Calling All Schools...to the Auckland Arts Festival
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MEDIA RELEASE
11 February, 2013
Calling All Schools...to the Auckland Arts Festival 2013
School teachers
across New Zealand are encouraged to BOOK NOW for the
Auckland Arts Festival 2013 SMARTSfest programme
—where education meets the arts.
Bookings are open
until 28 February for the Festival’s SMARTSfest, a
programme designed to provide young people with the chance
to experience internationally-acclaimed arts and culture at
significantly reduced ticket prices. This year, SMARTSfest
includes two specially-programmed performance works which
reflect the world and lives of children:
• The Man Who Planted Trees (ages 7+)
is a funny and captivating show, about the difference one
person’s actions can make to the world. An environmental
story set in the south of France, featuring sweet-smelling
lavender, a dog and a man who plants trees, bringing life
back to his region.
•
•
• The Ballad
of Pondlife McGurk (ages 9-98) is an engaging
storytelling experience about friendship, betrayal and how
relationships change over time. This show received numerous
five-star reviews at the 2012 Edinburgh Festival Fringe but
it was seeing the reaction on children’s and adults’
faces that made Auckland Arts Festival Artistic Director,
Carla van Zon, programme this work. She says, “Its
relevance to us all is astounding. And I too remembered
moments in my childhood.”
•
•
In addition
to these dedicated shows, schools can still book for a
selection of matinees within the Festival’s main
programme:
• I, George Nepia is the
heart-warming story of the New Zealand rugby legend as he
travels from small town Nuhaka to stardom in the United
Kingdom, by leading Māori playwright Hone Kouka.
•
• Leo – an international,
one-man show that challenges the senses and tests
perceptions of reality, Leo fuses energetic live
performance with innovative video
projection.
•
• One Man, Two
Guvnors – the National Theatre of Great
Britain’s hilarious and multi-award-winning West End and
Broadway sensation.
•
•
Schools can also book
for the following public shows at heavily discounted prices:
• Urban – a high-voltage
circus-theatre production with gravity-defying stunts and
astonishing acrobatics, performed by an extraordinary group
of young Colombians.
•
• Rhinoceros in
Love – China’s most successful play of all time,
about the maladies of young, urbanised Chinese, lost and in
love. Performed in Mandarin rhyming slang with English
subtitles, this show is perfect for students learning
Mandarin.
•
• Babel (words) – a
beautiful dance-theatre masterpiece by two of Europe’s
hottest choreographers, about the universal language of
music and dance.
•
•
Carla van Zon, Artistic
Director at the Auckland Arts Festival says, "This is an
incredible opportunity for students to discover the power of
creativity and the thrill of the arts. We want to encourage
teachers to make their school bookings now, for these
universally-themed works that not only align with and
enhance the New Zealand education curriculum, but are also
great
fun."
ends