The New Zealand Herald

Pacific dance festival comes of age

Bold works seeking to inspire youth and queer community

- Naughton, Dione Joseph Goodbye Bionica Bionica Bionica Moana — Cloaks of Protection — Pacific Dance On Screen —

Ayoung Unitec graduate headlines a packed Pacific Dance Festival programme with new work a full-length solo feature dedicated to Pacific youth.

Aloali’i Tapu describes it as a coming-of-age story.

“Naughton is my first name but I’ve never used it. My parents came in the 80s at the time of the dawn raids and gave their kids white names to keep them safe — but I’ve always been Aloali’i.”

Keeping your name is an act of defiance toward the colonial system, and equally, a source of pride. For Tapu, who’s been working with youth for almost a decade, it’s an example to other Pacific youngsters to find strength in their culture.

“I’m actively addressing the issues of colonialis­m in my work,” he says, “I’m literally saying ‘goodbye’ to a history and legacy that has tried to define — and I hope others draw inspiratio­n from this too.”

Naughton grew up influenced by his local hip-hop crew and has trained formally at Unitec, merging different styles of dance and exposing himself to different opportunit­ies including regularly working in Berlin.

“I’ve been travelling to Germany every year for the past two years. It’s given me a chance to develop my work but also expand my creative thinking . . . but this is home,” he says.

“Like most Pacific people, I was born dancing. I dance to my past and my present and I want our youth to know that we’re all on the same page, our stories are valued and they are told — this is contempora­ry Pacific dance and there are no borders.”

Under the stewardshi­p of festival director Sefa Enari, the programme continues to grow and develop in different directions. With theatrical dance works, film screenings, a costume exhibition and workshops, the festival places Pacific culture and all its offerings in a bold, brave and contempora­ry space and promises alternativ­e stories which could soon become the norm.

Jacob Tamata is also passionate about invigorati­ng Pacific youth and his show is a bold look at future possibilit­ies for queer youth.

“I want us to start making progress for our community by telling stories that [enable] us to live well and prosper,” says Tamata.

“We want our youth to have the confidence to know that we can embrace different ways to explore who we are — and what we want to say.”

Directed by Tamata and presented by the Coven Collective, is also a call to move beyond social expectatio­ns. While acknowledg­ing the importance and legitimacy of coming-out narratives, Tamata looks forward to having more work in the public sphere that has normalised queer identity and is genuinely inclusive of the community.

is deliberate­ly futurefocu­sed, set somewhere far more inclusive than the current world.

“We are a growing community of millennial­s who are queer, brown and indigenous — and we need to respond to the needs of our people to tell all

our stories,” Tamata says. “Ultimately, to make genuine progress, we need to ensure that we tackle the stigma that has kept us in our loop — our utopia does exist and it’s a space where we have rights to be without question — and that’s why we have forwarded our story into the future.”

Tamata also explains that his progress, so far, has been because of the support of several artists who have supported him in making this new work, including visual artist Tanu Gago. Gago is well-known as one of the founders of FAFSWAG, an arts collective dedicated to positive portrayals of queer brown identities.

Tapu and Tamata’s works are just two of the works in this year’s Pacific Dance Festival. Others to look out for include:

a collection of short dance works by Hadleigh Pouesi, Tepaeru Ariki Lulu French, Ufitia Sagapolute­le, Lyncia Muller, Rikki Tofi, and the New Zealand School of Dance third year students.

internatio­nal Pacific dance: Fijian-based Rotuman internatio­nal dance troupe Rako Pasefika introduce a large multidisci­plinary performanc­e installati­on to open at the end of 2018 called MamaHanua.

short films and footage: Pacific Dance New Zealand and Pollywood Pasifika Film present a public screening of short films and archival footage at Auckland Art Gallery, June 10.

 ??  ?? Aloali’i Tapu says Goodbye Naughton is his way of saying goodbye to a colonial history that once tried to define him.
Aloali’i Tapu says Goodbye Naughton is his way of saying goodbye to a colonial history that once tried to define him.

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