Herald on Sunday

Superstar’s ‘amazing gesture’

Tim Minchin’s donation helps write a new story for youth charity

- Dionne Christian

Adonation from Australian superstar Tim Minchin will allow a charity working with at-risk youth to expand its arts-based programmes into South Auckland schools.

Started nine years ago, Nga¯ Rangatahi Toa uses social justice and arts-based-programmes to connect with young people excluded from school and encourage them to stay in school or vocational training.

Minchin, the award-winning musician, comedian, actor and composer who wrote Matilda the Musical, chose NRT as the charity that will receive money from sales of tickets to his Auckland show in April, Tim Minchin Old Songs, New Songs, F*** You Songs.

NRT executive director Huia O’Sullivan said Minchin’s promoters provided an estimate of the amount which she won’t reveal other than to say it’s “not to be sneezed at”. “It will go back into the projects we run and, next year, we plan to roll out a partnershi­p project with schools in South Auckland. It’s an amazing gesture from Tim Minchin and we’re just really blessed that he, as an artist, can understand and see the importance of having access to the arts for young people who may not otherwise be able to get involved.”

Minchin told the West Australian newspaper that giving money away is part of being lucky.

“It’s saying to the wealthier of my ticket-buyers . . . you get the best seats in the house and all the money goes to charity, so you get a good feeling as well. It is important that people like me do our little bit to promote the idea that lucky people should have social responsibi­lity.”

Minchin will also perform in Wellington in April. Arohanui StringsSis­tema, which provides free music classes to vulnerable children across the city’s northern suburbs, will receive money, as will Australian charities in the cities Minchin performs in through March.

O’Sullivan believed he picked NRT after speaking with Auckland Live, custodians of the Herald Theatre where NRT performs its annual Manawa Ora showcase. This sees youth paired with top New Zealand musicians, actors, writers and artists to create public performanc­es of music, movement and monologue.

Because the Aotea Centre is closed for renovation­s, Manawa Ora 2018 is part of the Basement Theatre’s spring programme. Now in its sixth consecutiv­e year, mentors Laughton Kora, Cat Ruka, Suli Moa and Tama Jaram have worked with 15 teenagers on Invisible Threads, the theme for this year’s showcase.

It explores how young people navigate relationsh­ips and create connection by reflecting on the invisible threads that tie them to self, wha¯nau and community.

“These connection­s, through reflection­s that form the invisible threads, are the transferab­le skills our rangatahi [young people] are able to replicate into their own lives, strengthen­ing their protective factors and enhancing their resilience as they find their place in their wha¯nau, community and world,” O’Sullivan said. “Our role is to create the space for them to have their collective voices heard, shared and echoed.”

 ?? Photos / Nick Reed ?? Nga¯ Rangatahi Toa performers rehearse Manawa Ora. Inset: Tim Minchin.
Photos / Nick Reed Nga¯ Rangatahi Toa performers rehearse Manawa Ora. Inset: Tim Minchin.
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