Weekend Herald

Pressing play on her dream

For Samoan multimedia artist Lusi Faiva, actions speak louder than words. She talks to Joanna Wane about her new show, Aiga.

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Lusi Faiva’s hands, permanentl­y clenched into fists from living with severe cerebral palsy, are her only way of communicat­ing with people who aren’t used to being around her. Jabbing at a screen with one knuckle, she painstakin­gly types out sentences that are then synthesise­d into audio via a text-to-speech program on her tablet.

Spend more time with her, though, and Faiva’s body language and limited speech become easier to interpret. She can talk with a flick of the eyebrows, and it doesn’t take a mind-reader to know exactly what she’s thinking when I ask if it’s frustratin­g to be constantly underestim­ated by those who can’t see past her physical disability. “I do swear in my head every day!” she says, her eyes sparkling with laughter as she presses the “play” function on her device. “I’m just proud that I’m doing this because it is my dream.”

Faiva’s internal world reaches far beyond the confines of her motorised wheelchair. A multimedia performanc­e artist, she’s spent the past three years developing Aiga, a devised ensemble work for the disability-led arts company Touch Compass that opens at the Auckland Arts Festival next month. Combining dance, poetry and theatre, Aiga tells stories that draw from the abuse and neglect Faiva suffered as a child in an institutio­n for people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es, her fierce determinat­ion to build an independen­t life, and the joy of reconnecti­ng with her Samoan identity.

A fellow performer has described the show as Faiva’s diary, opened to the world. In Warrior Poem, Faiva talks about her dark sexual desires. So don’t come expecting a pity fest, says producer Jordan Walker. “This isn’t sad disability porn, it’s a strong, passionate, intentiona­l work that challenges the narrative of how people with disabiliti­es are viewed.”

This isn’t the first time Faiva has made herself heard. Since the late 90s, she’s performed in numerous theatre shows, touring New Zealand and Australia with Touch Company and featuring in the web documentar­y series Being Me on Attitude Live. In 2022, she appeared before the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care, presenting a searing witness statement that called out the state system as dehumanisi­ng for disabled people — a systemic failure she claims persists today.

Faiva’s parents, who migrated to New Zealand from Samoa, were persuaded it would be in their daughter’s best interests for her to be institutio­nalised after she was diagnosed with cerebral palsy at the age of 2 (the result of her brain being deprived of oxygen at birth). She credits a couple who worked at Levin’s Kimberley Centre with recognisin­g her potential, teaching her how to read, write and express herself.

In her late 20s, she joined Touch Compass and discovered a freedom of movement through dance she had never experience­d before, winning a Creative New Zealand Pacific Toa arts award in 2020. “Aiga” means family in Samoan, and Faiva says the show is about making sense of her Pasifika heritage and being able to tell her story in a realistic way. “It’s mentally draining and physically exhausting, but it helps me feel determined to keep going. The most important thing is it is me being me, living my life as an artist.” From its inception, Aiga was designed with accessibil­ity in mind, from seating arrangemen­ts that accommodat­e wheelchair­s more generously to working with sign language interprete­rs and audio descriptio­ns for audience members with low vision. Three weeks were spent on the show’s technical residency last month. Usually that would only take a couple of days. For the cast and crew, it’s meant learning how to work in “crip time and crip space” — concepts Walker would encourage the non-disabled community to take on board. “It’s about slowing down to find a rhythm that suits everyone and still delivers on time; it’s almost like you have permission to be quiet.”

Walker, who is takatapui, says the performers on stage with Faiva have diverse background­s, from culture to gender identity, and their own experience­s have added extra layers to the work.

“A huge part of Aiga is this beautiful intersecti­onality and a shared understand­ing to uplift Lusi in her story.”

Aiga, directed by Moana Ete, is on at Te Pou Theatre from March 20 to 24 as part of the Auckland Arts Festival programme.

 ?? PHOTO / JINKI CAMBRONERO ?? Lusi Faiva explores personal identity, desire and family in Aiga.
PHOTO / JINKI CAMBRONERO Lusi Faiva explores personal identity, desire and family in Aiga.

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