ringmaster.
After wildly popular Festival performances in 2004 (The Junebug Symphony) and 2006 (Bright Abyss), Thiérrée returns in his new full_length piece as Raoul, a lone figure adrift in an incredible, ever changing world of billowing sails, steel pipes and driftwood. Alone, that is, until the arrival of a destructive doppelgänger that attacks Raoul’s home and has him questioning his very identity and existence.
Unexpected at every turn, Thiérrée draws from a seemingly endless repertoire of theatrical talents as he pushes his mind and body to incredible new places. In his hands every part of the intricate set comes alive as Raoul’s world begins to spectacularly crash down around him.
Funny, moving and achingly beautiful, Raoul is a mesmerising journey into the mind of one of Europe’s most creative and versatile artists.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 12+
Images: Richard Haughton
WHEN 14, 16–1 8 March 8pmWHERE St James Theatre
TICKETS $18 – $83P$83 / A$68 / B$58 / C$48 / D$38 FRIENDS P$78 / A$63 / B$53CHILD P$53 / A$43 / B$38 C$28 / D$18
DURATION 1 hr 20
With support fromSponsored by
“ Dream_weaver James Thiérrée isa master of theatrical spectacle” Metro (UK)
RAOULCompagnie du Hanneton / James Thiérrée (France)
THEATRE
11
Rediscover Shakespeare through the physical style and engrossing interpretations of renowned all_male theatre company Propeller.
When you’ve got the words of history’s greatest playwright to work with, why do anything else? That’s Propeller’s philosophy and it’s one that works.
Directed by Edward Hall (son of theatre royalty Sir Peter Hall), Propeller combines unwavering devotion to the original beauty of Shakespeare’s text with inventive staging that adds clarity and appeal for today’s audience.
Presenting two very different yet equally enthralling works, this is fast, witty and accessible – Shakespeare at its most refreshing and alive. See one, or catch them both.
Save 15% when you buy an A or B ticket for both Henry V and The Winter’s Tale.
the winter’s taleLeontes, King of Sicilia, should be a happy man. He has devoted friends, a loving wife and son, and a baby on the way. But he also has a big problem with the green_eyed monster. Seeing deceit and treachery all around him, Leontes’ irrational yet all_consuming jealousy leads to the condemnation of his wife, banishment of his daughter and death of his son. Wracked with guilt, the scene is set for Leontes to begin a journey of redemption that leads to a miraculous climax.
Donned in immaculate Italian suits and with brandy glasses in hand, Propeller’s cast present a captivating modern twist on Shakespeare’s rollercoaster ride of contrasting emotions and motivations.
Henry VFull of famously rousing speeches, Henry V is the tale of the greatest warrior in English folklore. Chronicling Henry’s transformation from irresponsible youth to inspirational leader, we follow his journey from the corridors of Westminster to the battlefields of France. There, outnumbered by the enemy five to one, the young king must rally his ‘band of brothers’ for battle upon battle in a war of dubious justification.
Set in a time when British nationalism is at its most dangerous and exciting, Propeller presents this original take on one of Shakespeare’s powerhouse history plays.
“ Shakespeare as it should be done, fast, sinuous and surprising” Metro (UK)
Henry V / The Winter’s Tale Propeller (UK)
THEATRE
WHEN 29 February, 2, 4 March 7.30pmWHERE Opera House
TICKETS $38 – $78A$78 / B$58 / C$38FRIENDS A$73 / B$53
DURATION 2 hrs 45 (including interval)
WHEN 1, 3 March 7pm4 March 1.30pm
WHERE Opera HouseTICKETS $38 – $78
A$78 / B$58 / C$38FRIENDS A$73 / B$53
DURATION 2 hrs 45 (including interval)
Image: Robert Day
Presented in association with The Touring Partnership
Sponsored by
12
CircensesCircus Ronaldo (Belgium)
THEATRE
14
Step inside the vintage big top on Wellington’s waterfront and enter a world of enchantment and intrigue with Circus Ronaldo.
Executed by a host of performers including three generations of Belgium’s extraordinary Ronaldo family, Circenses brings all the nostalgic romance of the circus back to life in a performance that is both enthralling and eye_opening.
Blending razor_sharp wit and astounding physical skill, this is a show of two very different halves. In act one, half the audience sits around the ring and is treated to a fabulous display of traditional circus skills. Meanwhile, the other half sits backstage where they are privy to a darker and more mischievous world. Then at interval, everyone changes places and all is revealed. Or is it? As in the great circus traditions of curiosity and illusion, everything in this show is not always as it first appears.
A masterful blend of circus and theatre, Circenses is a unique peek into the unseen realm behind the red curtain. Book your spot amidst the sawdust and sequins to enjoy a memorable Festival night out.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 10+
“ Ronaldo strips away all circus’s spangles and cheesy smiles to reveal a tremulous ego and a delicately beating heart” The Independent (UK)
Images: Benny Degrove
WHEN 29 February 7.30pm1–3, 7–10, 14–17 March 7.30pm4, 11, 18 March 6pm
WHERE Waitangi ParkTICKETS $38 – $78
GA$78 FRIENDS GA$73CHILD GA$38
DURATION 2 hrs 20 (including interval)
15
One of the world’s greatest period ensembles comes to New Zealand for the first time to present two very special concerts.
Driven by the passions of eminent conductor and founder Harry Christophers, The Sixteen has been a regular at major concert halls and festivals worldwide for over 30 years. Comprising choir and period-instrument orchestra, The Sixteen has a reputation for performing early English polyphony and the masterpieces of the Renaissance, as well as bringing fresh insights into Baroque and early Classical music.
For the Festival, The Sixteen presents two incredible concerts. In the first, the choir is joined by the orchestra in celebrating the genius of Handel, concluding with perhaps his best-loved choral work, the uplifting Dixit Dominus. For the second concert An Immortal Legacy, The Sixteen choir performs some of the best-loved classics of Tudor and Jacobean church music and madrigals together with popular pieces by Britten and Tippett.
“ A tiny soundbite of heaven” The Times (UK)
The Sixteen(UK)
MUSIC
Image above: Marie -Sophie WillisImage right: Mark Harrison
Sponsored by
THE SIXTEEN CHOIRAN IMMORTAL LEGACYThomas Tallis Tunes for Archbishop Parker’s Psalter Salvator mundi O nata lux O sacrum convivium Loquebantur variis linguisOrlando Gibbons The Silver SwanJames MacMillan Sedebit Dominus Rex Mitte manum tuamMichael Tippett Five Spirituals from A Child of Our TimeThomas Morley April is in my mistress’ faceWilliam Byrd Laudibus in sanctis This sweet and merry month of May Benjamin Britten Gloriana Dances
WHEN 3 March 7.30pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $48 – $88 A$88 / B$78 / C$48 FRIENDS A$83 / B$73
DURATION 1 hr 40 (including interval)
THE SIXTEEN CHOIR AND ORCHESTRAHandel Let thy hand be strengthened (Coronation Anthem) Silete Venti Nisi Dominus Dixit Dominus
WHEN 1 March 7.30pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $48 – $98 A$98 / B$88 / C$48 FRIENDS A$93 / B$83
DURATION 1 hr 45 (including interval)
16
1717
TEZUKASidi Larbi Cherkaoui
DANCE
18
Experience the magic of Japanese manga in Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui’s entrancing follow-up to 2010 Festival smash hit Sutra.
From Bunkamura (Tokyo), Eastman (Antwerp) and distinguished London dance house Sadler’s Wells comes a major new dance work from this riveting Belgian-Moroccan choreographer. It is inspired by the creations of legendary Japanese manga artist Osamu Tezuka – the ‘Walt Disney of Anime’ and the inventor of Astro Boy.
Dance and animation combine in a production that is visually breathtaking. The dancers’ liquid movements create brushstrokes upon a vast canvas; inky blooms of colour and coiling calligraphy emerge on giant unfurling scrolls. Manga characters move within an animated scaffold of comic-strips, and a Shaolin monk enacts an enthralling kung fu battle – complete with cartoon ka-pows.
Three musicians perform the hauntingly exotic soundscape by Nitin Sawhney, joined on stage by a calligrapher whose live drawing blends with animation by Tezuka and video artist Taiki Ueda.
TeZukA is a feast for the eyes that celebrates an artist at the very heart of contemporary Japanese culture.
Production Sadler’s Wells (London), Bunkamura (Tokyo), Eastman (Antwerp) Co-Production Les Théâtres de la Ville de Luxembourg, Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay Singapore, Parc de la Villette Paris, DeSingel Antwerp and Movimentos Festwochen der Autostadt Wolfsburg. In collaboration with Tezuka Productions.
WHEN 3, 4 March 8pm5, 6 March 7pm
WHERE St James TheatreTICKETS $38 – $98
P$98 / A$88 / B$73 / C$58 / D$38 FRIENDS P$93 / A$83 / B$68
DURATION 2 hrs (including interval)
“ Sidi Larbi – the cross-cultural, cross-disciplinary poet of contemporary dance” The Daily Telegraph (UK)
Sponsored by
Image above: Tezuka ProductionsImages left: Hugo Glendinning
19
Parabelo/Onqotô Grupo Corpo (Brazil)
DANCE
20
19 lycra_clad bodies flow, melt and crash together in this sizzling double bill from celebrated Brazilian dance company Grupo Corpo.
Passion is something that is built into the Brazilian DNA. Their parties, their football, their dance – all are executed with an unbridled exuberance and energy. For over 35 years Grupo Corpo has followed this mantra, producing impassioned works of dance that draw from the country’s rich culture and history.
In their first visit to New Zealand, the company presents a back_to_back performance featuring two of their most recognisable dance works: Parabelo and Onqotô.
Parabelo has a distinctive carnival feel, with bright colours moving to the rhythm of sashaying hips and lithe limbs. Onqotô with its fast footwork and dynamic Brazilian beats, examines the attraction and repulsion of opposites. Set to a soundtrack by Caetano Veloso and others, it is vigorous and physical, elegant and engaging.
With all the grace and form of ballet stirred with the fire of Latin American dance, this is a fiesta of a performance, fresh from the stages of Europe, South America and the United States.
WHEN 24–26 February 8pm27 February 7pm
WHERE St James TheatreTICKETS $38 – $98
P$98 / A$88 / B$73 / C$58 / D$38 FRIENDS P$93 / A$83 / B$68
DURATION 1 hr 45 (including interval)
“ Grupo Corpo’s unashamed mission seems to be to tempt the rhythm of life out of us all” The Guardian (UK)
Sponsored by
Presented by arrangement with Arts Projects Australia
Images: José Luiz Pederneiras
21
The Wild BrideKneehigh (UK)
THEATRE
22
Images: Steve Tanner
“ Witty, surprising, strange, I dreamt about it all night” The Times (UK)
Sponsored by
One of today’s most innovative theatre companies invites you into a stunning world of petals, clay, fire and orchards for this lyrical love story about what happens when dad accidentally sells you to the Devil.
Make a deal with the Devil and you’re going to get burned. It’s simple advice, but so often ignored. When a foolish father makes this most grave of mistakes, it triggers a series of events that sees his daughter strike out into a wilderness that hides heartbreak, misfortune, love and hope.
Based on a Brothers Grimm fairytale and narrated by Satan himself (who also turns his hand to playing the guitar, banjo, drums and double bass), The Wild Bride is a rollercoaster ride of emotion – theatre and dance lashed with devilish humour and set to a live score of blues and bluegrass music.
Over the past 30 years English theatre company Kneehigh has cemented a reputation for ingenious productions. Their works have toured around the world, with their 2008 smash_hit Brief Encounter taking Broadway by storm and earning a Tony Award nomination.
Charting our heroine’s epic voyage from girlhood to womanhood, The Wild Bride is instinctive and magical storytelling – a fun and heartwarming production.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 12+
WHEN 24, 25 February 7.30pm26 February 2.30pm & 7.30pm27 February 7pm
WHERE Opera HouseTICKETS $18 – $78
A$78 / B$63 / C$38 FRIENDS A$73 / B$58 CHILD A$38 / B$28 / C$18
DURATION 2 hrs (including interval)
23
Image: Ros Kavanagh
Who is going to be, or not to be, Hamlet? That is the question you are faced with during this purgatorial presentation of Shakespeare’s greatest tragedy.
Highly innovative, witty and engaging, this is an irreverent riff on Hamlet that does not so much update or deconstruct the play as explode it.
The first half of the production is staged as an audition where our would_be Hamlets variously interpret the lead, attempting to impress the director and the audience with their unique takes on the troubled prince. But can anyone escape playing the ‘Great’ Dane? Aren’t we all the main part?
In the second half the stage is a hall of mirrors and the play_within_a_play, enacted by a troupe of schoolboy actors, is Hamlet itself.
Visually breathtaking, The Rehearsal, Playing the Dane was the winner of Best Production and Best Set Design at the 2010 Irish Times Theatre Awards and was unanimously awarded the Critics Choice as Best Show in the Ulster Bank Dublin Theatre Festival 2010.
Interactive and audacious, this will be enjoyed by both Shakespeare aficionados and novices alike.
“ Absorbing, sometimes mind_blowing… staging the audition process is ingenious” Irish Theatre Magazine
With support fromSponsored by
The Rehearsal, Playing the Dane Pan Pan (Ireland)
THEATRE
The TV3 Season of
WHEN 24–28 February 7pmWHERE TSB Bank Arena
TICKETS $38 – $68A$68 / B$48 / C$38 FRIENDS A$63 / B$43
DURATION 2 hrs 20 (including interval)
24
Globally_acclaimed and created by one of New Zealand’s greatest living artists, this urgent and provocative dance work returns home for its New Zealand premiere.
On the Pacific island of Tarawa, Samoan choreographer Lemi Ponifasio took an encounter with birds flying with glittering pieces of plastic waste in their beaks as the vision to create this extraordinary and epic work.
Hailed by the French newspaper Le Figaro as an artist who will be one of the greats alongside the legendary Pina Bausch and Merce Cunningham, Lemi Ponifasio’s style is a distinctive language of stage imagery: poetic, stark, hypnotic, and taut with
concentration. Dancers seem to float across a darkened stage, their movements, brief and sharp like animals or birds, executed with masterful precision. They appear to be one with the oppressive space surrounding them.
Co_produced by a host of international presenters, Birds With Skymirrors is a timely reflection of our connection to the Earth and our incredible power to protect or destroy what surrounds us.
CONTAINS NUDITY
Production MAUCo-Production Théâtre de la Ville (Paris), Theater der Welt 2010 RUHR, spielzeit’europa Berliner Festspiele, Wiener Festwochen, KVS Brussels, Holland Festival, Mercat de les Flors, DeSingel Antwerp, New Zealand International Arts Festival
Image: Sebastian Bolesch
Birds with skymirrors Lemi Ponifasio / MAU (New Zealand)
DANCE
With support fromSponsored by
WHEN 29 February, 1 March 8pmWHERE St James Theatre
TICKETS $38 – $68 P$68 / A$58 / B$48 / C$38 FRIENDS P$63 / A$53 / B$43
DURATION 1 hr 30
25
Igor Stravinsky conducting the NZSO, 1961 Image: Tom Shanahan
Two works from one of the 20th century’s great composers, a celebrated young conductor, Australasia’s most accomplished opera singers, two commanding choirs, and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra. All in one unmissable performance.
The Festival opens with this monumental double bill of two neo_classical works from Igor Stravinsky. This stunning gala concert balances the sorrow of Oedipus’ fate with the redemptive chorus of Symphony of Psalms.
For the famously tragic tale of Oedipus Rex, a riveting line-up of opera soloists includes Stuart Skelton as Oedipus, Daniel Sumegi as Creon, Margaret Medlyn as Jocasta and Martin Snell as Tiresias, the soothsayer. A line_up that will ensure Oedipus Rex dazzles from its first explosive chorus to its heart_rending finale.
Exuding power to the point of exaltation, Symphony of Psalms has been called one of Stravinsky’s most impressive works. When you hear the 40_strong choir join the orchestra’s pure and resonant music, you will instantly understand why.
