NZ Fringe Festival Selects Te Auaha, The Creative Headquarters Of Whitireia & WelTec As Festival Hub
Malea Nicolson is beyond
delighted she and her cast have the opportunity to again
perform her graduation piece, this time as part of the NZ Fringe
Festival. “It was such a surprise to be selected
to perform in the Fringe,” said the nearly 22-year-old.
“It’s a great chance to change it up a bit, and really,
performing it only twice for our graduation didn’t feel
like enough!” A musical theatre major, Malea
Nicolson is one of three 2019 graduates from the Bachelor of
Applied Arts programme at Whitireia selected to take part in
Lift Off, a
series of performances which showcases the best of new
graduate talent entering New Zealand’s creative
scene. Malea’s own piece is a musical theatre show
that uses popular songs, sometimes with altered lyrics, to
explore the coming-out story of a teenage girl – a story
based on Malea’s own. Her 15-minute piece will be
performed alongside two other short pieces by dancer Beth
Sammons, and performing arts graduate, Sina Esera, at Te
Auaha March 3 – 7. But the graduates’ three-part
show is far from the only association of the Fringe and Te
Auaha this festival. While the Fringe has previously
used Te Auaha as a performance venue and pop-up ticketing
site, this year it will also be the Festival’s main hub. A
venue for the Fringe Awards, various workshops, forums and
networking events, as well as the FAFF club, featuring a
variety of late-night entertainments. Te Auaha’s
venue manager Will Harris said he is “very pleased to see
the venue operating as a home and hub for the 2020 Fringe
artists”. “Our two theatres, Tapere Nui and Tapere
Iti, are state-of-the-art venues that have hosted many top
national and international acts. “More than that,
Whitireia is a world-class tertiary education institution
delivering leading programmes in creativity and innovation.
Te Auaha has created a vibrant creative hub in the heart of
Wellington, which makes it perfect to host the
Fringe.” The Fringe’s Festival Director Sasha
Tilly said they will utilise as much of the five-level
building as possible. “In 2018 we had seven events
across the two theatre spaces, expanding to 11 events in
three spaces in 2019, and now we have a whopping 27 events
across four spaces at Te Auaha. “A huge part of the Fringe’s kaupapa is
supporting and celebrating our emerging artists, and what
better way to do that than placing ourselves right alongside
them on their journey?” Having access to
purpose-built theatre spaces is a major attraction, as is Te
Auaha’s location in the heart of Wellington’s artistic
district. However, Sasha says she also loves the
collaboration from having students and professionals
mingle. “Te Auaha brings this great mash-up of
students, tutors, and industry professionals,” said Sasha.
“Students and tutors get access to a wide range of local,
national and international creative work of all flavours.
For them it provides the opportunity to connect with artists
and see there is something to aim for – that there’s a
community there and a valid pathway to a career in the
arts. “It’s so exciting when they collide, in the
bar or backstage, or just generally around the building. It
creates a buzz of creative energy that spills out to
audiences too. It's pretty cool.” Malea, who three
years ago moved from Sydney’s Northern Beaches – where
sport is prioritized over the arts – to Wellington
particularly to do the Applied Arts degree at Whitireia
based at Te Auaha – says she’s very much looking forward
to being part of that creative energy and sharing the spaces
she knows so well. “Te Auaha has two insanely
awesome theatres with amazing lighting rigs and open,
versatile spaces with great acoustics. There’s always so
much happening on each level of the building – dancing,
recording music, radio casting, production admin, computer
studies… It’s crazy that all these different artforms
can come together in one building, along with all the lovely
social spaces to hang around in. It’s going to be a lot of
fun.” And the Fringe’s Festival Director Sasha
Tilly is very much looking forward to seeing what Te Auaha
and its students will offer during this
festival. “I'm always impressed with the high
caliber of work I see coming out of the school. You can
really see the passion and care coming from the tutors and
feeding into what the students do. And not only the
performance courses – I’ve been loving the things I've
seen from the jewellers and the special effects makeup
too. “We're really lucky to have a place to foster
our emerging talents here in Wellington, and part of
Fringe's job is to help them stay here and continue to
grow,” said Sasha. The NZ Fringe Festival runs from
28 February – 21
March. The
New Zealand Fringe Festival has chosen Te Auaha, a
multi-level “cluster of creativity” and the HQ for
creative programmes at Whitireia and WelTec – as its hub
for the 2020 festival. Works by three Applied Arts graduates
from Whitireia will also be showcased at the
Hub.
“The team at Te Auaha
have been so open and generous with our vision of a Fringe
hub. The more that happens at Te Auaha each year, the more
others want to be involved the following year. It's really
cool to be around that growth and to help facilitate it,”
she said.