Kia Mau Festival: 01 – 15 June 2019
Kia Mau Festival: 01 – 15 June 2019
Proudly
Celebrating Our 5th Year Of Relentless Creativity, Theatre
And Dance.
Ka mihi ki ngā uri o te rohe nei, rātou e noho ana ki runga i te whenua o Te Ūpoko o Te Ika a Māui!
E ngā mana, e ngā reo, e ngā karangarangatanga maha o ngā hau e whā! Tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou katoa.
01-15 June 2019 sees two weeks full of theatre and dance performed in Wellington by Māori, Pasifika, and Indigenous artists and companies from across Te Moana-nui-a-Kiwa and around the globe.
Te Ūpoko o Te Ika a Māui - the head of the fish of Māui - Wellington is known for the strength of Tāwhirimātea, the God of the Winds, and it is the home and heart of Kia Mau Festival.
“Kia Mau Festival is a celebratory call to action, uplifting the voices and visibility of Māori, Pasifika and global Indigenous artists. With a Tangata Whenua worldview placed at its very centre, Kia Mau Festival is a gesture of creative sovereignty. Festival artists strive to lead us forward and carry audiences to experience new ways of being.”
Hone Kouka
MNZM,
Artistic Director, Kia Mau Festival
Created and helmed by senior artist Hone
Kouka, Kia Mau Festival places
artists at the centre of the festival’s vision. The
festival is an innovative experience for whānau and
communities of the Wellington region and beyond, to engage
with tangata whenua and international Indigenous artists
from across Papatūānuku.
Established in 2015, five years on we are
celebrating our biggest festival yet with 17 Māori,
Pasifika and Indigenous companiespresenting theatre and
dance across Te Whanganui-a-Tara region.
It’s our privilege to announce the first release of the Kia Mau Festival 2019 programme. The five companies included here are manuhiri to Wellington, with Sydney based Moogahlin Performing Arts and Montreal based Lara Kramer Danse amongst the festival’s international guests.
Shel We?
- Those Guys
Tāmaki Makaurau
01 - 02
June
HANNAH PLAYHOUSE, 12 CAMBRIDGE TCE, WELLINGTON
An enchanting, playfully intriguing and visually
stunning dance show inspired by the works of renowned
American writer Sheldon ‘Shel’
Silverstein – famous for children’s story
The Giving Tree and penning the ballad A
Boy Named Sue for Johnny Cash.
Shel’s off beat style and brilliant use of
metaphorical imagery in his poetry and sketches is cleverly
captured and celebrated in Tupua
Tigafua’s fresh choreography.
I
Ain’t Mad At Cha - Waitī
Productions
Rotorua
01 - 02
June
TE AUAHA, 65 DIXON STREET, WELLINGTON
Waitī
Productions presents multi-award winning rap musical
I Ain’t Mad At Cha by Turene Jones,
produced by Cian Elyse White. So, it’s 1999 and Kiwa is
struggling with the whole “being Māori” thing. Kiwa’s
done with being judged – worst of all by his own people.
How come black American fullas who live 20,000km away make
him feel more at home than his own people do?
I
Ain’t Mad At Cha is about a young Māori boy’s
affinity with rhymes.
Pōhutu - Bianca
Hyslop in collaboration with Rowan Pierce
Tāmaki
Makaurau
06 - 08 June
HANNAH PLAYHOUSE, 12
CAMBRIDGE TCE, WELLINGTON
Bianca’s grandmother
Rāmari Rangiwhiua Morrison was born in Te
Whakarewarewatanga-o-te-ope-tauā-ā-Wāhiao, Rotorua. Now
at the age of 88, she has Alzheimers. Pōhutu
draws parallels between her shapeshifting mind
and the restless landscape ofWhakarewarewa;
the whenua she was born from and will return to. The work
manifests connection to memory, time, place and
loss.Pōhutu is a world premiere not
to be missed.
The Weekend - Moogahlin
Performing Arts
Sydney,
Australia
11-15 JUNE
BATS THEATRE, 1 KENT
TERRACE, WELLINGTON
Lara has only the weekend to track
down her partner as she traverses the world of public
housing, drug dealing, and addiction. The
Weekend is an emotional ride of laughter and hope,
love and loss, and a young family’s search for a new
beginning.
Presented by Moogahlin Performing
Arts, this show by first-time Sydney playwright
Henrietta Baird follows one woman embodying
ten characters across 90 minutes, hurtling the audience
through the streets and public housing towers of
Redfern-Waterloo.
The Weekend made its
world premiere at Sydney Festival 2019.
Kia Mau Festival 2019 marks the New Zealand
premiere of this acclaimed solo show.
Windigo -
Lara Kramer Danse
Montreal, Canada
11 - 15
June
BATS THEATRE, 1 KENT TCE, WELLINGTON
Fierce and
visceral dance work, Windigo resonates like
a scream, the vibrant echo of a long history of human
ransacking and destruction, a violation of a land and its
culture. A northern epic with the air of a post- apocalyptic
ballad, Windigo exorcises the demons and
undercurrents of the violence perpetrated against Indigenous
peoples.
For more information and tickets go to
https://kiamaufestival.org/
Artists, whānau, friends, communities, and audiences are invited to join us as we mark the 5th year of Kia Mau Festival in Wellington.
“vital and exciting… perhaps the country’s best annual celebration of theatre” – Pantograph Punch
https://kiamaufestival.org/
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