Both pieces are a tribute to Stravinsky’s diversity and instinct for the theatrical. With Portuguese conductor Joana Carneiro at the helm, this performance promises to be a true Festival must_see.
New Zealand Symphony Orchestra The Chapman Tripp Opera Chorus of The NBR New Zealand Opera
Conductor Joana Carneiro
With Stuart Skelton (tenor), Margaret Medlyn (soprano), Martin Snell (bass) and Daniel Sumegi (bass_baritone)
Igor Stravinsky conducting the NZSO, 1961 Image: Tom Shanahan
Stravinsky: Oedipus Rex/symphony of Psalms
MUSIC
Event Partner
WHEN 24 February 8pmWHERE Michael Fowler Centre
TICKETS $38 – $148 P$148 / A$138 / B$98 / C$58 / D$38 FRIENDS P$138 / A$128 / B$93
DURATION 1 hr 45 (including interval)
26
Dazzling images of the universe combine with beautiful classical music and poetic narration to create a fusion of science and culture that is simply out of this world.
Galileo Galilei’s development of the astronomical telescope was an innovati on that was to forever change the way we view the universe and our place within it.
To commemorate the 400th anniversary of this achievement Tafelmusik, one of the world’s most prolific and celebrated baroque orchestras, has created the astounding Music of the Spheres.
More of a performance than a concert, works by Galileo’s contemporaries are performed from memory, playing in perfect harmony with stunning astrological images and words from the writings of Galileo, Isaac Newton and other great astronomers.
This is an unmissable event for anyone who has marvelled at the beauty of the night sky. As the Toronto Star put it: ‘it’s hard to come back down to Earth when it’s all over.’
PROGRAMME INCLUDES
Handel Allegro from Concerto Grosso in D, Opus 3 No. 6Lully Overture and excerpts from PhaetonPurcell Rondeau from AbdelazerRameau Entrance of Mercury from PlatéeMonteverdi Ciaconna after Zefiro tornaRameau Entrance of Jupiter from Hippolyte et AricieMerula CiaconnaMonteverdi Ritornello and Moresca from Orfeo
“ An event steeped in intellect and imagination” The New York Times
Image: Don Lee
WHEN 16 March 8pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $48 – $78 A$78 / B$68 / C$48 FRIENDS A$73 / B$63
DURATION 1 hr 45 (including interval)
Co_production with With support from
The Galileo Project: Music of the SpheresTafelmusik Baroque Orchestra (Canada)
MUSIC
27
World Premiere
_hoHepaPresented by The NBR New Zealand Opera and the New Zealand International Arts Festival
OPERA
A powerful story, spine_tingling staging and our finest operatic talent all come together in this new New Zealand opera from acclaimed composer Jenny McLeod.
From one of the most turbulent times in our country’s history comes this tragic true story of Ma
_ori chief Ho–hepa Te Umuroa.
In a production of sweeping scale, we travel from the fertile earth of the Hutt Valley and the barren brutality of Tasmania’s Maria Island penal colony to the Whanganui River in the 1980s. This is the sacred journey to reunite Ho–hepa Te Umuroa with the soil of his homeland.
This groundbreaking new work features an outstanding 17-strong cast of New Zealand’s most renowned opera singers, including Phillip Rhodes, Jonathan Lemalu, Martin Snell and Jenny Wollerman. Ho–hepa will be accompanied by players from the Vector Wellington Orchestra.
The production represents more than a decade of extensive research by composer Jenny McLeod and is based on recorded, personal and oral histories. The result is a warm and at times humorous opera; epic yet deeply human at heart.
Composer Jenny McLeod Conductor Marc TaddeiDirector Sara Brodie
With Phillip Rhodes, Jenny Wollerman, Nicky Spence, Jonathan Lemalu, Deborah
Wai Kapohe, Ra_wiri Paratene, Martin Snell,
Eddie Muliaumaseali’i
SUNG IN ENGLISH AND MA_ORI
“ A Kiwi story covering nearly a century and a half, in which truth is ever stranger and richer than fiction” Jenny McLeod
With support from
WHEN 15, 17 March 7.30pm18 March 5pm
WHERE Opera HouseTICKETS $48 – $108
P$108 / A$88 / B$68 / C$48FRIENDS P$103 / A$83 / B$63 / C$43
DURATION 2 hrs (including interval)
28
Tawata Productions (New Zealand)
tuTHEATRE
Image: Aneta Ruth
Patricia Grace’s award-winning novel is the inspiration for this powerful return to the stage by celebrated playwright and director Hone Kouka.
Weaving together text and image, Tu is an epic tale set against 1940s Wellington, the battlefields of Monte Cassino and post-war Te Tairawhiti on the North Island’s East Coast. After years of self-imposed exile, old Tu is found and visited by his brother’s children. In search of answers, their presence triggers an unstoppable wave of memories that envelops Tu and forces him to confront and embrace the ghosts of his past.
Hone Kouka’s previous theatrical works include I, George Nepia, the internationally acclaimed Waiora and the 2004 New Zealand International Arts Festival premiere of The Prophet. With Kirk Torrance starring as Tu, this is a majestic story of love, redemption, wha
_nau and brotherhood.
With support from
WHEN 1, 2 March 8pm3 March 1pm & 8pm4–6 March 7pm7 March 2pm & 7pm
WHERE Pipitea Marae TICKETS GA$53
FRIENDS GA$48DURATION 1 hr 40
The Conch Theatre’s much anticipated follow up to the international hit Vula, Masi grows from a unique collaboration between artistic director Nina Nawalowalo, legendary British illusionist Paul Kieve (the only magic advisor to the Harry Potter films), and an explosive ensemble of six male Fijian dancers.
Masi interweaves the meaning of Fijian Tapa cloth with the remarkable story of the meeting of Nawalowalo’s parents in 1950s New Zealand. This meeting between a Fijian high chief from the island of Kadavu and the daughter of Cambridge-educated public schoolmasters, happened over a game of chess in Wellington. Their romance was captured in a beautiful set of photographs by then budding photographer Ans Westra.
This love story in black and white is reflected in the patterns of the Masi, as themes combine into a rich journey exploring loss, memory and the tracing of the lines that make us who we are.
With support from
Image: Phillip Merry
MASIThe Conch (New Zealand/UK/Fiji)
THEATRE
Sponsored by
World Premiere
WHEN 2 March 8pm3 March 2pm & 8pm4 March 5pm5, 6 March 6pm
WHERE Soundings Theatre, Te Papa TICKETS A$58
FRIENDS A$53DURATION 1 hr 20
29
town HALL
Guns, guitars and Gaddafi – the epic story of this North African band is as fascinating as their music.
Born out of Libya’s refugee camps and refined during Mali’s Tuareg revolutions, Tinariwen’s music began as a way to highlight the persecution of their nomadic people. Their hypnotic brand of ‘desert blues’, based on traditional West African rhythms, features incredible electric guitar riffs and the vibrant beats of hand drums. Their lyrics rage against the indifference to their plight and express nostalgia for a lifestyle that has existed for thousands of years, but is fast disappearing.
In a career that has now spanned 30 years, Tinariwen has produced five albums (their
“ Relentless and brilliant as the Saharan sun”The Guardian (UK)
g i g S
last recorded on acoustic instruments in the desert) and played over 700 major festival concerts throughout the world, inspiring everyone from Carlos Santana to Coldplay’s Chris Martin along the way. From the sands of the Sahara to the Town Hall stage, you have to be there for this extraordinary group.
A world of music will be on the Town Hall stage. From America to Africa and Ireland to Cuba, it’s
all coming to Wellington. So whether you like tapping your toes, singing along at
the top of your lungs, or simply sitting back and appreciating
musical talent at its very best, there’s a Town Hall Gig
waiting to blow you away. Tinariwen(Mali)
MUSIC
Presented by arrangement with Arts Projects Australia
WHEN 13 March 8pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $38 – $68 A$68 / B$58 / C$38 FRIENDS A$63 / B$53
30
walk a mile in my shoes
MUSIC
Barefoot Divas
Struggle, power and sensational music come to the Town Hall, as five proud black women combine their talents in the spirited Walk A Mile In My Shoes.
Whirimako Black (Ma_ori), Emma Donovan
(Aboriginal Australian), Merenia (Ma_ori
Romany Gypsy), Ngaiire (Papua New Guinean) and Maisey Rika (Ma
_ori) are
the Barefoot Divas – a group of funny, cheeky and uplifting women who take their commentary on fame, contemporary music and cultural struggle right to the edge.
Each a star in their own right, these women come together to form a potent vocal force that swings between reggae, roots, R&B and Latin-infused soul. But this is more than just music. Speaking openly about the vagaries, pitfalls, scams and scandals of life as contemporary musicians, this is a telling and intimate insight about life on the road and in the studio.
The commanding voices of the Divas are accompanied by a band of musicians originating from Chile, Peru, Greece and Australasia. Developed by writer Alana Valentine and producer/director Vicki Gordon Walk A Mile In My Shoes transcends borders and beliefs. This will be an entertaining evening of spoken word and song that is inspirational and a little bit outrageous.
Art on the Move: 8 March Porirua & 9 March Paraparaumu (see page 58)
WHEN 10, 11 March 8pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $38 – $78 GALLERY & CABARET
SEATING (TABLE OF 6)
A$78 / B$68 FRIENDS A$73 / B$63GALLERY RESTRICTED VIEW C$38
Top image: Shane Rozario
With support from
31
“ Her instrumental technique is remarkable, yet looks effortless” The Guardian (UK)
“ One of our era’s defining singers” Rolling Stone (USA)
Kiwi eyes and ears will be smiling as famed Irish accordionist Sharon Shannon’s infectious tunes and seven_piece big band light up the Town Hall.
Sharon Shannon is a woman who knows how to get a party started. Just ask Barack Obama or Bill Clinton – Shannon has performed for them both. She has also toured and recorded with a veritable who’s who of musicians including Bono, Sinead O’Connor, Steve Earle and Mark Knopfler. Not bad for an accordionist from the tiny village of Corofin in Ireland’s County Clare.
Accompanied by her big band, featuring some of the greats of rock and jazz (including the renowned Richie Buckley on saxophone), Shannon’s flying fingers and bubbling enthusiasm effortlessly lead the way through rock, funk, cajun, blues and jazz. Get ready for a Town Hall Gig to remember, because good times don’t get much better than this.
(Ireland)
Sharon shannon BIG BAND
MUSIC
A self_described ‘introspective, emotional country kid’ turned indie megastar hits the Town Hall stage.
In the winter of 2007 Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon was writing music alone in his father’s isolated Wisconsin cabin. Then his debut album For Emma, Forever Ago tapped into the zeitgeist. Next came the record sales, plaudits from music critics and devoted fans, and collaborations with artists from Volcano Choir to Kanye West.
Lilting between baritone and falsetto, Vernon’s extraordinary and unmistakable vocals are now the stuff of indie legend. His nine_piece band will take you through both intimate moments and boisterous choruses alive with orchestral harmony. Expect to hear tracks from both For Emma and his ‘ravishing follow_up’ (NME) album Bon Iver.
With talent this big and their only New Zealand performances, you’d better move fast.
(USA)
Bon Iver MUSIC
WHEN 14 March 8.30pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $38 – $68 A$68 / B$58 / C$38 FRIENDS A$63 / B$53
WHEN 27, 2 8 February 8pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $38 – $78GALLERY SEATED P$88 / A$73 STANDING GA$73 FRIENDS P$83 / A$68 / GA$68 GALLERY RESTRICTED VIEW C$38
DURATION 1 hr 30
Sponsored bySponsored by
®
32
Grammy Award-winning conguero and bandleader Poncho Sanchez commemorates one of jazz music’s most famous and influential collaborations.
In 1947 bebop jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and the great Cuban drummer Chano Pozo came together to create the transformative recording Cubano Be, Cubano Bop. This revolutionary album almost single-handedly propelled Afro-Cuban sounds into the arena of serious music and instantly ensured the immortality of its creators.
Over 60 years later Poncho Sanchez – one of the top Latin jazz artists of our age – channels the rhythms and beats of the time in a tribute concert that crackles with all the energy and vibrancy of the original work. Join Sanchez and his sizzling band as they re-ignite the classics and set fire to the Town Hall stage with their own raucous Latin-jazz compositions.
“ As Elvis is to rock and James Brown is to soul, Poncho Sanchez is to salsa” Los Angeles Times
Poncho Sanchez and his Latin Jazz Band
CUBANO BE! CUBANO BOP!
MUSIC
Image: Devin DeHaven
Sponsored by With support from
WHEN 7 March 8pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $38 – $68 GALLERY & CABARET SEATING (TABLE OF 6)
A$78 / B$68FRIENDS A$73 / B$63GALLERY RESTRICTED VIEW C$38
33
The folk-inspired songs of sisters Klara and Johanna Söderberg are flooded with crafty melodies and warm vocal harmonies that completely belie their youth. Since being catapulted onto the international music scene with a YouTube cover of Fleet Foxes’ Tiger Mountain Peasant Song, the angelic duo have gone on to produce a full-length debut album The Big Black And The Blue. This was a resounding critical success in Europe and has paved the way for tours all over the world.
With two gold albums, a hit movie soundtrack (Taika Waititi’s Boy), and a NZ Music Award for Best Group, The Phoenix Foundation have earned their reputation as one of New Zealand’s most innovative and respected acts. Originating in Wellington, this 6-piece band produce a distinct, boundary-crossing sound that glides between infectious guitar pop gems, alt-country anthems, dreamy psychedelia and delirious synthesizer prog rock. Their latest album Buffalo was nominated for no less than eight New Zealand Music Awards.
WHEN
25 February 10.15pm
TICKETS
Booth $440 (8 seats) $55 (single seat) GA $48
WHEN
26, 28 February 7.30pm
TICKETS
Booth $520 (8 seats) $65 (single seat) GA $58
National treasures The Topp Twins have performed around the world as an original country music and comedy duo for more than 25 years. Known for their vast array of personas and ability to re-invent themselves on stage, they change character, musical styles and gender with ease. Armed with guitar, mouth-harp and spoons they deliver original songs, audience participation and comedy in a fast-paced and hilarious entertainment experience. Get in quick, tickets will sell out fast.
Art on the Move: 27 February Masterton (see page 58)
the topp twins New Zealand
Formed by a bunch of down and out Melbourne musicians in 2007, The Barons cut their teeth with performances for local underground theatre and circus troupes before embarking on three years of merciless touring. Lashing tango, rockabilly, Latin and gypsy with breaks, hard-hitting guitar riffs, double kick blast beats and massive horn arrangements, The Barons of Tang serve up their self-described ‘gypsy deathcore’. The catchy tunes and punk ethos all tie together to mean one thing – dancing is inevitable!
THE BARONS OF TANG Australia
WHEN
8 March 7.30pm
TICKETS
Booth $440 (8 seats) $55 (single seat) GA $48
WHEN
9, 10 March 7.30pm
TICKETS
Booth $520 (8 seats) $65 (single seat) GA $58
first aid kit Sweden
the phoenix foundation New Zealand
t e l s t r a c l e a r F E S T I V A L C L U B
t e l s t r a c l e a r
C L U B
25 FEBRUARY – 18 MARCH
2012
At the heart of the action is the TelstraClear Festival Club. The much_loved tent returns – this time situated in the thick
of things in Odlin’s Plaza on the Wellington waterfront. Check out live music in the evening,
then catch our late night theatre cabaret spectacular Cantina,
or hang out in the bar.
Open from early evening, the Club precinct is the
perfect place to soak up the Festival atmosphere; meet
before or after a show, grab a drink, a bite to eat,
and mingle with visiting artists, crews and performers.
© Neil Krug
34
With an incredible rendition of Michael Jackson’s Billie Jean strummed and tapped out on his ukulele, James Hill changed the way the world looks at this much-loved instrument forever. Described as one of the world’s top ukulele composers and arguably the best player on the planet, Hill’s unusual techniques, humour and creativity have seen him build a global base of fans. He will be joined by cellist and singer Anne Davison for an evening of serious virtuosity and unpredictable fun.
Art on the Move: 13 March Porirua (see page 58)
james hill Canada
See page 37.
