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Taki Rua

Taki Rua is a theatre organisation based in Wellington, Aotearoa / New Zealand that has produced many contemporary Māori theatre productions. Taki Rua has been going since 1983 and has had several name changes over that time including The New Depot, Depot Theatre and Taki Rua / The Depot. The full current name is Taki Rua Productions. Since inception the mission of Taki Rua has been to showcase work from Aotearoa. Because of this and the longevity of Taki Rua many significant New Zealand actors, directors, writers, designers and producers have part of the history including Riwia Brown ONZM, Nathaniel Lees, Rachel House ONZM and Taika Waititi.

Taki Rua Productions
Formation1983; 40 years ago (1983)
HeadquartersTe Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington
FieldsContemporary Māori theatre
Kahukura Chief Executive
Tānemahuta Gray, Ngāi Tahu, Rangitāne, Waikato
Websitehttps://www.takirua.co.nz/about

Background Edit

 
The Depot, Wellington March 1993

Taki Rua started in Wellington in 1983 when a group took over The Depot, a second performance space that Downstage Theatre had set up a year previously, they changed the name to the New Depot. This collective group was Colin McColl, Jean Betts, Philippa Campbell, Fiona Johnstone, Alyson Baker, Richard Mudford, Phillip Mann and John Banas.[1]: 245  Colin McColl when interviewed in 2013 says about the start, "We wanted primarily something for New Zealand writers and also Maori and Pacific Island writers. That was the initial vision."[2] In that year about 15 shows were presented including a late-night satirical cabaret by Rangimoana Taylor and Asking For It written and directed by New Zealand feminist playwright Renee.[1]: 246 

The New Depot was run as a cooperative with the people involved in each show taking the box office risk. At the end of 1985 the New Depot moved to an upstairs premises in Alpha Street at the back of Courtenay Place.[1]: 285 

In 1992 the Depot Theatre became Taki Rua The Depot[3]: 80  and then in 1994 to just Taki Rua. Former director of Taki Rua and playwright Hone Kouka says of the name, "Taki Rua is a weaving pattern and means to go in twos - signifying the bi-cultural aspect of the theatre."[4]: 17 

Taki Rua as a venue closed in 1997 and changed to operating purely as a production company, focusing on touring and presenting works in other venues.[5] The name changed to Taki Rua Productions,[3]: 85  and is still running under this name although mostly referred to as Taki Rua.

The loss of a venue as a home base for collectives to come together was mourned by the theatre community, with a reflection written in the 2013 publication Playmarket 40.[3] In 2016 Taki Rua joined with Māori theatre company Tawata Productions and Pacific theatre company The Conch, to set up a new home base but not a performance venue in Wellington called Te Haukāinga.[6] In 2020 Te Haukāinga was shared by Taki Rua, The Māori Sidesteps, The Performance Arcade and Te Hau Tūtū.[7]

In 2021 the staff of Taki Rua include the Kahukura / Chief Executive, Tānemahuta Gray, Kaiwhakahaere Matua / General Manager, Nathan McKendry and Pou Tikanga Mātauranga Māori, Pekaira Jude Rei. Their Ngā Kaiurungi / Board Members are Toni Huata, Tama Kirikiri, Simon Garrett, Trish Stevenson, Adrian Wagner, Tolis Papazoglou, Jamie Ferguson, Pearl Sidwell, Roimata Kirikiri and Patrick Hape.[8]

Kaumātua Edit

Experienced practitioners 'elders' were named as kaumātua of Taki Rua. They gave guidance and support and were both Māori and Pākehā. Over the years this group of respected people included Tungia Baker, John Tahuparae, Wi Kuki Kaa, Bob Wiki, Rona Bailey, Keri Kaa and Sunny Amey.[9]

Significant Moments Edit

The Māori theatre group Te Ohu Whakaari involving writers Rowley Habib (Rore Hapipi), Hone Tuwhare, Riwia Brown and Apirana Taylor were part of the early Taki Rua days.[10]

Le Matau (The Fish Hook) was presented at the New Depot in 1984, the first Samoan language play to be performed in New Zealand, by the group Taotahi Ma Uo. Written by Stephen Sinclair and Samson Samasoni.[11][12]: 308 

The play Kohanga by Apirana Taylor was produced in 1986 about current issue of the establishment of Kohanga Reo in New Zealand reflecting the political stories in many Māori plays of the time.[4]: 15 

Theatrical New Zealand band The Front Lawn performed in October 1987[13] two years after they formed. They had a distinctive New Zealand voice which coincidentally influenced playwright Hone Kouka in the mid-1980s,[12]: 240  who was also later to be the director of Taki Rua.

