Whanganui Chronicle

Try acting, theatre company urges

- Mike Tweed

A new theatre company is taking shape in Whanganui, and the man behind it is hoping the local community will get involved.

Rohan Mouldey said Theatre and Suns would have a kooky, offbeat and free-form approach towards performanc­e and theatre, and people of all abilities and experience could get involved.

“If you’ve always thought in the back of your mind that you’d like to step on stage and give it a go, now is the chance,” Mouldey said. “I promise you won’t regret it.”

Mouldey, with decades of experience on stage and screen, will facilitate workshops, put on plays and create a local hub of artistic collaborat­ion.

“In terms of workshops, Initially I will do a more generalise­d, freeform theatre approach. What is free-form practice? It’s going with, saying yes, responding, and listening.

“It’s very involving, and some people might say ‘I don’t get it’, but when it’s done well you can really be taken by it.”

Mouldey, who returned to Whanganui from Auckland four years ago, said his passion for performing began on his sixth birthday, and it hadn’t dimmed.

“My mum took me to see a play at the Four Seasons Theatre called The Nobodies from Nowhere, which was just a couple of pantomimes.

“I thought it was real, and afterwards I leapt on the stage and climbed up a ladder into a hole in the ceiling to retrieve a ball they had been too ‘scared’ to get themselves.

“I didn’t know they had been pretending, so I just thought ‘I’d better help these fellas out’. That moment told me that I was bound for the stage.”

Mouldey hasn’t really left the stage since, performing through his school years at the Four Seasons, Amdram, Repertory, and Opera House, before leaving teachers’ college to try to act full-time.

Shortland Street, fringe festivals and performing Shakespear­e in Singapore followed, with Mouldey also writing plays such as Blunt and Man Bits, which both earned rave reviews from critics.

While his career had a lot of highs, he said there had been lows, including a battle with addiction.

After treatment at Odyssey House in Auckland, he stayed on as a Youth Practition­er, supporting young people in their recoveries.

“The only thing that saved me was my passion for theatre. A lot of addicts are actually artists, they just don’t know it yet.”

Mouldey said while he had enjoyed his time in social work, theatre was his main passion.

He currently has three full plays read to perform, along with 25 others in first draft.

“Theatre and Suns will be a supportive environmen­t of kindred spirits . . . this whole thing is just beginning, so I’m putting the call out for everyone and anyone to get involved.”

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