WHEN
2 March 8.30pm
3, 4, 8–10, 14–16 March 10.15pm 6, 7, 11, 13, 17, 18 March 8pm
TICKETS
Booth $520 (8 seats) $65 (single seat)
GA $58 / FRIEND GA $53
cantina Strut and Fret / Australia
See page 36.
WHEN
3, 4 March 7.30pm
TICKETS
Booth $520 (8 seats) $65 (single seat) GA $58
Kimmo Pohjonen Finland
WHEN
11 March 4pm
TICKETS
GA $38
WHEN
14, 15 March 7.30pm
TICKETS
Booth $440 (8 seats) $55 (single seat) GA $48
Jonathan Besser has teamed up with composers/performers Ross Harris and Chris Prosser and Wellington band Kugeltov to assemble a new body of colourful New Zealand Jewish Klezmer compositions. With its artistic breadth, distinctive sound and boundless energy, Klezmer music is unmistakable. Besser himself is Jewish and has led music ensembles for many years, combining leading talents from both the improvisational and classical orchestral worlds. Entertaining and spontaneous, catching this band of seven will be the perfect way to liven up a Sunday afternoon.
new klezeland New Zealand
See page 36.
WHEN
29 February 7.30pm / 1 March 7.30pm
TICKETS
Booth $440 (8 seats) $55 (single seat) GA $48
tubular bells for two Australia
Four vocally energised poets take to the stage in this immersive combination of spoken word, music and performance. Apirana Taylor (Nga
_ti Porou)
is a versatile Ma_ori writer with an international
reputation as a poet and storyteller. Troy Hunt performs as a musician with Waiata & The Word. Performing with fellow musician Luther Hunt, they inspire a younger audience towards poetry and music. Known for his music, Karl Teariki is also talented in the art of storytelling and performance.
Words in Motion is produced by Toi Ma_ori Aotearoa –
Ma_ori Arts New Zealand.
WHEN
4 March 4pm
TICKETS
GA $28
WORDS IN MOTION New Zealand
This Auckland-born, Berlin-based band’s songs have been described as ‘organic instrumentation and sounds of the east meet psychedelia’. Combining guitars, drums, synths, violins and keyboards, with the exotic sounds of sitars, tablas, daabuka and various percussion instruments, the six-piece group’s experimental style has gained them praise from some of the most respected voices in New Zealand music. They also have a reputation both here and in Europe for unleashing memorable live shows.
Art on the Move: 2 March Paekakariki (see page 58)
WHEN
1 March 10.15pm
TICKETS
Booth $440 (8 seats) $55 (single seat) GA $48
An emerald city New Zealand
t e l s t r a c l e a r F E S T I V A L C L U B
With support from
The TelstraClear Festival
Club is supported by
KPR Catering Stoneleigh Mata Beer Hema Water
The Topp Twins sponsored by
James Hill sponsored by
© Merna Ryan
35
t e l s t r a c l e a r F E S T I V A L C L U B
Multi-tasking gets an all_new meaning in this highly entertaining theatrical event, as two musicians take on over 20 instruments to recreate an influential piece of classic rock.
Released in 1973, Mike Oldfield’s Celtic_folk_rock opus Tubular Bells was perhaps the most unlikely smash hit record ever released. Now nearly 40 years later, two Aussie musicians have taken on the ambitious task of performing this demanding work in full and with no extra hands.
In this intricately choreographed performance, multi_instrumentalists Daniel Holdsworth and Aidan Roberts frantically juggle pianos, organs, electric guitars, acoustic, bass and Spanish guitars, mandolin, tuned percussion, drums, glockenspiel, loop pedals, synthesizers and, of course, tubular bells.
It sounds completely chaotic and it is, but somehow they manage to pull it all together, bringing Oldfield’s masterpiece to life with all of its multi_layered madness and subtle beauty intact.
Image: Joanne Kee
Tubular Bells for Two
Australia Finland
“ A two_man performance that is part musical, part acrobatic” The Australian
DURATIONDURATION
TICKETS
3, 4 March 7.30pm
Booth $520 (8 seats) $65 (single seat) / GA $58
The Club will be pumping as this Finnish accordionist unleashes his incredible menagerie of sound.
Kimmo Pohjonen looks a bit like a punk rocker that had to escape a gig in a hurry and grabbed the wrong instrument on his way out. But don’t be fooled – there is nothing this muso would rather be doing than rocking an audience with his accordion. It’s something he’s now been doing for over 30 years, taking his innovative style to the world and becoming a regular at international festivals.
A king of collaborations, Pohjonen has lent his sound to everything from feature films and dance, to theatre and classical music. But it’s on stage where he truly comes into his own; an entertainer of boundless imagination, the startling sounds of his accordion combine with vocal, lighting and sound effects to create a performance that is utterly original and completely unforgettable.
Image: Marja Seppälä
Kimmo Pohjonen
“ An unquenchably ambitious improviser and a riveting live performer” The Guardian (UK)
29 February 7.30pm / 1 March 7.30pm
TICKETS
1 hr 15
Booth $440 (8 seats) $55 (single seat) / GA $48
1 hr 15 Sponsored by
WHENWHEN
36
t e l s t r a c l e a r F E S T I V A L C L U B
Cantina
The circus gets a titillating twist as Cantina’s creatures of the night come out to play.
As darkness falls, the temperature will be rising in the TelstraClear Festival Club. Scorching with decadent passion, Cantina is a showcase of heart_stopping acrobatic skills, set within a depression_era inspired time of vaudeville, seduction and violence.
From its playful opening, the performance gradually transcends to a more sinister place where glamour increasingly struggles to shine and tortured desires begin to emerge from the shadows. The atmosphere is completely enveloping, with recorded and live music played on antiquated instruments mixing with dim, moody lighting reminiscent of an underground Chicago bar.
But for all its theatrical ambience, it’s the show’s physical feats that remain the highlight. The world_class performers walk tightropes in high heels, literally throw each other around the stage and generally do things with their bodies that nature never intended.
Circus in the rawest, most captivating sense of the word, Cantina’s intoxicating cocktail of skill, danger and sensuality has seen them enjoy sold_out seasons across Australia and Europe. Be quick.
Strut and Fret / Australia
Image: Sean Young
“ Spectacular acts of physical strength, endurance and anatomical unlikelihood” The Australian
WHEN
TICKETS
Booth $520 (8 seats) $65 (single seat)GA $58 / FRIEND GA $53
2 March 8.30pm
3, 4, 8–10, 14–16 March 10.15pm 6, 7, 11, 13, 17, 18 March 8pm
DURATION
1 hr Sponsored by
37
SHOW VENUE PAGE FRI 24 SAT 25 SUN 26 MON 27 TUE 28 WED 29 THU 1 FRI 2 SAT 3 SUN 4 MON 5 TUE 6 WED 7 THU 8 FRI 9 SAT 10 SUN 11 MON 12 TUE 13 WED 14 THU 15 FRI 16 SAT 17 SUN 18
MUSICBeethoven! St Mary of the Angels 44 6pm 7.30pm
Bon Iver Town Hall 32 8pm 8pm
Cubano Be! Cubano Bop! Town Hall 33 8pm
H-ohepa Opera House 28 7.30pm 7.30pm 5pm
I Musici Michael Fowler Centre 44 7.30pm
NZTrio Ilott Theatre 46 4pm
NZSQ & Jonathan Lemalu Town Hall 45 6pm
Peter and the Wolf Michael Fowler Centre 50 6pm
Sharon Shannon Big Band Town Hall 32 8.30pm
Shivkumar Sharma St Mary of the Angels 46 7pm
Stravinsky: Oedipus Rex/Symphony of Psalms Michael Fowler Centre 26 8pm
The Galileo Project: Music of the Spheres Town Hall 27 8pm
The Sixteen Town Hall 16 7.30pm 7.30pm
Tinariwen Town Hall 30 8pm
Walk A Mile In My Shoes Town Hall 31 8pm 8pm
THEATREBeautiful Burnout TSB Bank Arena 8 8pm 2pm/8pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 8pm 8pm 2pm/8pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 8pm 8pm 2pm/8pm
Circenses Waitangi Park 14 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 6pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 6pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 6pm
Frequently Asked Questions Downstage Theatre 49 9.30pm 8.30pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 8pm 8pm 2pm/8pm
Henry V Opera House 12 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm
Leo Downstage Theatre 48 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 6pm 6pm
Michael James Manaia Downstage Theatre 49 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 6pm 5pm 4pm
Peninsula Circa Theatre 52 8pm 4pm 6.30pm 6.30pm 8pm 8pm 8pm 4pm 6.30pm 6.30pm 8pm 8pm 8pm 4pm 6.30pm 6.30pm 8pm 8pm 8pm 4pm
Private Peaceful Soundings Theatre 51 6.30pm 6.30pm 6.30pm 2pm
Raoul St James Theatre 10 8pm 8pm 8pm 8pm
The Animals and Children Took to the Streets Opera House 47 8pm 8pm 1pm/6pm 6pm
The Rehearsal, Playing the Dane TSB Bank Arena 24 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm
The Wild Bride Opera House 22 7.30pm 7.30pm 2.30pm/7.30pm 7pm
The Winter’s Tale Opera House 12 7pm 7pm 1.30pm
Tu Pipitea Marae 29 8pm 8pm 1pm/8pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 2pm/7pm
White Capital E 50 10.30am/ 1.30pm
10.30am/ 12.30pm/2.30pm
10.30am/ 1.30pm
10.30am/ 12.30pm/2.30pm
10.30am/ 1.30pm
DANCE / PHYSICAL THEATREBirds With Skymirrors St James Theatre 25 8pm 8pm
Masi Soundings Theatre 29 8pm 2pm/8pm 5pm 6pm 6pm
Parabelo/Onqoto St James Theatre 20 8pm 8pm 8pm 7pm
Political Mother St James Theatre 6 8pm 8pm 8pm 8pm
TeZukA St James Theatre 18 8pm 8pm 7pm 7pm
TELSTRACLEAR FESTIVAL CLUBAfternoon TelstraClear
Festival Club34–37 Words in
Motion4pm
New Klezeland
4pm
Early Evening TelstraClear Festival Club
34–37 Topp Twins
7.30pm
Topp Twins
7.30pm
Tubular Bells for
Two7.30pm
Tubular Bells for
Two7.30pm
Cantina8.30pm
Kimmo Pohjonen7.30pm
Kimmo Pohjonen7.30pm
Cantina8pm
Cantina8pm
First Aid Kit
7.30pm
The Phoenix
Foundation 7.30pm
The Phoenix
Foundation 7.30pm
Cantina8pm
Cantina8pm
James Hill7.30pm
James Hill7.30pm
TBC Cantina8pm
Cantina8pm
Late Night TelstraClear Festival Club
34–37 The Barons of Tang10.15pm
An Emerald
City10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
TBC
FREEArt Talks (see festival.co.nz for updates)
TelstraClear Festival Club
63 The Wild Bride 1pm
Masi 1pm
Tu 1pm
Birds with Skymirrors
1pm
The Sixteen 12pm
Beautiful Burnout
1pm
The Animals & Children
1pm
Political Mother 12pm
Michel Tuffery
1pm
Arcane Waitangi Park 53 6pm 2pm/6pm 2pm/6pm
First Contact 2012 Te Papa 4 8.30pm From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk
The M-aori Troilus and Cressida Te Papa Amphitheatre 52 6pm 6pm
WRITERS AND READERS WEEKWriters and Readers Week Embassy/Downstage 54–57 9.30am–6pm 9.30am–6pm 9.30am–6pm 9.30am–6pm 9.30am–4pm
Germaine Greer Town Hall 54 6.30pm
High Tea Museum Art Hotel 55 3.30pm
Thomas Friedman Town Hall 54 6pm
Tim Flannery Town Hall 54 6.30pm
Young Writers and Readers Day Downstage Theatre 51 9.30am
FESTIVAL CALENDAR FEBRUARY MARCH
Online/ festival.co.nz or ticketek.co.nz Mail/ New Zealand International Arts Festival Bookings, Ticketek, PO Box 6334, Wellington 6141 Phone/ From 14 November Ticketek 04 384 3840 / 0800 TICKETEK In Person/ From 14 November at Ticketek outlets nationwide
How to book38
SHOW VENUE PAGE FRI 24 SAT 25 SUN 26 MON 27 TUE 28 WED 29 THU 1 FRI 2 SAT 3 SUN 4 MON 5 TUE 6 WED 7 THU 8 FRI 9 SAT 10 SUN 11 MON 12 TUE 13 WED 14 THU 15 FRI 16 SAT 17 SUN 18
MUSICBeethoven! St Mary of the Angels 44 6pm 7.30pm
Bon Iver Town Hall 32 8pm 8pm
Cubano Be! Cubano Bop! Town Hall 33 8pm
H-ohepa Opera House 28 7.30pm 7.30pm 5pm
I Musici Michael Fowler Centre 44 7.30pm
NZTrio Ilott Theatre 46 4pm
NZSQ & Jonathan Lemalu Town Hall 45 6pm
Peter and the Wolf Michael Fowler Centre 50 6pm
Sharon Shannon Big Band Town Hall 32 8.30pm
Shivkumar Sharma St Mary of the Angels 46 7pm
Stravinsky: Oedipus Rex/Symphony of Psalms Michael Fowler Centre 26 8pm
The Galileo Project: Music of the Spheres Town Hall 27 8pm
The Sixteen Town Hall 16 7.30pm 7.30pm
Tinariwen Town Hall 30 8pm
Walk A Mile In My Shoes Town Hall 31 8pm 8pm
THEATREBeautiful Burnout TSB Bank Arena 8 8pm 2pm/8pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 8pm 8pm 2pm/8pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 8pm 8pm 2pm/8pm
Circenses Waitangi Park 14 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 6pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 6pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm 6pm
Frequently Asked Questions Downstage Theatre 49 9.30pm 8.30pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 8pm 8pm 2pm/8pm
Henry V Opera House 12 7.30pm 7.30pm 7.30pm
Leo Downstage Theatre 48 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 6pm 6pm
Michael James Manaia Downstage Theatre 49 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 6pm 5pm 4pm
Peninsula Circa Theatre 52 8pm 4pm 6.30pm 6.30pm 8pm 8pm 8pm 4pm 6.30pm 6.30pm 8pm 8pm 8pm 4pm 6.30pm 6.30pm 8pm 8pm 8pm 4pm
Private Peaceful Soundings Theatre 51 6.30pm 6.30pm 6.30pm 2pm
Raoul St James Theatre 10 8pm 8pm 8pm 8pm
The Animals and Children Took to the Streets Opera House 47 8pm 8pm 1pm/6pm 6pm
The Rehearsal, Playing the Dane TSB Bank Arena 24 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 7pm
The Wild Bride Opera House 22 7.30pm 7.30pm 2.30pm/7.30pm 7pm
The Winter’s Tale Opera House 12 7pm 7pm 1.30pm
Tu Pipitea Marae 29 8pm 8pm 1pm/8pm 7pm 7pm 7pm 2pm/7pm
White Capital E 50 10.30am/ 1.30pm
10.30am/ 12.30pm/2.30pm
10.30am/ 1.30pm
10.30am/ 12.30pm/2.30pm
10.30am/ 1.30pm
DANCE / PHYSICAL THEATREBirds With Skymirrors St James Theatre 25 8pm 8pm
Masi Soundings Theatre 29 8pm 2pm/8pm 5pm 6pm 6pm
Parabelo/Onqoto St James Theatre 20 8pm 8pm 8pm 7pm
Political Mother St James Theatre 6 8pm 8pm 8pm 8pm
TeZukA St James Theatre 18 8pm 8pm 7pm 7pm
TELSTRACLEAR FESTIVAL CLUBAfternoon TelstraClear
Festival Club34–37 Words in
Motion4pm
New Klezeland
4pm
Early Evening TelstraClear Festival Club
34–37 Topp Twins
7.30pm
Topp Twins
7.30pm
Tubular Bells for
Two7.30pm
Tubular Bells for
Two7.30pm
Cantina8.30pm
Kimmo Pohjonen7.30pm
Kimmo Pohjonen7.30pm
Cantina8pm
Cantina8pm
First Aid Kit
7.30pm
The Phoenix
Foundation 7.30pm
The Phoenix
Foundation 7.30pm
Cantina8pm
Cantina8pm
James Hill7.30pm
James Hill7.30pm
TBC Cantina8pm
Cantina8pm
Late Night TelstraClear Festival Club
34–37 The Barons of Tang10.15pm
An Emerald
City10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
Cantina10.15pm
TBC
FREEArt Talks (see festival.co.nz for updates)
TelstraClear Festival Club
63 The Wild Bride 1pm
Masi 1pm
Tu 1pm
Birds with Skymirrors
1pm
The Sixteen 12pm
Beautiful Burnout
1pm
The Animals & Children
1pm
Political Mother 12pm
Michel Tuffery
1pm
Arcane Waitangi Park 53 6pm 2pm/6pm 2pm/6pm
First Contact 2012 Te Papa 4 8.30pm From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk From dusk
The M-aori Troilus and Cressida Te Papa Amphitheatre 52 6pm 6pm
WRITERS AND READERS WEEKWriters and Readers Week Embassy/Downstage 54–57 9.30am–6pm 9.30am–6pm 9.30am–6pm 9.30am–6pm 9.30am–4pm
Germaine Greer Town Hall 54 6.30pm
High Tea Museum Art Hotel 55 3.30pm
Thomas Friedman Town Hall 54 6pm
Tim Flannery Town Hall 54 6.30pm
Young Writers and Readers Day Downstage Theatre 51 9.30am
24 February – 18 March 2012
We take events out to the Greater Wellington region, some exclusively. Check out the Art on the Move calendar on page 59Online/ festival.co.nz or ticketek.co.nz Mail/ New Zealand International Arts Festival Bookings, Ticketek, PO Box 6334, Wellington 6141 Phone/ From 14 November Ticketek 04 384 3840 / 0800 TICKETEK In Person/ From 14 November at Ticketek outlets nationwide
39
HILL
MAJORIBANKS
ELIZABETH
PIRIE
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JESSIE
FREDERICK
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ARTHUR STREET
WEBB STREET
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WHITEMORE
BUNNY
PIPITEA
HAWKESTONE
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GHUZNEE STREET
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MANNERS
MANNERS
COURTENAY PL
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QUEENS WHARF
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map and venue information
22
• Arrive early – most venues won’t be able to seat late-comers and you will not be entitled to a refund or transfer
• The Box Office will usually open one hour before the show for last minute ticket sales and ticket collection
• If collecting tickets, be there at least 20-30 minutes before the performance starts
• A venue will generally open for seating 30 minutes prior to the show
• Remember to switch off your mobile phone prior to the start of the show
• Recording or photography during the performance is not permitted
From outside Wellington? For travel, accommodation and tourist information visit festival.co.nz or wellingtonnz.com.