Early Maōri theatre companies Te Ika a Maui and Te Ohu Whakaari under the directorship of Jim Moriarty present a programme of Māori theatre at the Depot for Wellington's International Arts Festival in 1990 including Māori plays by Bruce Stewart and John Broughton.[14][3]: 78  This initiated the concept of Theatre Marae[4]: 16  and is part of the beginning of the longest running Māori theatre company Te Rākau Hua o te Wao Tapu led by Jim Moriarty.

The seed of Taki Rua as a Māori production company happens in 1994 with the establishment of a theatre company called Te Ropu Whakaari with the mission to showcase new Māori work.[3]: 82 

On 25 May 1994, Taki Rua Theatre held the first performance of Hone Kouka's play Nga Tangata Toa. The cast included Jim Moriarty as Taneatua, Shimpal Lelisi as Te Riri, Nancy Brunning as Rongomai, and Apirana Taylor as Paikea.[15]

1995 was the year of the first annual Te Reo Māori Season, theatre in Te Reo Māori.[5] Touring to rural iwi-based communities and marae with the Te Reo Māori performances is a significant achievement,[16] and these tours are still going.

Think of a Garden written by John Kneubuhl and directed by Nathaniel Lees presented at Taki Rua on Alpha Street won three awards at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards in 1995, including an acting award for Sima Urale.[17]

In 2000 Rachel House won an award for her outstanding performance in Taki Rua's play Women Far Walking by Witi Ihimaera.[17]

The comedy The Untold Tales of Māui by the Humour Beasts, Taika Waititi and Jermaine Clement was produced by Taki Rua and toured New Zealand over 2003 and 2004. A 2004 review states, "simple yet sophisticated, flippant yet strangely relevant and affirming."[18]

The first play performed in te reo Māori for adult rather than child audiences to tour Aotearoa, He Kura E Huna Ana, premiered at the Forge at the Court Theatre in 1995 in a development season.[19]

