The New Zealand Herald

Wellington set to sail into festival

Waka Odyssey starts three weeks of performanc­es

- Dionne Christian

Waka hourua crews from around New Zealand and the Pacific will sail to Wellington for the opening of the capital’s 31st New Zealand Festival, an event expected to attract thousands of spectators.

As the twin-hulled ocean-going waka arrive, they’ll be welcomed with a 1000-strong new haka written especially for Wellington with a full musical score by award-winning composer Warren Maxwell.

A Waka Odyssey: Kupe launches three weeks of arts and cultural performanc­es which also include a contempora­ry version of the ballet

Swan Lake, Nigerian playwright Inua Ellams’ five-star musical Barbershop

Chronicles, Vietnamese circus A O Lang Pho and the NZ Symphony Orchestra performing the music of

Star Wars: A New Hope for a live screening of the original film.

Outgoing festival director Shelagh Magadza says A Waka Odyssey celebrates NZ’s voyaging history while signalling other festival themes such as epic journeys, a sense of discovery, home and belonging.

Magadza says as this is her last NZ Festival, she wants to look toward the future and get a glimpse as to where the country might be heading.

“A Waka Odyssey recognises the fact that we all came from somewhere else but the stories around those initial voyages are so immense and exciting, and reveal a certain kind of knowledge in this country, that they should be part of the conversati­on about where we derive our national identity from.”

She says artists work in a global context and are, more than ever, responding to the politics of the world they see around them. At the same time, audiences look to arts festivals for events that unite them.

“There are similariti­es between music and performing arts festivals in that people are looking for something that brings them together, gives then an authentic connection on a human level and being a live experience offers something that can’t be replicated.”

The NZ Festival again partners with Auckland Arts Festival to bring production­s to both cities. These are:

A O Lang Pho, which tells the story of village and city life in Vietnam;

Us/Them, described as a powerful piece of physical and narrative theatre about the 2004 siege of a Beslan school by Chechen separatist­s;

Bless the Child, by local playwright Hone Kouka and Tawata Production­s;

Orpheus, a new dance opera choreograp­hed by Michael Parmenter and starring the NZ Dance Company, American tenor Aaron Sheehan, baroque ensemble Latitude 37 and special guests;

Cecile McLorin Salvant performs jazz standards and songs from her latest album, Dreams and Daggers;

The Royal New Zealand Ballet production of The Piano: The Ballet.

One of the five biggest festivals in Australasi­a, the NZ Festival has sold more than two million tickets to an audience of more than five million since it began 1986. Magadza says her three terms directing are the normal tenure before making way for someone new to “shake things up”.

 ??  ?? Waka from around New Zealand and the Pacific will open the NZ Festival in Wellington in February.
Waka from around New Zealand and the Pacific will open the NZ Festival in Wellington in February.

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