Wellington Combined Taxis (04) 384 4444
VENUE TIPS
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To Porirua, Paekakariki, Paraparaumu, Otaki, Lower Hutt, Upper Hutt, Greytown and Masterton.
Ticketek Michael Fowler Centre
Ticketek at Railway Station
Ticketek St James Theatre
Festival Box Office Midland Park
Embassy Theatre (Writers and Readers Week tickets only)
First Contact Hub, Odlin’s Plaza
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23
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Parking Tourist information
Festival Office Taxi ranks
Adam Art Gallery
Capital E
Circa Theatre
City Gallery
Downstage Theatre
Embassy Theatre
Enjoy Gallery
Michael Fowler Centre
Museum Art Hotel
Museum of Wellington City & Sea
New Zealand Portrait Gallery (Shed 11)
Opera House
Pipitea Marae
St James Theatre
St Mary of the Angels
TelstraClear Festival Club, Odlin’s Plaza
Te Papa/Soundings Theatre
TSB Bank Arena
Waitangi Park
Wellington Sculpture Trust Installation
Wellington Town Hall & Ilott Theatre
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festival venues
Ticket Outlets
40
booking ticketsTICKETEK BOOKING FEES
Ticketek Booking Fees apply to all ticket purchases, including door sales.
$8.50 per transaction: Phone, email, fax and postal bookings.
$8 per transaction: Internet bookings – tickets printed and posted to you.
$5 per transaction: ezyTicket™ Internet Bookings – you print your tickets.
$3 per ticket: Ticketek Agencies.
$2 per ticket: Box Office at the venue where the event is being held – please note some venue box offices are only open one hour prior to the performance.
$10 lost ticket fee (per transaction): If you have lost/misplaced your tickets, these may be reissued to you, at a charge. Ticketek reserve the right to replace the lost tickets with either reprinted tickets or a ‘Lost Ticket Pass’ which may only be collected from the venue box office one hour prior to the show (identification will be required).
BOOKING INFORMATION
Season Ticket Redemption is now possible online. Available from Thursday 3 November. This feature allows you to redeem your Season Ticket allocation online. Simply visit ticketek.co.nz, select your shows and confirm your membership number.
Booking more than 10 shows? Please use our personalised booking service. Phone Ticketek on (04) 384 3842.
ezyTicket™Tickets purchased via the Ticketek website give you the option to print your own tickets. This is a safe, quick and easy way to purchase tickets to the Festival.
Tickets didn’t arrive?If you haven’t received your tickets within 10 days of sending your booking form please contact Ticketek on 0800 842 538.
MISSED OUT ON TICKETS?
If a show is sold out you may place your name on a waitlist at the Box Office (one hour prior to the show). Tickets may become available from one hour prior to 15 minutes before the show time.
Child PricingSelected shows have child prices. A child is aged 15 years and under. All children must have a ticket, regardless of age.
SEATING /PRICING
Premium seating (P): Available for selected shows, premium seats are the very best seats in which to see the show. Premium seats are limited and sell quickly.
A Reserve (A): These are the best seats in the venue (after premium, if premium seating applies). A Reserve seats are not sight obstructed and offer the best vantage point for seeing the show.
B Reserve (B): A limited number of seats are available in this price category. These seats are not the best seats in the venue and are often at the back or to the very sides of the theatre.
C and D Reserve (C&D): These seats represent the lowest priced seats in the theatre and may have sightline and/or sound issues.
General Admission (GA): Where there are no reserved seats and seating is on a ‘first come, first served’ basis. It is highly recommended you arrive early (30 minutes prior) to ensure the best choice of seating.
HOW TO BOOK
Public sales open from 9am, Monday 14 November 2011.
Online: festival.co.nzticketek.co.nz
Phone: 0800 842 538 0800 TICKETEK (04) 384 3840
In person: At Ticketek agencies nationwide
Post: Ticketek NZIAF Bookings PO Box 6334, Marion Square, Wellington, 6141
Email: [email protected] email bookings must be on a NZIAF Booking Form – please scan the Booking Form to book tickets by email.
Fax: Ticketek (04) 384 9574** Due to the high incidence of transmission and non_receipt errors with fax bookings we strongly recommend you choose an alternative method if possible.
Door Sales: Tickets may be purchased at the venue one hour prior to the show subject to availability.
BOOKING PERIODS
Public Sales: From Monday 14 November 2011.
Season Ticket: Preferential booking period Thursday 3 – Monday 7 November 2011.
Friends of the Festival: Preferential booking period Tuesday 8 – Sunday 13 November 2011.
Writers and Readers Week: Public sales open Friday 3 February 2012.
Bookmark Pass: Preferential booking period Friday 27 January – Thursday 2 February 2012. All booking periods start from 9am.
Pay less and book tickets before the public: Become a Friend of the Festival and you’ll be able to book tickets before the general public and pay reduced Friend’s prices (FRIENDS) for your tickets.
It costs just $75 (single) or $140 (double) and you can become a 2012 Friend by joining online at festival.co.nz or by completing the Friends section of the Booking Form.
More information on the benefits of becoming a Friend of the Festival can be found on the Festival website.
Wheelchair seating: It is essential that you advise us at the time of booking if you have any special seating requirements including wheelchair and/or companion seating. See page 64 for more details.
Seating requests: If you have a particular seating request we advise you to phone through your booking and discuss your requirements with a Ticketek customer service representative.
Disclaimer/Important information: Information in this programme is correct at the time of printing. The Festival reserves the right to alter without notice any events, programmes and artists.
All ticket purchases are subject to availability and the best available seats (in each price category) at the time of purchase will be sold.
Tickets are not transferable and there are no refunds or exchanges permitted, except as required under NZ consumer law. If a show is cancelled you will be refunded your ticket price (excluding the Ticketek service fee). Any claims on refunds for cancelled shows must be done prior to 31 March 2012, via Ticketek.
41
STEP 3 CHOOSE YOUR EVENTS
Show/Event Date TimeGA, P (PREM),
A,B,C,D RESERVE*
Tickets required
TotalPublic Friends
No. $ Price No. $ Price
Example: Political Mother 8 Mar 8pm A 2 $156 2 $146 $ 302
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
Ticketek booking fee $8.50
Confirm your new Friends Membership... Friends membership / (single $75 or double $140)
New Friends only
$
Make a difference and make a donation (tax deductible – our Charities Commission registration number is CC31596) $
Preferred method of delivery Mail Venue Collection Courier (+ $4) $
*Please note, you will be allocated the best available seats at the time of booking. All endeavours will be made to seat you in the pricing reserve of your choice. Should the reserve you have selected not be available, you will be allocated seats in the next price reserve down. Total $
STEP 1 COMPLETE YOUR DETAILS
Contact Name /
Postal Address / Postcode /
Telephone / Daytime ( ) Email /
Already a 2012 Friend of the Festival? Single/Double Friends (please circle). Friends membership number:
I am a Circa Friend yes / no (please circle) Circa membership number:
I am a Downstage Friend yes / no (please circle) Downstage membership number:
(Circa/Downstage Friends may buy two seats at the Friends’ rate for any performances at the relevant theatre – not available online. Standard prices apply for all other Festival events).
You’ll pay reduced ticket prices, get access to exclusive Friends events and tours and have the opportunity to book your tickets before public sales open.
I wish to become a ‘Friend of the Festival’ yes / no (please circle)
We wish to become a ‘Friend of the Festival’ yes / no (please circle)
Ms / Mrs / Miss / Mr / Dr (please circle) First name Last name
Ms / Mrs / Miss / Mr / Dr (please circle) First name Last name
Please remember to select the ‘Friends’ prices (FRIENDS) when completing your booking form. Please note that there is a limit of one discounted ticket to each performance per Friend of the Festival.
$140 (must reside at the same address)
$75
STEP 2 WOULD YOU LIKE TO BECOME A FRIEND OF THE FESTIVAL?
STEP 4 PAYMENT
Payment Method / Cheque (payable to Ticketek New Zealand Limited)
Visa Mastercard AMEX Please charge my credit card $
Credit Card Number Expiry Date / /
Card Holder’s Name / Security code /
Signature / Yes, please add me to the Festival mailing list
Please note: there are no refunds or exchanges on ticket prices or service fees, except as required under NZ consumer law.
*If you are faxing this form, please ensure you transmit it only once. If you are unsure if the transmission went through correctly, please contact Ticketek on 0800 842 538 before re_faxing. Multiple receipts of faxed forms will be processed, and if you have duplicated your booking in error, the policy of no refunds/exchanges will apply.
We recommend you retain a copy of this form for your reference. Tickets will be posted to your nominated mailing address (internet, email, post and phone bookings) or you may choose to collect your tickets from the venue, which will be available from one hour prior to the show. Please note that only the legal credit card holder can collect tickets and current photo identification will be required.
STEP 5 POST, EMAIL OR FAX* THIS FORM (SEE ‘HOW TO BOOK’)
book
ing F
ORM
42
festival.co.nz
“ Playing of verve, stylistic purity and impeccable artistry”The New York Times
I Musici presented in association with
Legendary chamber music ensemble I Musici is turning 60 and bringing its celebrations to Wellington.
This famous Italian ensemble is one of the longest_running active chamber groups in existence and as part of their 60th anniversary ‘Celebration World Tour’ they make their first ever trip to our shores.
Proudly presented by Chamber Music New Zealand, I Musici’s Serenata Italiana takes audiences on a journey of the Italian serenade, featuring music by Rossini, Respighi and film composer Nino Rota (of The Godfather fame). The group plays with no conductor, achieving an unparalleled synergy between the musicians.
Rossini Sonata a quattro No. 1 in G majorRossini Une Larme, Theme and Variations Donizetti Allegro in D majorPaganini Il Carnevale di Venezia, Theme and Variations Bossi 3 Intermezzi Goldoniani, Opus 127Respighi AriaRota Concerto for strings (written for I Musici)Bacalov Concerto Grosso for I Musici’s 60th Anniversary
Image: Corine Veysselier
Serenata Italiana I Musici (Italy)
MUSIC
WHEN 28 February 7.30pmWHERE Michael Fowler Centre
TICKETS $48 – $88A$88 / B$68 / C$48 FRIENDS A$83 / B$63
DURATION 1 hr 50 (including interval)
“ Thrilling to hear… an uncommonly fine performance” The Washington Post
The New Zealand String Quartet begins its 25th anniversary celebrations with two exclusive Festival performances in the stunning setting of St Mary of the Angels church.
Experience Beethoven through his string quartets – the medium in which he expressed some of his deepest and mostprofound musical thoughts and ideas.
In 2012 the New Zealand String Quartet will be touring the country, presenting Beethoven’s 16 string quartets in six concerts. Part one of this cycle, The Age of Enlightenment, consists of two concerts of six string quartets that show the influence of Haydn and Mozart. This is music of expressive power, elegance and beauty.
Concert 1 (25 February) String Quartets, Opus 18 Nos. 3, 2 and 1
Concert 2 (26 February) String Quartets, Opus 18 Nos. 4, 5 and 6
New Zealand String Quartet
Beethoven! The Age of Enlightenment
MUSIC
Beethoven! is a partnership project between
WHEN CONCERT 1 25 February 6pm CONCERT 2 26 February 7.30pm
WHERE St Mary of the AngelsTICKETS GA$48
FRIENDS GA$43 DURATION 2 hrs (including interval)
44
MUSIC
“ As prodigious of voice as he is of personality, Lemalu is always a striking performer” The Guardian (UK)
Power and PassionNew Zealand String Quartet with Jonathan Lemalu (New Zealand)
New Zealand’s foremost chamber ensemble combines with the glorious baritone voice of Jonathan Lemalu for this programme of four stunning works.
This will be a performance to remember. Barber’s famous Adagio and the music of Shostakovich are combined with Variation 25 by Ross Harris (based on Bach’s Goldberg Variations) and the world premiere of a new work by Chinese_born New Zealand composer Gao Ping.
Anguish, intensity, love and desire will weave together as the gorgeous music of the strings marries with the warm and rich tones of Lemalu – one of the most sought-after talents on the world opera stage.
Ross Harris Variation 25 for string quartetSamuel Barber String Quartet in B, Opus 11Gao Ping Three Poems by Mu Xin for baritone and string quartet (World Premiere) Samuel Barber Dover Beach, Opus 3 for baritone and string quartet Dmitri Shostakovich String Quartet No. 9 in E♭, Opus 117
Image: Alastair Thain
With support from
WHEN 4 March 6pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS $38 – $68 A$68 / B$58 / C$38 FRIENDS A$63 / B$53
DURATION 1 hr 40 (including interval)
Peter & Carolyn Diessl
45
New Zealand’s leading piano trio joins forces with outstanding percussionists Lenny Sakofsky and Jeremy Fitzsimons for this programme of vast sonic scope and visual energy.
Enjoy the funky toe_tapping music of Kenji Bunch, a world premiere piece by Jack Body, and four other meditative works – in a programme marked by freedom and fluidity.
At its heart will be a rare performance of American composer George Crumb’s mesmerising Dream Sequence (Images II), an extraordinary piece that is perhaps the most adventurous of Crumb’s explorations into his characteristic realm of sound events.