In 2015 Taki Rua produced Briar Grace-Smiths' play Ngā Pou Wahine twenty years after the first presentation at Taki Rua in 1995. The new version was the directing debut for Miriama McDowell and the solo debut of Kura Forrester. In 1995 it was directed by Nancy Brunning and performed by Rachel House.[20][21]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Smythe, John (2004). Downstage upfront : the first 40 years of New Zealand's longest-running professional theatre. Wellington, N.Z.: Victoria University Press. ISBN 0-86473-489-1. OCLC 60386677.
  2. ^ Dekker, Diana (2013-03-18). "Taki Rua: Brave new frontiers". Stuff. Retrieved 2020-02-27.
  3. ^ a b c d e Atkinson, Laurie; O'Donnell, David, eds. (2013). Playmarket 40 : 40 years of playwriting in New Zealand. [Wellington] New Zealand: Playmarket. ISBN 978-0-908607-45-7. OCLC 864712401.
  4. ^ a b c Kouka, Hone (1999). Te Matou Mangai, Our Own Voice. Victoria University Press. ISBN 978-0-86473-348-1.
  5. ^ a b Grace-Smith, Briar; Derby, Mark (22 Oct 2014). "Māori theatre - te whare tapere hōu". Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  6. ^ "Te Hau Kainga: bringing theatremakers together". RNZ. 2016-06-12. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  7. ^ "Te Haukāinga". Taki Rua. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  8. ^ "About". Taki Rua. from the original on 2021-06-07. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  9. ^ Derby, Mark; Grace-Smith, Briar (22 Oct 2014). "Consolidating Māori theatre, 1990s onwards". Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 2020-04-30.
  10. ^ Huria, John (2013). "Mā te Rēhia e Kawe, Māori Theatre in the 1990s". Playmarket 40 : 40 years of playwriting in New Zealand. Atkinson, Laurie, O'Donnell, David, ed. [Wellington] New Zealand: Playmarket. ISBN 978-0-908607-45-7. OCLC 864712401.
  11. ^ "Depot Theatre :Le Matau. Taotahi Ma Uo, at the New Depot. 8 pm, Feb 3-4, 7-10, 15-18 [1984]". National Library of New Zealand (in Samoan). 1984-01-01. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  12. ^ a b Maufort, Marc; O'Donnell, David (2007). Performing Aotearoa: New Zealand Theatre and Drama in an Age of Transition. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-90-5201-359-6.
  13. ^ "Depot Theatre (Wellington) :[Posters for productions. 1987]". National Library of New Zealand. 1987-01-01. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  14. ^ Chambers, Colin (2006-05-14). Continuum Companion to Twentieth Century Theatre. A&C Black. p. 477. ISBN 978-1-84714-001-2.
  15. ^ Hone Kouka (1994). Nga Tangata Toa: The Warrior People. Wellington: Te Herenga Waka University Press. ISBN 0-86473-278-3. OL 1235357M. Wikidata Q106815726.
  16. ^ Maunder, Paul (2013). Rebellious mirrors : community-based theatre in Aotearoa / New Zealand. Canterbury University Press. ISBN 9781927145456. OCLC 861221640.
  17. ^ a b "Theatre Aotearoa". tadb.otago.ac.nz. Retrieved 2020-02-27.
  18. ^ Smythe, John (2014-03-12). "Untold Tales flattened by drizzle". The National Business Review. New Zealand.
  19. ^ "170 Years of New Zealand Theatre". The Court Theatre. 2018-09-25. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  20. ^ Delilkan, Sharu (2015-06-27). "REVIEW: Nga Pou Wahine (Taki Rua Productions)". Theatre Scenes The Auckland Theatre Blog. Retrieved 2020-02-27.
  21. ^ Smythe, John (2015-06-25). "NGĀ POU WAHINE - Full of life and very welcome". Theatreview. Retrieved 2020-02-27.

