The New Zealand Herald

Star man: Tim Finn tells Tahitian navigator Tupaia’s story in opera

- Joseph Los’e

Singer, songwriter, musician, freedom fighter, opera composer, Split Enz-er. Tim Finn has pretty much done it all.

But his latest foray into opera just might be his biggest challenge — and his most rewarding to date.

To close off a successful postCovid 2022 season, New Zealand Opera will hold its final performanc­e of the year, Ihitai’Avei’a — Star Navigator, at Te Rauparaha Arena in Porirua on December 9.

Composed by Finn, and with Tahitian monologues by Ce´lestine Hitiura Vaite, Ihitai’Avei’a — Star Navigator has had the help of more than 200 people to bring the 75-minute production to the stage.

The opera boasts a cast of singers well-known to New Zealand opera lovers, including Emmanuel FonotiFuim­aono, recipient of the Dame Kiri Te Kanawa Foundation Scholarshi­p at the 2022 Lexus Song Quest, who will sing as Tupaia; Paul Whelan as James Cook; Marlena Devoe, who brings Purea to life; and Norah Stevenson-Tuuga, who will perform Ce´lestine’s Tahitian monologues.

The production tells the story of Tupaia, a Tahitian star navigator, and his time aboard James Cook’s HMS Endeavour. He sailed from Tahiti with Cook on the Endeavour’s maiden voyage in 1769, but the two navigators were unable to find their way into each other’s worlds.

After joining Cook’s expedition, Tupaia piloted the Endeavour through the Society Islands and handled many of the negotiatio­ns with Māori during their six-month circumnavi­gation of Aotearoa New Zealand. His presence in these early encounters made this visit different from any other by a European ship during the contact period.

Finn said he first first thought about writing the musical story of Tupaia 16 years ago when he took his son to see the Endeavour replica in Sydney Harbour.

“I went into the great cabin, which was Captain Cook’s space — who was [then] still a lieutenant. But there were others around with big minds and big personalit­ies, like Joseph Banks, Charles Green, and Daniel Solander and Tupaia.

“It struck me as a being a theatrical space of highly-combustibl­e ideas, with all that knowledge in one small space. Cook and Tupaia going headto-head. The scientist, and the man who was a navigator, priest and artist. Something about the claustroph­obic confines of the master cabin — the obvious tensions and misunderst­andings that must have occurred. It seemed dramatic and spoke to our current dilemma . . . Where are we going? How will we get there?”

The opera is a collaborat­ion between Finn and Ce´lestine Hitiura Vaite, who share the same passion for telling stories set in the vast Pacific.

Growing up in Te Awamutu, close to the coast, Finn has always had an affinity for the ocean and astronomy, and he marvels at how the story has evolved and attracted new audiences to opera.

“During the writing of Ihitai ‘Avei’a — Star Navigator, I visited the sacred island of Raiatea twice with my family. I stood on Taputapuat­ea marae and watched as the twin-hulled voyaging canoe Hokule’a was called in through the reef. Tahitian writer Ce´lestine Hitiura Vaite became my collaborat­or on the libretto, and Tom Mcleod my collaborat­or on the score.”

Vaite — a Tahitian novelist published in 17 countries, with a personal connection to the story itself — had been passionate­ly researchin­g ancient Tahiti for two years.

“I think it’s wonderful of Tim that we were invited to the project, and I feel honoured, because there are a lot of stories about Tahitians, but it is rare that we are invited to participat­e. Often the people who write our stories don’t truly understand Tahitians.

“In this opera, Purea is not my direct tū puna ancestor, but descends from the same Ari’i royal genealogy. As for Ari’i Tupaia, he would have met my direct ancestor Ari’i Manea, both being high priests in 1769, when Cook arrived in Tahiti on the Endeavour.”

Finn said because Cook was a very staunch character and perhaps narrow-minded, he never took the opportunit­y to open up to Tupaia and learn from him.

“But he was so closed off, because he was a humbly-born Yorkshirem­an and wasn’t Captain Cook but Lieutenant Cook, and he was holding on tightly to the controls.

“He would have known Tupaia had a certain nobility and mana about him.”

To find out more, visit: https:/ /nzopera.com/ihitai-aveiastar-navigator-2022/

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 ?? Photo / Grant Trilow ?? The opera by Tim Finn (above) tells the story of Tupaia and his time on the Endeavour.
Photo / Grant Trilow The opera by Tim Finn (above) tells the story of Tupaia and his time on the Endeavour.

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