Kenji Bunch Swing Shift: GrooveboxJack Body World PremiereMorton Feldman Durations 4John Psathas FragmentGeorge Crumb Dream Sequence (Images II)Victoria Kelly SonoKenji Bunch Concerto for piano trio and percussion
Image: John Crawford
DreamscapesNZTrio (New Zealand)
MUSIC
With support from
WHEN 17 March 4pmWHERE Ilott Theatre, Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS A$48 FRIENDS A$40
DURATION 1 hr
With intricate, almost imperceptible flicks of his fingers, santoor maestro Shivkumar Sharma creates music that is nothing short of magic.
The santoor might look like the unusual love child of a harp and xylophone, but in the hands of India’s most revered composer and player it becomes the source of a sound that is complex, beautiful and hypnotic.
Shivkumar Sharma has spent a lifetime mastering the santoor, in the process transforming it from an obscure folk device to a virtuoso instrument – its rhythms and melodies gracing the likes of Carnegie Hall.
With Yogesh Samsi on tabla and Takahiro Arai on tanpura, each a master of his chosen instrument, this will be a very special evening of Indian music, set within a deeply spiritual space.
shivkumar Sharma: spirit of india(India)
MUSIC
With support from
By arrangement with the Nataraj Cultural Centre Melbourne: assisted by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations
WHEN 14 March 7pmWHERE St Mary of the Angels
TICKETS GA$48 FRIENDS GA$40
DURATION 1 hr 30
46
Sponsored by
denoise + sharrpen please
Evil kids run riot and creatures of darkness rule in this gloriously grim and wickedly funny world created through astonishing animated projections.
Welcome to the Bayou, a part of the city that is feared and loathed. There sits the infamous Bayou Mansions – a sprawling, stinking tenement block, where curtain_
twitchers and peeping_toms live side by side, and the wolf is always at the door.
When Agnes Eaves and her daughter appear late one night, does it signal hope in this hopeless place, or has the real horror only just begun?
Looking like a giant graphic novel
brought to life, 1927 invites you into
a dystopian metropolis of inner city
paranoia. Seamlessly synchronising
live music, performance and storytelling
with stunning films and animation,
this is a twisted new tale from the
multiple award_winning company
behind the Festival’s 2010 Club hit
Between the Devil and the Deep Blue
Sea. Technically brilliant, razor sharp
and completely entrancing, you won’t
find dark humour more gleeful than this.
Images: Nick Flintoff
“ This is a perfect alternative show. In fact, it is a perfect show”
The Financial Times (UK)
1927(UK)
The Animals & Children Took to the Streets
THEATRE
WHEN 8, 9 March 8pm10 March 1pm & 6pm11 March 6pm
WHERE Opera HouseTICKETS $53 – $63
A$63 / B$53 FRIENDS A$58 / B$48
DURATION 1 hr 10
47
Images: Heiko Kalmbach
The laws of gravity are made to be broken in this brilliantly mind_boggling piece of theatre.
The rules of the physical world disappear and a place of boundless imagination emerges in Leo. Amidst fabulous scenes and landscapes, Leo lives at a ninety degree angle to the rest of us. Defying gravity through an ingenious combination of stage design and video projection, he embarks on an adventure that is funny, witty and unexpected.
A triumph of coordination, Leo interacts perfectly with all that appears around him, meeting the physical challenges thrown his way by an ever_changing environment and leaving you wondering which way is up and which way is down.
Leo premiered at the 2011 Edinburgh Fringe where it was a stand_out success,
S O L O sDOWNSTAGE
receiving glowing reviews and winning no fewer than three awards, including the Three Weeks Editors Award and the Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh Award. A perfect blend of cutting_edge technology, creativity and story, this might just be a Festival event you have to see twice.
A mind-bending marvel, a world premiere and
the revival of an iconic Kiwi tour de force, these
three one-man shows at Wellington’s beloved Downstage Theatre are
testimony to the dramatic possibilities of solo theatre.
LEOCircle of Eleven (Germany)
PHYSICAL THEATRE
Sponsored by
WHEN 13–16 March 7pm17, 18 March 6pm
WHERE Downstage TheatreTICKETS $53 – $58
A$58 / B$53 FRIENDS A$53 / B$48
DURATION 1 hr 10
48
Image: Stephen Tilley
Celebrated actor Michael Hurst joins forces with two of New Zealand’s freshest young writers in this innovative new solo work, set in the Shakespearean afterlife.
In Frequently Asked Questions an insomniac called Hamlet discovers a script documenting the end of his life, and begins some serious late_night soul_searching. ‘What a piece of work is a man?’ ‘To be, or not to be?’ These are his FAQs. And Hamlet can’t sleep until he knows.
Writers Natalie Medlock and Dan Musgrove have been working in collaboration with Hurst since early 2010 to develop this semi_autobiographical work. With ‘cameos’ from some of the Bard’s greatest characters and a climax where Hurst unleashes 30 years of stage combat experience on himself, Frequently Asked Questions is Shakespeare as you’ve never seen it.
CONTAINS LANGUAGE THAT MAY OFFEND
World Premiere
Sponsored by
®
With support from
frequently Asked QuestionsTO BE OR NOT TO BE, ETC. Royale Productions (New Zealand)
THEATRE
WHEN 2 March 9.30pm3 March 8.30pm6–8 March 7pm9, 10 March 8pm11 March 2pm & 8pm
WHERE Downstage TheatreTICKETS $43 – $48
A$48 / B$43FRIENDS A$43 / B$38
DURATION 1 hr 20
Image: Te Rawhitiroa Bosch
20 years after it burst onto the stages of the world, writer John Broughton’s iconic piece of Kiwi theatre returns for its Festival encore.
Michael James Manaia is a poignant story about a New Zealand man who, after returning from the Vietnam War, finds himself at odds with his culture, his history and his memories. Packed full of dynamic theatrical action and colourful characters, we follow his journey through childhood, family, love, grief, violence, conflict and passion.
After premiering at Wellington’s Downstage Theatre in 1991, this heart_wrenching one_man show went on to the Edinburgh Festival and celebrated performances across the globe. Directed by Nathaniel Lees and starring Te Kohe Tuhaka in the title role, this new vision of the story crosses the generations.
Taki Rua (New Zealand)
michaeljamesmanaia
THEATRE
With support from
WHEN 25, 26, 28, 29 February, 1 March 7pm2 March 6pm3 March 5pm4 March 4pm
WHERE Downstage TheatreTICKETS $43 – $48
A$48 / B$43 FRIENDS A$43 / B$38
DURATION 2 hrs 10 (including interval)
49
With characters named Cotton and Wrinkle you’d expect Andy Manley’s White to be the kind of show that will charm your kids’ socks off – and you’d be right.
Imagine a world with no green grass, no red roses, not even a splash of blue in the sky; everything is perfectly and startlingly white.
In this pristine place full of trees and birdhouses, friends Wrinkle and Cotton are always busy. Every day they meticulously tend to their woodland surrounds, cleaning, tidying and, most importantly, ensuring that even the tiniest smidge of colour doesn’t last for long.
Everything seems perfect, until one day a brightly coloured egg tumbles out of the sky and changes their world forever.
Created especially for the youngest of theatre-goers, White is a wonderfully visual tale that has also been proving a delight for parents. It is a perfect first theatrical experience, storytelling at its heart warming and award winning best.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 2-5
“ Distinctive, gripping and beautiful” The Times (UK)
Sergei Prokofiev’s classic children’s tale has never looked or sounded so good, as Suzie Templeton’s Academy Award_winning short film is accompanied by the beautiful live music of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra.
Life isn’t great when you are incessantly picked on by the town bullies, live with a paranoid grandfather, and your only real friend is a duck.
This is life for Peter, a shy, stick_thin lad who longs for nothing more than the freedom to explore the wild and wonderful forest behind his fortress_like home. One day the temptation proves too much and Peter stumbles headlong into a wilderness that holds both joy and danger.
Peter and the Wolf will be followed by a narrated orchestral performance of New Zealand composer Jenny McLeod’s The Emperor and the Nightingale. A magical night for all ages.
Film © 2006 Breakthru Peter Ltd. and se-ma-for.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 5+
“ An utter delight no matter what your age” The Times (UK)
Image: Paul Watt
whiteCatherine Wheels (UK)
THEATRE
WHEN 7, 9, 11 March10.30am & 1.30pm8, 10 March10.30am, 12.30pm & 2.30pm
WHERE Capital ETICKETS GA$25
CHILD GA$15DURATION 45 mins
Sponsored by
Breakthru Films / Directed by Suzie Templeton (UK)
Peter and the Wolf
FILM /MUSIC
The New Zealand Post Season of
F O R K I D S
WHEN 9 March 6pmWHERE Michael Fowler Centre
TICKETS $10 – $43A$43 / B$28 FRIENDS A$38 CHILD A$15 / B$10
DURATION 1 hr 20 (including interval)
Following two hugely successful UK tours and sell_out runs in London’s West End, this riveting adaptation of Michael Morpurgo’s award_winning book comes to the Festival.
Branded a coward by the country he fights for and condemned to death by firing squad, Private ‘Tommo’ Peaceful waits to die. Before dawn, we’ll learn Tommo’s story: his adventures, tragedies, loves and the injustices that now find him hopelessly confined in a desolate cell.
Multi award_winning author Michael Morpurgo (War Horse) was inspired to write Private Peaceful following a trip to a Belgian war cemetery, where he was shocked by how many young soldiers were court_martialled and shot for cowardice during the First World War. Adapted and directed by Simon Reade, Private Peaceful is a one-man show that leaves an indelible mark on the mind.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 11+
Art on the Move: Lower Hutt and Greytown (see page 58)
“ The horrors of war and the joyfulness of life are bound up together in this magnificent show” The Scotsman
Sponsored by
Private PeacefulScamp Theatre (UK)
THEATRE
Image: Steve Ullathorne
DOWNSTAGE THEATRE, SUNDAY 11 MARCH 2012
YOUNG WRITERS & READERS DAY
For Kids is supported by
Right image: Tim Cuff
In January the Festival will announce a third writer to complete this celebration of much-loved children’s literature.
WHEN 11 March 11amPRICE $5 per person
DURATION 50 mins
Gavin BishopGavin Bishop is a writer and illustrator of children’s books ranging from Bidibidi to his charming memoir Piano Rock: A 1950s Childhood. Among the many books he has illustrated are Joy Cowley’s Snake and Lizard and Diana Noonan’s Quaky Cat. Gavin discusses his work and reads from his enchanting books.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 6-12
WHEN 11 March 9.30amPRICE $5 per person
DURATION 50 mins
Lynley DoddLynley Dodd is best known for her Hairy Maclary series and follow-up books featuring much-loved animal characters with rhyming names. Lynley reads from her classic books, describes how her characters and stories came into being, and shares anecdotes about her life and work.
AGE RECOMMENDATION: 6-10
A Unity bookstore will be onsite and all sessions will be followed by writer book signings
WHEN 14–16 March 6.30pm17 March 2pm
WHERE Soundings Theatre, Te PapaTICKETS A$48
FRIENDS A$43 CHILD A$18
DURATION 1 hr 20
51
Playwright Gary Henderson takes a touching, bittersweet look at life in the 1960s in this beautifully crafted play, directed by Jane Waddell.
Michael Hope is ten years old and sleeps on a volcano. This is his playground, his paradise. But tremors begin to shake his idyll as rumblings in the adult world encroach into Michael’s life, erupting, and throwing his universe into a chaos that will change him forever.
Set within the moody landscape of its title, this engrossing play weaves a story in and around the everyday lives of a small town community on Banks Peninsula. It provides a richly emotional journey amid childhood games and adventures, adult issues and events. Although the story of Peninsula is fictional, Henderson says the places and some of the incidental anecdotes are real. It is an acknowledgement, a nod to a time and a place that was a step on the way to here and now.
“ Destined to become a classic” National Business Review (NZ)
Image: Stephen A’Court / Melanie Lisch
Peninsula Circa Theatre (New Zealand)
THEATRE
With support from
Korowai woven by the late Dame Rangimarie Hetet Image: Matt Grace
With support from
See this very special Te Reo Ma_ori version
of Shakespeare’s tragedy before it travels to play at London’s Globe.
More than sporting greatness will descend upon London in 2012. As part of the city’s Cultural Olympiad, the Bard’s Thames-side theatre presents Globe to Globe – an unprecedented programme of 37 multi-lingual Shakespeare productions from around the world. Representing New Zealand will be Nga
_kau Toa’s adaptation
of Troilus and Cressida with a new translation by Te Haumiata Mason.
Set during the Trojan wars, Troilus and Cressida follows the love between a Trojan prince and maiden and features struggles of power, hierarchy and honour between some of history’s greatest characters. A host of our most respected Ma
_ori actors make
up the cast, which is led by Ra_wiri Paratene
(Whale Rider) as Pandarus. Directed by Rachel House and Wetini Mitai-Ngatai.
Nga-kau Toa (New Zealand)
THE MAORITROILUS AND CRESSIDA
–
THEATRE
WHEN 25 February 8pm 26 February, 4, 11, 18 March 4pm28, 29 February 6.30pm 1–3, 8–10, 15–17 March 8pm6, 7, 13, 14 March 6.30pm
WHERE Circa TheatreTICKETS A$50
FRIENDS P$43DURATION 2 hrs (including interval)
WHEN 9, 10 March 6pmWHERE Te Papa Amphitheatre
DURATION 2 hrs 15 (including interval)
52
With two wheels that look like they’ve been pinched off a giant’s bicycle and two fearless French performers, this is the jaw_dropping acrobatics of Arcane.
Performing perfect flips, spins and somersaults on a nice steady platform would be difficult enough for most of us. Make that platform a moving, rolling structure and you add an entirely new level of complexity and skill.
Invented by trapeze artists Maxim Bourdon and Sebastien Bruas, Arcane’s wheel is much more than a mere prop. Like two spiders on a huge web, the daring duo clamber over the structure, expertly propelling it around the stage. As the performance progresses, the tricks get riskier as the wheel becomes the inspiration for excitingly dangerous and original feats that will transfix the crowds in Waitangi Park.
Sponsored by
Les Philébulistes (France)
ArcaneOUTDOOR THEATRE
Images: Cie Les Philébulistes
With support from
WHEN 24 February 6pm25, 26 February 2pm & 6pm
WHERE Waitangi Park DURATION 25 mins
53
TOWN HALL TALKS
Tim Flannery Opening Address
Germaine GreerThe Life and Times of Germaine Greer
Thomas Friedman Closing Address
Writers and Readers Week opens with a keynote address from this acclaimed scientist, explorer and environmentalist.
Few are more passionate or knowledgeable about the natural world than 2007 Australian of the Year Tim Flannery. He is chairman of the Copenhagen Climate Council and has written over a dozen books including his award_winning bestsellers The Future Eaters: An Ecological History of the Australasian Lands and People and The Weather Makers: The History and Future Impact of Climate Change. His more recent Here On Earth: An Argument for Hope charts the history of life on our planet and is an extraordinary exploration of evolution and sustainability.
An hour with an inspirational writer whose ideas and opinions are fearless, challenging and often controversial.
Australian writer, academic and journalist Germaine Greer is widely regarded as one of the most significant feminist voices of our time. Her ideas have courted controversy since the publication of her bestseller The Female Eunuch (1970), which took the world by storm and remains one of the most influential texts of the feminist movement. Among her many other books are Sex and Destiny: The Politics of Human Fertility, The Change: Ageing and the Menopause and Shakespeare’s Wife. Germaine Greer has a distinguished academic career in Britain and the USA.
Three_time Pulitzer Prize_winning journalist, columnist and author Thomas Friedman concludes Writers and Readers Week with a keynote address examining the current state of America.
One of the world’s most influential public intellectuals, Friedman is a long_time columnist for The New York Times. He has written extensively on global trade, the Middle East and the environment. Among his bestselling books are From Beirut to Jerusalem and The World is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty_First Century, which has sold more than four million copies in 37 languages. His latest book, That Used To Be Us, explores the major challenges facing America today.
