Otago Daily Times

Time to ‘freshen’ up heritage celebratio­ns

- DANIEL BIRCHFIELD daniel.birchfield@odt.co.nz

OAMARU’S Victorian heritage celebratio­ns need a freshen up if they are to continue, the new organising committee chairwoman overseeing them says.

Last week, Diane Lee was installed as chairwoman of the 10member committee charged with the organisati­on of this year’s November celebratio­ns.

The full committee is made up of Mrs Lee, her daughter Anisha Lee, Natalie Wilson, Faye Ormandy, Ole Wallis, Jen Howden, Elizabeth Perkinson, James Glucksman, Graeme Simpson and Trevor Holdstock.

The committee was formally elected at a special meeting on June 5 after the former committee folded in April, after no nomination­s were received to fill spaces made vacant through rotation and retirement at the Oamaru Victorian Heritage Celebratio­ns Incorporat­ed Society’s annual meeting.

At the time, the future of the celebratio­ns looked to be under threat.

Mrs Lee, who served on the former committee in 2015 and 2016, was delighted to be voted in and felt she had a lot of offer.

‘‘Lots of new people have joined the committee and there was lots of support shown. A decision had been made to form a new committee and as there are only two longterm committee members still there, a little bit of experience was still needed.

‘‘I want to see the melding together of the new people . . . and the people who have supported this event over two decades.’’

She said Oamaru was ‘‘seen as a Victorian town’’, but the number of groups and individual­s that offered unique Victoriane­ra attraction­s had ‘‘dwindled’’ in recent years.

Mrs Lee, who grew up in Kurow and moved to Oamaru at the age of 19, said the celebratio­ns were held to ‘‘educate and showcase’’ Oamaru’s Victorian history and had been run to a tried and true formula that used a different theme each year.

This year’s theme would be upstairsdo­wnstairs, with a focus on the suffragett­e movement, given 2018 marks the 125th anniversar­y of women winning the right to vote in New Zealand.

‘‘This is real history. We have had Alice in Wonderland and medicine in the past, they are kind of concepts, but this focuses on what everyone thinks of as Victorian.’’

Planning was well under way for some events, but some would be shelved in favour of some ‘‘fresh ideas’’, which included events designed for younger people.

‘‘We do want to freshen it up a little bit, but not change it so much the people that come to it to enjoy it feel like it’s a foreign land. It’s about encouragin­g the new, but respecting the previous celebratio­ns. This thing has got to have a future.’’

Mrs Lee has had a fascinatio­n with Victorian times for years and often helped behind the scenes at previous celebratio­ns.

She said each time the celebratio­ns came around she loved incorporat­ing a Victorian character into her everyday life in way that was more fun than serious.

 ??  ?? Diane Lee
Diane Lee

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