WHEN 9 March 6.30pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS A$33 BP & FRIENDS A$28
DURATION 1 hrON SALE 14 November
WHEN 12 March 6.30pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS A$33 BP & FRIENDS A$28
DURATION 1 hrON SALE 14 November
WHEN 14 March 6pmWHERE Wellington Town Hall
TICKETS A$33 BP & FRIENDS A$28
DURATION 1 hrON SALE 14 November
John F. Kennedy Memorial Fellowship
With support from
© Adam Bruzzone © Josh Haner & The New York Times
Friday 9 – Wednesday 14 March 2012
From journalists and scientists to novelists and poets, this is your opportunity to see some of the world’s finest writers and thinkers as they deliver a stimulating and entertaining week.
The full Writers and Readers programme will be launched on 26 January and the booklet will be widely available at Unity Books, libraries, bookshops and other outlets nationwide. All events will be listed on festival.co.nz.
With support fromW E E K
writers & readers
W R I T E R S & R E A D E R S W E E K
54
YOUNG writers and READERSSchools Sessions (part of New Zealand Post SchoolFest) at the Town Hall on Friday 9 March – see page 64.
Young Writers and Readers Day at Downstage Theatre on Sunday 11 March – see page 51.
For further details see festival.co.nz and the Writers and Readers programme booklet (available 26 January).
Bill Manhire – New Zealand’s first poet laureate and director of Victoria University’s prestigious International Institute of Modern Letters – is on the hunt for New Zealand’s virtuosi of verse. Take part or be in the audience to watch this creative process at work.
Manhire hosts a public masterclass offering comment on the work of three budding poets. If you would like to be considered for one of the three spots on stage at the Embassy Theatre, send three poems of up to 30 lines in a single Word attachment to [email protected] with your full name and contact information. Submissions close on Friday 3 February. For more details see festival.co.nz.
BILL MANHIRE’S POETRY MASTERCLASS An opportunity for undiscovered writers
LUNCHTIME AT DOWNSTAGEWhat is the future of the book? What are the processes and pitfalls of translation? These questions and many more relating to the business of books will be discussed during three industry_focused sessions at Downstage Theatre.
HIGH TEA AT THE MUSEUM ART HOTEL with selina hastings
Fact, fiction, fantasy, history, politics, screenwriting, music and poetry. It’s all there to be discussed and picked over during 29 thought_provoking sessions delivered by a host of international and New Zealand writers at the Embassy Theatre.
SAVE WITH A MULTI-PASSInterested in attending more than one Embassy or Downstage session? Pick up one of these great multi_passes.
BookMark Pass (BP)The ultimate Writers and Readers multi_pass.
• Tickets to 15 Embassy and Downstage sessions of your choice
• Secure your spot before the general public with a preferential booking period from 27 January to 2 February
• Save around 25% on the standard ticket price
• Buy discounted tickets for the Town Hall Talks
• The Writers and Readers programme booklet is mailed to you on 26 January
PASS $200 / FRIENDS $180 ON SALE 14 November
Take Five PassGot five sessions you’d like to see? This is for you.
• Tickets to five Embassy and Downstage sessions of your choice
• Save around 15% on the standard ticket price
PASS $75 / FRIENDS $70ON SALE 14 November
WHEN 10 –14 MarchWHERE Embassy Theatre
PRICE Single session GA$18 ON SALE 3 February
See over the page for a sneak peek at some of the writers on offer.
GREAT WRITERS IN greater wellingtonFor details see Art on the Move on page 58 and festival.co.nz
Engage your mind and indulge your tastebuds – British biographer Selina Hastings presents Nancy Mitford and Evelyn Waugh: A Literary Correspondence Course based on the brilliantly funny letters they exchanged. Wise and witty words are accompanied by sumptuous hand_crafted amuse_bouches, mini sandwiches and many more tasty offerings.
EMBASSY SESSIONS
WHEN 12 –14 MarchWHERE Downstage Theatre
PRICE Single session GA$18 ON SALE 3 February
WHEN 13 March 3.30pmWHERE Embassy Theatre
PRICE GA$18 DURATION 1 hr
ON SALE 3 February
WHEN 14 March 3.30pmWHERE Hippopotamus Restaurant,
Level 3, Museum Art HotelPRICE GA$65
DURATION 1 hr 30ON SALE 14 November
W R I T E R S & R E A D E R S W E E K
55
eleanor cattonNew Zealand
Eleanor Catton is one of the country’s exciting emerging writers. In 2007 she won Victoria University’s Adam Prize in Creative Writing for her first novel, The Rehearsal. It went on to be published in more than ten languages and collected several prestigious literary awards. She is now the Ursula Bethell Writer in Residence at the University of Canterbury.
Javier Cercas Spain
Javier Cercas is a Spanish novelist, short story writer and essayist. Soldiers of Salamis, his novel set during the Spanish Civil War, won the UK’s prestigious Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. Cercas’ latest book, The Anatomy of a Moment, examines the attempted coup in the Spanish Parliament on 23 February 1981.
dionne brandCanada
Poet and novelist Dionne Brand is currently Toronto’s Poet Laureate. Born in Trinidad and Tobago, at 17 she moved to Canada to study at the University of Toronto. Brand won the Governor General’s Award for her poetry collection Land to Light On and the 2011 Griffin Poetry Prize for Ossuaries.
chris bourkeNew Zealand
Chris Bourke is a Wellington_based writer, journalist, editor and radio producer with a passion for music. His book Blue Smoke: The Lost Dawn of New Zealand Popular Music triumphed at the 2011 New Zealand Post Book Awards, taking home the General Non_fiction Award, the People’s Choice Award and the coveted Book of the Year.
Patrick Evans New Zealand
Patrick Evans teaches New Zealand literature at the University of Canterbury. He has written many non_fiction works including The Long Forgetting and The Penguin History of New Zealand Literature. Evans’ latest work is Gifted, a fictional imagining of the early relationship between Frank Sargeson and Janet Frame.
Kate grenville Australia
One of Australia’s best_known writers, Kate Grenville has published seven novels, a collection of short stories, and four books about writing. For The Secret River she won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. Kate recently released Sarah Thornhill, the third part of The Secret River trilogy.
Jenny Erpenbeck Germany
Based in Berlin, Jenny Erpenbeck is a versatile writer of short stories, plays and novels. Her recent novel The Visitation (nominated for the UK’s Independent Foreign Fiction Prize) is a haunting evocation of buried secrets set during the traumatic period from the rise of Nazism to the fall of the Berlin Wall.
FIONA FarrellNew Zealand
Fiona Farrell is a poet, fiction writer and playwright; her novels include The Hopeful Traveller and Limestone. Fiona’s latest, The Broken Book, is a travel book interrupted by 20 poems about the Christchurch earthquakes and how they changed everything: the book you were writing, the house you were living in, the thoughts that preoccupied you.
© Katharina Behling
Writers and Readers Week is supported by Victoria University of Wellington, Unity Books, Museum Art Hotel, Australia Council for the Arts, Australian High Commission, Goethe-Institut, Canada Council for the Arts, Embassy of Spain and the Embassy of the United States of America.
Some of the finest international and New Zealand writers converge on Wellington’s Embassy Theatre during Writers and Readers Week. Here’s just a taste of the literary line_up on offer. The full Writers and Readers programme is released on 26 January 2012.
W E E K
writers & readers
EMBASSY SESSIONS
W R I T E R S & R E A D E R S W E E K
Friday 9 – Wednesday 14 March 2012
56
Kelly LinkUSA
Kelly Link’s stories are often described as slipstream or magic realism: a combination of science fiction, fantasy, horror, mystery and realism. Her recent books of short stories, The Wrong Grave and Pretty Monsters, have a strong young adult following. She has won three Nebulas and a World Fantasy Award.
Jo NesboNorway
Bestselling Norwegian crime writer Nesbo has had his work translated into over 40 languages. He is best known for his Detective Harry Hole crime novels including The Snowman and The Leopard. Nesbo’s latest, Headhunters, is a stand_alone thriller with a movie version soon to be released. He also writes the Doctor Proktor children’s novels.
Richard Price USA
Richard Price is an American novelist who wrote for the hugely popular HBO series The Wire. He has written numerous screenplays including The Color of Money, for which he was nominated for an Oscar. His novels include The Wanderers, Blood Brothers and Clockers, which was made into a movie directed by Spike Lee.
Ron Rash USA
Ron Rash is an award_winning poet, short story writer and novelist who lives in the Appalachian Mountains. His novels, including One Foot in Eden and The New York Timesbestseller Serena, have earned him comparisons to John Steinbeck and Cormac McCarthy. His recent short story collection, Burning Bright, won the 2010 Frank O’Connor Award.
Kim Scott Australia
Kim Scott was the first indigenous Australian writer to win the Miles Franklin Award. His latest novel, That Deadman Dance, explores the early contact between the Aboriginal Noongar people and the first European settlers in Albany, Western Australia. It has received many accolades including the prestigious Victorian Premier’s Literary Award.
Selina hastingsUnited Kingdom
British writer and journalist Selina Hastings has written literary biographies on Evelyn Waugh, Nancy Mitford and Rosamund Lehmann. Her latest literary biography is The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham. Selina worked for fourteen years on The Daily Telegraph and was the literary editor of Harper’s & Queen.
Alan Hollinghurst United Kingdom
British novelist Alan Hollinghurst won the 2004 Man Booker Prize for The Line of Beauty.His other novels include The Swimming Pool Library, The Folding Star and Spell. Hollinghurst’s latest, the highly acclaimed The Stranger’s Child, is an epic story following the lives of two families from the eve of the Great War to the close of the 20th century.
Michael hulse United Kingdom
Michael Hulse is a poet, translator, teacher and critic. His recent books include a poetry collection The Secret History and The 20th Century in Poetry, co_edited with Simon Rae.One of Hulse’s great translations is W.G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn. Hulse teaches creative writing and comparative literature at the University of Warwick.
Denise MinaUnited Kingdom
Denise Mina is a Scottish crime writer and playwright whose style has been described as ‘tartan noir’. She is the author of the Garnethill trilogy and another series featuring Patricia ‘Paddy’ Meehan, a Glasgow journalist. Mina’s first Paddy Meehan novel, The Field of Blood, has become a BBC drama.
harry ricketts New Zealand
Poet, academic, editor and reviewer, Harry Ricketts studied English at Oxford University and lived in Asia before moving to New Zealand. His 20 published works include The Unforgiving Minute: A Life of Rudyard Kipling and Strange Meetings: The Poets of the Great War. Ricketts teaches creative non_fiction and English at Victoria University.
© Sophie Kandaonroff
© Colin McPherson
© Hakon Eikesdal
© Ralph Gibson
© Robert Cross
W R I T E R S & R E A D E R S W E E K
57
New Zealand’s Emerging Writers
walk a mile in my shoes Barefoot Divas
ART ON THE MOVEEvery Festival we take national and international artists out of the city and into the Greater Wellington region. It’s your chance to catch some fantastic Festival events where you are. Here’s who is coming your way.
The Festival acknowledges the generous support of the Porirua and Hutt City Councils, and the Kapiti Coast, Masterton and South Wairarapa District Councils in helping to present the 2012 Art on the Move programme.
Supported by
PORIRUA Mana Community Grants Foundation
OTAKIOtaki Community Board
LOWER HUTTPelorus Trust
UPPER HUTTYouthtown
GREYTOWNGreytown Trust Lands
MASTERTONMasterton Trust Lands Trust
THE TOPP TWINS New Zealand
MUSIC MUSICAN EMERALD CITY New Zealand
© Sally Tagg
© Shane Rozario© Philip O’Brien
MUSIC
Three of the country’s most exciting new voices read from their work and discuss their writing journey. Eleanor Catton’s first novel The Rehearsal was published in more than 10 languages, Craig Cliff won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize Best First Book Award for A Man Melting and in 2011 Hamish Clayton’s remarkable first novel Wulf met with high critical acclaim.
WHERE Aratoi, Masterton WHEN 12 March 12.30pm
TICKETS GA $15
Whirimako Black, Emma Donovan, Merenia, Ngaiire and Maisey Rika are the Barefoot Divas – five proud black women of diverse cultural backgrounds and exceptional vocal talent. Accompanied by their international band, the ensemble combines reggae, roots, R&B and Latin-infused music with stories of struggle and scandal from their lives on the road and in the studio.
See page 31
National treasures The Topp Twins have performed around the world as an original country music and comedy duo for more than 25 years. Armed with guitar, mouth-harp and spoons, they deliver original songs, audience participation and comedy in a fast-paced and hilarious entertainment experience.
See page 34
With a reputation for memorable live shows, this Auckland-born band has gained a ravenous following of fans. Combining universal and exotic beats, the six-piece group’s experimental style has been described as ‘organic instrumentation and sounds of the east meet psychedelia’.
See page 35
WHERE Masterton Town HallWHEN 27 February 7.30pm
TICKETS GA $44
WHERE St Peters Village Hall, Paekakariki WHEN 2 March 9pm
TICKETS GA $15
WHERE Pataka Museum, PoriruaWHEN 8 March 8pm
TICKETS GA $36
WHERE Southward Theatre, Paraparaumu WHEN 9 March 7.30pm
TICKETS GA $36 / CHILD GA $15
58
Maisey Rika New Zealand
private peaceful Scamp Theatre (UK)
MUSICInternational Poets at Paekakariki Canada/UK
James Hill Canada
AT A GLANCE
© Sophie Kandaonroff © Merna Ryan
© Steve Ullathorne
MUSICTHEATRE
PORIRUA Pataka Museum
Walk A Mile In My Shoes8 March 8pm
James Hill13 March 8pm
PAEKAKARIKI St Peters Village Hall
An Emerald City2 March 9pm
International Poets at Paekakariki 11 March 4pm
PARAPARAUMU Southward Theatre
Walk A Mile In My Shoes 9 March 7.30pm
OTAKI Otaki College
Maisey Rika13 March 7pm
LOWER HUTT Little Theatre
Private Peaceful10 March 7pm
UPPER HUTT Genesis Energy Theatre, Expressions
Maisey Rika14 March 7.30pm
GREYTOWN Kuranui College
Private Peaceful12 March 7.30pm
MASTERTON Masterton Town Hall
The Topp Twins27 February 7.30pm
Aratoi
New Zealand’s Emerging Writers12 March 12.30pm
Maisey Rika’s strong heritage, eclectic songs, and honey-stung vocals have quickly captured the hearts of listeners both in New Zealand and abroad. Combining many different sounds and effortlessly fusing English and Te Reo Ma
_ori lyrics, this multi award-winning singer-
songwriter has already secured her place amongst the greats of New Zealand music.
WHERE Otaki College WHEN 13 March 7pm
TICKETS GA $26 / CHILD GA $15
WHERE Genesis Energy Theatre, Expressions, Upper Hutt
WHEN 14 March 7.30pmTICKETS GA $26 / CHILD GA $15
Tickets from Ticket Direct 0800 224 224
Toronto’s Poet Laureate Dionne Brand and British poet and translator Michael Hulse read from their acclaimed collections and discuss their work. Brand was awarded the 2011 Griffin Poetry Prize for her book length poem Ossuaries. Hulse’s collections include The Secret History and recently he co-edited The 20th Century in Poetry.
WHERE St Peters Village Hall, PaekakarikiWHEN 11 March 4pm
TICKETS GA $15
Ukulele maestro James Hill is joined by cellist and singer Anne Davison for a performance of creativity and unpredictable fun. Described as one of the world’s top ukulele composers and arguably the best player on the planet, Hill’s unusual techniques, humour and virtuosity have seen him build a global base of fans.
See page 35.
WHERE Pataka Museum, Porirua WHEN 13 March 8pm
TICKETS GA $36 / CHILD GA $15
In a desolate cell Private ‘Tommo’ Peaceful waits to die. As time marches towards dawn, we learn his story of joy and tragedy. This riveting adaptation of Michael Morpurgo’s award-winning book has enjoyed sell-out runs in London’s West End. A one-man show that leaves an indelible mark on the mind.
See page 51
WHERE Little Theatre, Lower Hutt WHEN 10 March 7pm
TICKETS GA $36 / CHILD GA $15
WHERE Kuranui College, Greytown WHEN 12 March 7.30pm
TICKETS GA $36 / CHILD GA $15
59
Adam art gallery SNAPSHOTS: Four Takes on Documentary Photography
Harry Watson, Edward Gibbon Wakefield (detail), 2008, oils on wood, private collection. Photo: Harry Watson
John Lake, The Campus (detail), 2011, Victoria University of Wellington Art Collection
ARATOI – WAIRARAPA MUSEUM OF ART & HISTORYHarry Watson: That Was Then, This Is Now
Fiona Amundsen The First City in HistorySharon Hayes In The Near FutureJohn Lake The CampusKohei Yoshiyuki The Park (An Institute of Modern Art Touring Exhibition)
The Adam Art Gallery presents a suite of four solo exhibitions that offer different takes on documentary photography. Recording people and places, these artists’ projects model strikingly different approaches, offering viewers a provocative opportunity to ask what it means when a camera is used to capture a scene, both in the moment and for posterity.
Robyn Kahukiwa, Resistance/Te Tohenga (detail), 2009 oil & alkyd oil on canvas, courtesy of the artist and Bowen Galleries. Photo: Stephen A’Court
MAHARA GALLERY Robyn Kahukiwa: Wahine Toi
Robyn Kahukiwa is a senior Ma_ori artist with a national and
international reputation whose career spans 40 years. Her work is a celebration of the life and experiences of Ma
_ori people. Many
of her paintings and prints encapsulate important socio-political issues in Aotearoa New Zealand. Maumahara: Remember gathers together a selection of Kahukiwa’s images from New Zealand public and private collections. It includes her latest major work Resistance/Te Tohenga, recently shown in Leiden, Holland.
An exhibition of past and recent work by skilled carver and self_taught artist Harry Watson. Harry creates animal, feathered and human protagonists (often based on real historical figures) that enact their dramas against the backdrop of a fledgling colonial society. Melding Ma
_ori and Pa
_keha
_ techniques and
traditions, Harry explores the social history and politics of Aotearoa in ways that are at once quirky and thought_provoking.
visual arts
WHERE 20 Mahara Place, Waikanae VillageWHEN From 25 February, Tue to Sat 10am–4pm, Sun 1pm–4pm
WHERE Bruce Street, MastertonWHEN From 10 December 2011 – 11 March 2012,
daily 10.30am–4.30pm
WHERE Victoria University of Wellington, Gate 3, Kelburn ParadeWHEN From 24 January, Tue to Sun 11am–5pm
Erica van Zon, Ritan Park Children’s Zodiac Ride (detail), 2011. Digital image courtesy of the artist
ENJOY GALLERYThe Chinese Horoscope Show
Featuring a dozen international and New Zealand_based artists the show is an exploration of the Chinese Zodiac. Collected by guest curator Erica van Zon, the twelve contributing artists have been asked to consider and respond to their zodiac sign. The result is an eclectic range of work in various media that is both engaging and playful.
WHERE Level 1/147 Cuba Street, WellingtonWHEN From 15 February – 10 March
Wed to Fri 11am–6pm, Sat 11am–4pm
60
Rohan Wealleans, He with Glands of Wasp (detail), 2009, polystyrene, fibreglass, paint and shark jaw, courtesy of Hamish McKay Gallery
City Gallery WELLINGTONThe Obstinate Object: Contemporary NZ Sculpture
Sculpture can be the most anti-social or belligerent of mediums, responsible for things that get in the way, need to be walked around, or even bumped into. The Obstinate Object harnesses and celebrates these very qualities, exploring the ‘object-ness’ of sculpture for its potential to transform real space through physical encounter. Spilling out of City Gallery into its non-spaces, surrounds and the city, The Obstinate Object brings together recent work by some of New Zealand’s most compelling sculptors.
Garments shown at London Fashion Week 1999. L to R: Zambesi, Nom*D, World, courtesy of the designers. Photo: Sarah Munro
MUSEUM OF WELLINGTON CITY & SEABlack in Fashion: Wearing the Colour Black in New Zealand
From the all black uniforms of our sports teams to that icon of kiwiana, the black singlet, black is the colour most commonly associated with New Zealand identity. During the Black in Fashion pop_up exhibition in Wellington, the subject of how and why black has become part of our proud identity as New Zealanders is explored. Presented by the New Zealand Fashion Museum in association with Museum of Wellington City & Sea.
Mark Rutledge, Ray Columbus (detail), Winner of the People’s Choice in the Adam Award and Exhibition 2010
NEW ZEALAND PORTRAIT GALLERY 2012 Adam Portrait Award
Pick your favourite piece of portraiture during the 2012 Adam Portrait Award at the New Zealand Portrait Gallery on Wellington’s waterfront. Your vote will help decide the People’s Prize of $2,000, while the overall winner, judged by Tony Ellwood Director of the Queensland Art Gallery and Gallery of Modern Art, will receive $15,000. New Zealand art at its finest.
The dowse art museum Teresa Margolles: So It Vanishes
Teresa Margolles, En el Aire / In the Air, 2003, courtesy of the artist and Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zurich. Photo: Axel Schneider
The Dowse Art Museum is proud to present two major works by internationally acclaimed Mexican artist Teresa Margolles. In The Air is one of Margolles most important works, featuring an empty room filled only with floating bubbles. It creates a scene of unearthly beauty, underscored with a sense of unease. In addition, an outdoor billboard series will see Margolles develop an entirely new body of work especially for The Dowse. The exhibition is guest curated by Claudia Arozqueta.
WHERE 45 Laings Rd, Lower HuttWHEN From 25 February, Mon to Fri 10am–4.30pm,
Sat/Sun 10am–5pm
WHERE See museumswellington.org.nz for details of thispop-up exhibition
WHEN From 24 February, daily 10am–5pm
WHERE Shed 11, Queens Wharf, Wellington waterfrontWHEN From 23 February, daily 10.30am–4.30pm
WHERE Civic Square, WellingtonWHEN From 24 February, daily 10am–5pm
*Excluding Shapeshifter
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Pieter Hugo, Escort (detail), 2008
PATAKA MUSEUM Pieter Hugo: Nollywood
Hannah Kidd, Getaway Gateway, 2008
Summer days, the serenity of beautiful gardens and contemporary sculpture are all there to be enjoyed during The Dowse and the Hutt Civic Gardens’ fifth Shapeshifter sculpture exhibition. From more than 100 proposals, Cam McCracken, Director of The Dowse, has selected a variety of stimulating large and small_scale works for display by established and emerging New Zealand artists. All works are for sale. Picnickers welcome.
Shapeshifter
Artist Concept Image: Joanna Langford, 2011
WELLINGTON SCULPTURE TRUST The 4 Plinths Sculpture Project: Joanna Langford
The 4 Plinths Sculpture Project is a temporary biennial installation that showcases New Zealand sculpture. On four massive bollards on Wellington’s waterfront, artist Joanna Langford presents the third project in this series – The Quietening – featuring four glass boxes in which the artist has installed her work. When viewed from a distance Langford’s dioramas unfold as a panoramic industrial landscape made from recycled shopping bags and elegant metal skewers.
Karl Fritsch, Ring, silver, iron, brass, 2010. Purchased 2011, Te Papa
te papa Collecting Contemporary
Every year, Te Papa extends its contemporary art collection, adding significant works by both emerging and established artists, as well as pieces that enhance the collection or reflect important trends. This exhibition showcases a selection of works acquired between 2006 and 2011. On 23 February 2012, Collecting Contemporary will re_open with newly acquired artworks, replacing some of the works previously on display.
visual arts
The Nigerian film industry – colloquially known as ‘Nollywood’ – is the third largest in the world. In this captivating exploration of the multi-layered reality of the film industry in Africa’s most populous nation, South African photographer Pieter Hugo recreates the stereotypical characters from Nollywood productions in a series of other_worldly portraits posed by Nigerian actors.
WHERE Corner Norrie and Parumoana St, Porirua CityWHEN From 11 February, Mon to Sat 10am–4.30pm, Sun 11am–4.30pm WHERE Civic Gardens and The Dowse, Laings Road, Lower Hutt
WHEN Opens 25 February, daily 10am –5pm.Late night 10am –8pm Thu. Closes 18 March at 4pm
ENTRY $5 with proceeds to charity, accompanied children free
WHERE Level 5, Te Papa, 55 Cable Street, WellingtonWHEN From 23 February, daily 10am–6pm and Thu 10am–9pm WHERE Wellington waterfront between Te Papa and Circa Theatre
WHEN From 24 February
Pay Event
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art talksMake the most of your lunch break during Festival 2012. Always popular and full of fascinating insights, Art Talks are a series of conversations with some of the Festival’s most inspirational national and international artists. Held through a series of free hour-long lunchtime talks at the TelstraClear Festival Club, this is your chance to hear about the lives and works of these creatives. For more information visit festival.co.nz.
Image: Steve Tanner Image: Phillip Merry
27th 28th
Join members of the Kneehigh theatre company as they discuss taking their work from the fields of Cornwall to London’s West End and Broadway.
WHEN 1pm
masiTHE WILD BRIDE
The Conch director Nina Nawalowalo and British illusionist Paul Kieve talk about the cross-cultural creation of Masi.
WHEN 1pm
29th
Image: Aneta Ruth
tu
Adapting someone else’s story to stage – join Hone Kouka as he discusses writing a play inspired by Patricia Grace’s bestselling novel.
WHEN 1pm
8th
Image: Gavin Evans
2nd
Image: Sebastian Bolesch
birds with skymirrors
An opportunity to hear Lemi Ponifasio talk about his experiences touring the works of Mau to some of the most prestigious stages in the world.
WHEN 1pm
3rd
Image: Mark Harrison
the sixteen
A rare chance to hear from the renowned conductor and founder of The Sixteen, Harry Christophers.
WHEN 12pm
beautiful burnout
What does it mean to be a theatre company without bricks and mortar? The National Theatre of Scotland talks about their approach to building a new generation of theatre-goers.
WHEN 1pm
10th 15th
Artist Concept Image: Michel TufferyImage: Ben Rudick
9thThe Animals & Children took to the Streets
Wellington is awash with digital creators. Be there as members of theatre company 1927 talk with local experts in the field.
WHEN 1pm
political mother
In conversation with Hofesh Shechter – one of the most important voices in contemporary dance.
WHEN 12pm
Michel Tuffery
Acclaimed New Zealand artist Michel Tuffery gives an insight into the evolution of his latest multi-media installation, First Contact 2012.
WHEN 1pm
M A R C H
F E B R U A R Y
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GET ACCESS TO FESTIVAL 2012 We’re making every effort to ensure the Festival is accessible to our whole audience. It is important that ticketing staff are notified of your requirements at the time of booking to ensure the necessary arrangements are made for you.
BOOKINGS
If you have special seating requirements such as wheelchair access or hearing difficulties, or you require companion seating, please contact Ticketek on 0800 842 538. If you have any further access issues please contact the Festival on (04) 496 5493.
TRANSPORT INFORMATION
Information about accessible parking and public transport in Wellington is available at www.wellington.govt.nz/move/lifestyle/community/disability.
PHYSICAL ACCESS
For more details on the access available at specific venues, you can go to festival.co.nz.
All venues have limited wheelchair seating. Designated wheelchair spaces (where available) and one companion seat will be sold at the lowest price in the house for that performance.
If you are a Friend of the Festival, please see our website for access information on the Friends Tours.
PATRONS WHO ARE DEAF OR HARD OF HEARING
There are hearing loops available at the following venues: Michael Fowler Centre and St James Theatre. Please inform ticketing staff if you wish to sit in a certain area of the venue to assist with your enjoyment of the performance.
FESTIVAL INFORMATION IN ALTERNATIVE FORMATS
This programme brochure is available:
• As a Word document in simple large print format – please contact the Festival on (04) 496 5493. Event programmes for selected performances can also be requested in this format a week before the performance.
• As a PDF at festival.co.nz.
Trouble reading the small print? For a large text version of this brochure call (04) 496 5493
Designed with Kiwi students in mind, the 2012 New Zealand Post SchoolFest programme features a hand_picked selection of the world’s best theatre, dance, music and visual arts. It’s where students experience discovery, creativity, learning and excitement. SchoolFest offers schools...
• Subsidised tickets to Festival performances ($15_$18)
• Special schools_only performances of Festival shows
• Workshops from Festival performers and creative teams
• Schools’ Writers and Readers Day
In 2010, more than 9,000 students from 89 schools came from across Aotearoa to experience the Festival close up. This year we work with New Zealand Post to bring the arts to even more schools across the country.
Look out for the New Zealand Post SchoolFest booklet in schools in early November or contact the Festival for a copy. Tickets can only be purchased through schools, so talk to your school about how to get involved.
Visit festival.co.nz and subscribe to our e_newsletter to get regular updates on the 2012 Festival and New Zealand Post SchoolFest.
Know a school student who loves the arts? Tell them about New Zealand Post SchoolFest.
What the teachers said about SchoolFest 2010
“ Our students were able to see a variety of professional shows that they would not usually see.”
“ Our school really enjoys this event and attends various performances every time.”
“ The girls came back buzzing about how wonderful the workshops were. They found them invaluable and entertaining.”
“ It was full of diverse experiences and my students loved it!”
Sponsored by
24 February – 18 March 2012
SCHOOLfestNEW ZEALAND POST
64
SEE A FESTIVAL SHOW FOR JUST $20
Tickets to most Festival shows, even sold out ones, for just $20?
It almost sounds too good to be true, but that’s exactly what you get with Tix for Twenty. Every day during the Festival we’re making 10 tickets to most Festival shows available on the day for just $20. All you need to do is head down to the Festival Box Office and you could grab a ticket for a show that very night.
Festival Box Office, Midland Park, Lambton Quay
Daily from 12.30pm until 4.30pm (or until tickets sell out) 24 February – 18 March 2012
WHERE
WHEN
WHAT DO I NEED TO KNOW?
• Tix for Twenty tickets are only available on the day of the show.
• Tickets are just $20 including all service and ticket fees.
• You can pay by cash or eftpos – sorry no credit cards.
• You can only purchase tickets in person at the Festival Box Office in Midland Park.
• There’s a limit of two tickets per person, per day.
• The Festival reserves the right to determine the seat allocation.
• Tickets are limited to performances within the 2012 New Zealand International Arts Festival (24 February – 18 March 2012).
• Tickets cannot be replaced if they are lost, stolen or damaged.
WHAT CAN’T I BUY A TIX FOR TWENTY TICKET FOR?
You can buy a Tix for Twenty ticket for most Festival shows, except those with limited capacity or for events priced under $20. Excluded events include: Writers and Readers Week, For Kids shows, Friends of the Festival tours, and Art on the Move regional performances. Tix for Twenty is strictly subject to availability.
Brand new for Festival 2012 is the inaugural The Dominion Post Festival Awards.
ABOUT THE AWARDS
Every night of the Festival, representatives from the Awards Judging Panel will take in performances – then on the final weekend they will deliberate, ruminate and decide the winners for 2012.
THE JUDGING PANEL
The panel will be made up of top arts critics from the newspaper and from the blogs, and joined by one or two well-known faces from the Capital!
THE CATEGORIES
From Best Theatre, Music, Dance and Children’s Event, Best Hidden Gem to Best New Zealand Production – the competition for the accolades will be hot – as will the debate!
YOU DECIDE
Plus, YOU pick the winner of our Dominion Post Readers’ Best in the Festival Award from one of the hundreds of events in the 2012 New Zealand International Arts Festival – check out the voting details in your Dominion Post from 24 February, or online at dompost.co.nz.
FIND OUT MORE
Check out your Dominion Post throughout the Festival, or head online to dompost.co.nz to find out more and for Festival news and reviews. Buy your copy of the paper on Wednesday 8 February 2012 to read about the full list of Awards in the Festival Supplement and on Monday 19 March 2012 for the winners.
To receive The Dominion Post delivered daily to your door, subscribe today – details at dompost.co.nz.
New in 2012
Festival awards 24 February – 18 March 2012
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Finc Dining Room122 Wakefield Street, CBD (04) 499 2999 / finc.co.nz
Located opposite the Town Hall and MFC, perfect for pre-show dining. Dine and dash prior to your event with small plates accompanied by organic ciders and beers, or perhaps dinner with a glass of boutique New Zealand wine.
Logan Brown Restaurant and BarCnr of Cuba and Vivian Streets (04) 801 5114 / loganbrown.co.nz
Getting you to the show on time for 15 years! Pre-show Bistro menu $39.50; bread and three courses with options. Every night 5.30pm, out by 7.30pm or from 9.30pm. Also available for lunch. 5 Stars – Cuisine Magazine 2011.
CHOWChow Tory, 45 Tory Street (04) 382 8585 Chow Woodward, 11a Woodward Street (04) 472 8585 / chow.co.nz
Fresh Asian cuisine in a relaxed modern environment. Vegetarian and vegan friendly with gluten and dairy free options. Two great central city locations. Open from 11am and serving the full menu until midnight.
the library53 Courtenay Place (04) 382 8593 / thelibrary.co.nz
Hidden away upstairs in the heart of Courtenay Place sits The Library. Fun and frivolous cocktails, exquisite and obscure wines, delicious desserts, exceptional cheeses and scrumptious savoury snacks make this a great place to meet before or after a show.
karaka cafÉIn Te Wharewaka, Taranaki Street Wharf (04) 916 8369 / kprcatering.co.nz/karaka-cafe
All day dining, private functions, delicious kai. Offering both café and à la carte, with a modern Ma
_ori twist. Open seven days –
late night Thursday, Friday, Saturday.
Ancestral31-35 Courtenay Place (04) 801 8867 / ancestral.co.nz
Ancestral brings the opulence of 1930s Shanghai to Wellington, offering modern Cantonese and Sichuan cuisine. The open-air Garden Bar offers Yakitori while in the main bar elegance and grace prevail with a carefully fashioned cocktail and whisky list.
motelUpstairs, Forresters Lane (off Tory Street) (04) 384 9084 / motelbar.co.nz
Recently voted the ninth best cocktail bar in the world, Motel has been providing sophisticated drinks to a discerning clientele since 1999. This discrete cocktail lounge is tucked away on Forresters Lane just off Tory Street. Find them if you can.
The Grill at Amora Hotel Wellington170 Wakefield Street, CBD (04) 471 5711 / wellington.amorahotels.com
The Grill is an outstanding restaurant where diners can enjoy exquisite Euro-Pacific cuisine in stunning 5 Star surroundings every day and night. Pre-Show dinner with any two courses for $42.95 per person from 5.30pm to 7.30pm, seven days a week.
Shed 5: Restaurant and BarQueens Wharf (04) 499 9069 / shed5.co.nz
Occupying one of the oldest buildings in the warehouse, Shed 5 has a prime waterfront location. The dining room has a focus on fresh seafood, an extensive wine list, and casual yet professional service.
Ortega Fish Shack & Bar16 Majoribanks Street (just off Courtenay Pl) (04) 382 9559 / ortega.co.nz
Follow the locals and order perfectly cooked, super fresh, line caught fish. Beckoning cheeseboard and creative wine list. Simple, honest and reasonably priced food. Cuisine Magazine Restaurant of the Year Finalist 2011. 4 Star rating.
TOP TEN
EATS &DRINKS
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Village Accommodation Group3–5 Star accommodation throughout Wgtn 0800 50 80 25 / villagegroup.co.nz
Village Accommodation Group properties are designed to give you the options that best suit your requirements. From comfortable large apartments to corporate 5 Star hotel style suites, our Wellington properties give you choice. Village Group – space, comfort and affordability.
Museum Art Hotel90 Cable Street, CBD (04) 802 8900 / museumhotel.co.nz
The Museum Art Hotel is a luxury hotel opposite Te Papa and the waterfront featuring magnificent artwork from around the world. On-site facilities include an art gallery, fitness centre, day spa, sauna, lap and spa pool and a beautiful French restaurant.
Quest Wellington33 Hunter Street, CBD (04) 916 0700 / questapartments.co.nz
Quest Wellington’s Art Deco inspired heritage building is a prominent landmark located on a pivotal corner site in New Zealand’s capital – Wellington. Boutique-style apartments in the heart of the city’s shopping and central business district.
Amora Hotel Wellington170 Wakefield Street, CBD (04) 473 3900 / wellington.amorahotels.com
This fabulous, downtown hotel has just completed a total makeover, redefining superior comfort and luxury with contemporary style. Most rooms command unobstructed views of Wellington Harbour and/or the city and the hotel is located right in the arts and entertainment precinct.
Central City Apartment Hotel130 Victoria Street, CBD (04) 385 4166 / centralcityhotel.co.nz
Located in the heart of Wellington City, step outside our door and you are minutes away from Lambton Quay, Courtenay Place and the main tourist attractions. We offer 54 stylish guest rooms from studio to one or two bedroom apartments.
Ohtel66 Oriental Parade (04) 803 0600 / ohtel.com
Ohtel is a luxurious ten bedroom property perfectly located in Oriental Bay. With an emphasis on friendly, unpretentious service and attention to every detail, Ohtel is ‘retro cool’ and signals a new direction for boutique hotels in New Zealand.
InterContinental Wellington2 Grey Street, CBD (04) 472 2722 / intercontinental.com/wellington
The only internationally-branded 5 Star hotel in the capital, InterContinental Wellington showcases 231 guestrooms and suites, Chameleon Restaurant, The Lobby Lounge and Tex-Mex Arizona Bar. Unwind in Emerge Health Club or be enriched by the knowledge of the InterContinental Concierge.
CQ Hotels Wellington213-223 Cuba Street (04) 385 2153 / hotelwellington.co.nz
Located in the heart of Wellington, CQ Hotels is a beautiful heritage building providing 3 Star accommodation at Comfort Hotel Wellington and 4+ Star at Quality Hotel Wellington. Offering a great mix of accommodation as well as CQ Café, Restaurant and Bar.
Bolton HotelCnr Bolton and Mowbray Streets (04) 472 9966 / boltonhotel.co.nz
The 5 Star boutique Bolton Hotel is located a short walk from attractions/activities with 140 rooms including a mixture of studios and suites. The hotel provides an award-winning restaurant, modern recreation facilities and concierge desk that specialises in tours and executive transfers.
The Bay Window200 Tinakori Road, Thorndon (04) 499 0345 / thebaywindow.co.nz
Elegance, comfort and service combine to make your stay in this stylish B & B a memorable and relaxing experience. Decorated in the French style with a modern twist, The Bay Window is a short walk to the best Wellington has to offer.
TOP TEN
SLEEPS
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Madame Fancy Pants217 Cuba Street, Wellington (04) 385 0830 / madamefancypants.com
There’s a wonderland which exists at the top of a long street. It’s a store which to visit is always a treat. From silken dresses to pretty rings, leather bags to writing pads, Madame Fancy Pants stocks all wonderful things.
MANDATORY NZ MENSWEAR 108 Cuba Mall, Wellington (04) 384 6107 / mandatory.co.nz
Mandatory designs and produces fashion and tailored wear for men. 15 years strong, we make jeans through to suits in limited edition and offer a custom-fit service. Boutique New Zealand menswear – high quality, great fabrics, great fit. New garments every week.
Minnie Cooper29 Hunter Street, CBD (04) 473 7946 / minniecooper.co.nz
Minnie dreams them up, Murray makes the patterns, Jim cuts them, Connie and Nirmala sew them, Peter and John last them, Mana cleans, inks and boxes them. When you buy Minnie Cooper shoes you’re keeping good jobs and skills here in New Zealand.
Kirkcaldie & Stains165-177 Lambton Quay, CBD (04) 472 5899 / kirkcaldies.co.nz
A visit to Kirkcaldies is a shopping experience. Be welcomed by our friendly Commissionaire at the door and enter a retail mecca where local and international brands grace the shelves and our knowledgeable staff offer unsurpassed customer service.
Vintage Antiques & Interiors318 Tinakori Road, Thorndon (04) 473 3250 / vintageantiques.co.nz
French country in style, with a dash of English manor house, Vintage Antiques offers antique furniture, decorative objects, vintage French brocante and giftware. Yearly buying trips to France ensures Vintage stocks a range of unique items and special one-off pieces.
I Love ParisOld Bank Arcade, Lambton Quay, CBD (04) 473 3123 / iloveparis.co.nz
I Love Paris shoe store, right in the heart of Wellington’s fashion hub, stocks an eclectic range of gorgeous shoes from Europe’s most exciting designers. Call in and let their lovely staff help you find something special!
Wellington Underground MarketUnder Frank Kitts Park, Jervois Quay, Waterfront / undergroundmarket.co.nz
Showcasing the best of Wellington’s emerging creative talent, including homeware, fashion, jewellery, delicious food and live music under cover on the waterfront. Open 10am – 4pm Saturdays.
Bears With AttitudeShop 4, 119 Featherston Street (04) 472 3277 / bearswithattitude.com
We’re New Zealand’s biggest little bear shop. We have a bear to suit every occasion, from a newborn to a gift for an arctophile. We specialise in New Zealand artist bears as well as a variety of other animals.
Te Papa Store55 Cable Street (04) 381 7013 / tepapastore.co.nz
Take away something creative with your own little piece of inspiration from Te Papa Store. You’ll find amazing one-off New Zealand art pieces, exquisite jewellery and beautiful books. Come and discover this creative and welcoming shopping destination.
Sommerfields296 Lambton Quay, CBD (04) 499 4847 / [email protected]
Every day, Sommerfields sings the praises of New Zealand’s most talented artists and artisans. Come and browse our wonderful selection of greenstone, ceramics, glassware, wooden crafts, fine art, clothing and more. Free gift wrapping with a special New Zealand touch.
TOP TEN
SHOPS
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shona moller gallery42 Cable Street (Opposite Te Papa) 027 294 2186 / shonamoller.com
Contemporary New Zealand paintings by Shona Moller in a large, welcoming and central gallery space. Shona is collected internationally and has had sell-out shows in central London and New Zealand.
kura gallery19 Allen Street (off Courtenay Place), Wellington(04) 802 4934 / kuragallery.co.nz
Enter a world of contemporary Ma_ori art and New Zealand design.
Dealers in Ma_ori arts, carving, greenstone, weaving. Also featuring
New Zealand designer furniture, painting, sculpture and jewellery. International packing and shipping. Open seven days.
GALL
ERIES
festival peoplePATRONThe Governor-General, His Excellency Lieutenant General The Right Honourable Sir Jerry Mateparae, GNZM, QSO
BOARD OF TRUSTEESKerry Prendergast CNZM (Executive Chair)John AllenMargie BeattieSarah EliottSue ElliottJohn McCayBronwyn Monopoli MBEPatsy ReddyMark VerbiestCelia Wade-Brown
FESTIVAL STAFFArtistic Director Lissa TwomeyExecutive Director Sue Paterson ONZMExecutive Coordinator Wah YuAdministration Assistant Nancy Sandilands
Producing TeamSenior Producer Anna CameronProgramme Coordinator Esther LastArtist Liaison Coordinator Gina MossArtist Liaison Assistant Merrilee McCoyEducation and Community Coordinator Stephannie TimsEducation and Community Assistant Emma CarterMaori Cultural Advisers Tihi Ltd.Writers and Readers Programme Manager Anne ChamberlainWriters and Readers Coordinator Kathryn Carmody
Technical TeamTechnical Manager Nick KyleTechnical Coordinator Emma WeldonProduction Manager Jo KilgourProduction Manager Natasha JamesHead of Lighting Jason MorphettHead of Sound Emily HakaraiaTechnical Operations Manager Danny Hones
Marketing and Development TeamMarketing and Development Manager Megan WilliamsMarketing Coordinator Natalie FountainMarketing Assistant Heather O’CarrollSponsorship Liaison Sara BarnesPublications Editor Hamish ArmstrongMedia Communications Adviser Rebecca LancashireMedia Communications Coordinator Julia HughesTicketing Coordinator Lewis RichardsonTicketing Assistant Jessica FooteGraphic Design Intern Philip Tan
Finance TeamFinance and Business Manager Denise BrennockAssistant Accountant Luzy Toomer
FESTIVAL FOUNDATION TRUSTEESSir John AndersonSir David GascoigneJohn McCay
PROGRAMME BROCHUREFestival Brand Development, Communications and Publication DesignThe ChurchPrint ManagementLandau Group Limited
WRITERS AND READERS WEEK ADVISORY GROUPChris BourkeTobias BuckKate De GoldiPaul DiamondIngrid HorrocksNoel MurphyDeborah OlsonJane Stafford
Official BooksellerUnity Books
New Zealand International Arts Festival
Level 2, Anvil House, 138–140 Wakefield Street, Wellington 6011 PO Box 10–113, Wellington 6143t +64 4 473 0149 f +64 4 471 1164 e [email protected] w festival.co.nz
mahara Gallery20 Mahara Place, Waikanae Village (04) 902 6242 / maharagallery.org.nz
Mahara Gallery is the Kapiti Coast district’s public gallery offering a range of exhibitions in contemporary art and cultural heritage. Mahara’s exhibition of Robyn Kahukiwa’s works – Robyn Kahukiwa Maumahara: Remember – is featured on page 60.
Image credit: as page 60
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historylive at... Museum
of WellingtonCity & Sea
ColonialCottage
Museum
Open every day 10am to 5pmQueens Wharf
Open every day 12 to 4pm68 Nairn St (top of Willis St)
www.museumswellington.org.nz
Wellington Museums Trust institutions
Ad Festival 23sep11.indd 1 23/09/11 7:40 PM
Main Store • 165 - 177 Lambton Quay
Cuisine (Food & Kitchenware), Untouched World & Luggage Harbour City Centre, 179 Lambton Quay, Wellington.
A Wellington tradition since 1863
When in Wellington it is essential to visit New Zealand’s premier department store for understated elegance and
outstanding service. You will find three floors of fine shopping in the main store and more departments across
the road in the Harbour City Centre.
Telephone (04) 472 5899 for store hours or go to www.kirkcaldies.co.nz
CREATING STAGE AND SCREEN
PROFESSIONALSwww.toiwhakaari.ac.nz
www.nzschoolofdance.ac.nzDirector: Garry Trinder
WORLD
CLASS DANCE
TRAINING
TE WHAEA: NATIONAL DANCE & DRAMA CENTRE, NEWTOWN, WELLINGTON TE WHAEA: NATIONAL DANCE & DRAMA CENTRE, NEWTOWN, WELLINGTON
Embroidered silk wedding dress by Christian Lacroix, Paris, Autumn/Winter 1992-93 Haute Couture. Given by Christian Lacroix. Photograph by Guy Marineau © 1992
17 December 2011– 22 April 2012 AT TE PAPAAdmission charges apply www.tepapa.govt.nz/unveiled
Exhibition partnerExhibition organised by the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Core Funders
The Festival site was lovingly crafted with electricity and Springload know-how.
Smart and simple, we reckon she scrubs up pretty well too.
Love the web, love the Festival. Love, Springload.co.nz
There is always one moment in childhood when the door opens and lets the future in. graham greene
“
”
THEATRE I EVENTS I CREATIVE TECHNOLOGY
www.capitale.org.nz
Fulbright New Zealand is proud to support the participation of Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist and author Thomas Friedman at the 2012 New Zealand International Arts Festival’s Writers and Readers Week, as a John F. Kennedy Memorial Fellow.
Fulbright New Zealand was established in 1948 to promote mutual understanding between the peoples of New Zealand and the United States of America by means of educational and cultural exchange.
Visit the Fulbright New Zealand website for details of the Fulbright programme’s range of exchange awards for New Zealand graduate students, academics, artists and professionals to study, research, teach, or present their work in the US.
www.fulbright.org.nz
Growing our brand so we can help you grow yours.
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Proud sponsors of the New Zealand International Arts Festival
Creative New Zealand is proud to support the development of New Zealand’s outstanding artistic talent at the 2012 New Zealand International Arts Festival
Supporting our artsARTS COUNCIL OF NEW ZEALAND TOI AOTEAROA
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Creative New Zealand is the national arts development agency, developing, investing in and advocating for the arts | www.creativenz.govt.nz | [email protected]
TV3_AucklandArtsFestival_2012.indd 2 26/09/2011 12:53:11 p.m.
TV3_AucklandArtsFestival_2012.indd 2 26/09/2011 12:53:11 p.m.