External links Edit

taki, theatre, organisation, based, wellington, aotearoa, zealand, that, produced, many, contemporary, māori, theatre, productions, been, going, since, 1983, several, name, changes, over, that, time, including, depot, depot, theatre, depot, full, current, name. Taki Rua is a theatre organisation based in Wellington Aotearoa New Zealand that has produced many contemporary Maori theatre productions Taki Rua has been going since 1983 and has had several name changes over that time including The New Depot Depot Theatre and Taki Rua The Depot The full current name is Taki Rua Productions Since inception the mission of Taki Rua has been to showcase work from Aotearoa Because of this and the longevity of Taki Rua many significant New Zealand actors directors writers designers and producers have part of the history including Riwia Brown ONZM Nathaniel Lees Rachel House ONZM and Taika Waititi Taki Rua ProductionsFormation1983 40 years ago 1983 HeadquartersTe Whanganui a Tara WellingtonFieldsContemporary Maori theatreKahukura Chief ExecutiveTanemahuta Gray Ngai Tahu Rangitane WaikatoWebsitehttps www takirua co nz about Contents 1 Background 2 Kaumatua 3 Significant Moments 4 References 5 External linksBackground Edit nbsp The Depot Wellington March 1993Taki Rua started in Wellington in 1983 when a group took over The Depot a second performance space that Downstage Theatre had set up a year previously they changed the name to the New Depot This collective group was Colin McColl Jean Betts Philippa Campbell Fiona Johnstone Alyson Baker Richard Mudford Phillip Mann and John Banas 1 245 Colin McColl when interviewed in 2013 says about the start We wanted primarily something for New Zealand writers and also Maori and Pacific Island writers That was the initial vision 2 In that year about 15 shows were presented including a late night satirical cabaret by Rangimoana Taylor and Asking For It written and directed by New Zealand feminist playwright Renee 1 246 The New Depot was run as a cooperative with the people involved in each show taking the box office risk At the end of 1985 the New Depot moved to an upstairs premises in Alpha Street at the back of Courtenay Place 1 285 In 1992 the Depot Theatre became Taki Rua The Depot 3 80 and then in 1994 to just Taki Rua Former director of Taki Rua and playwright Hone Kouka says of the name Taki Rua is a weaving pattern and means to go in twos signifying the bi cultural aspect of the theatre 4 17 Taki Rua as a venue closed in 1997 and changed to operating purely as a production company focusing on touring and presenting works in other venues 5 The name changed to Taki Rua Productions 3 85 and is still running under this name although mostly referred to as Taki Rua The loss of a venue as a home base for collectives to come together was mourned by the theatre community with a reflection written in the 2013 publication Playmarket 40 3 In 2016 Taki Rua joined with Maori theatre company Tawata Productions and Pacific theatre company The Conch to set up a new home base but not a performance venue in Wellington called Te Haukainga 6 In 2020 Te Haukainga was shared by Taki Rua The Maori Sidesteps The Performance Arcade and Te Hau Tutu 7 In 2021 the staff of Taki Rua include the Kahukura Chief Executive Tanemahuta Gray Kaiwhakahaere Matua General Manager Nathan McKendry and Pou Tikanga Matauranga Maori Pekaira Jude Rei Their Nga Kaiurungi Board Members are Toni Huata Tama Kirikiri Simon Garrett Trish Stevenson Adrian Wagner Tolis Papazoglou Jamie Ferguson Pearl Sidwell Roimata Kirikiri and Patrick Hape 8 Kaumatua EditExperienced practitioners elders were named as kaumatua of Taki Rua They gave guidance and support and were both Maori and Pakeha Over the years this group of respected people included Tungia Baker John Tahuparae Wi Kuki Kaa Bob Wiki Rona Bailey Keri Kaa and Sunny Amey 9 Significant Moments EditThe Maori theatre group Te Ohu Whakaari involving writers Rowley Habib Rore Hapipi Hone Tuwhare Riwia Brown and Apirana Taylor were part of the early Taki Rua days 10 Le Matau The Fish Hook was presented at the New Depot in 1984 the first Samoan language play to be performed in New Zealand by the group Taotahi Ma Uo Written by Stephen Sinclair and Samson Samasoni 11 12 308 The play Kohanga by Apirana Taylor was produced in 1986 about current issue of the establishment of Kohanga Reo in New Zealand reflecting the political stories in many Maori plays of the time 4 15 Theatrical New Zealand band The Front Lawn performed in October 1987 13 two years after they formed They had a distinctive New Zealand voice which coincidentally influenced playwright Hone Kouka in the mid 1980s 12 240 who was also later to be the director of Taki Rua Early Maōri theatre companies Te Ika a Maui and Te Ohu Whakaari under the directorship of Jim Moriarty present a programme of Maori theatre at the Depot for Wellington s International Arts Festival in 1990 including Maori plays by Bruce Stewart and John Broughton 14 3 78 This initiated the concept of Theatre Marae 4 16 and is part of the beginning of the longest running Maori theatre company Te Rakau Hua o te Wao Tapu led by Jim Moriarty The seed of Taki Rua as a Maori production company happens in 1994 with the establishment of a theatre company called Te Ropu Whakaari with the mission to showcase new Maori work 3 82 On 25 May 1994 Taki Rua Theatre held the first performance of Hone Kouka s play Nga Tangata Toa The cast included Jim Moriarty as Taneatua Shimpal Lelisi as Te Riri Nancy Brunning as Rongomai and Apirana Taylor as Paikea 15 1995 was the year of the first annual Te Reo Maori Season theatre in Te Reo Maori 5 Touring to rural iwi based communities and marae with the Te Reo Maori performances is a significant achievement 16 and these tours are still going Think of a Garden written by John Kneubuhl and directed by Nathaniel Lees presented at Taki Rua on Alpha Street won three awards at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards in 1995 including an acting award for Sima Urale 17 In 2000 Rachel House won an award for her outstanding performance in Taki Rua s play Women Far Walking by Witi Ihimaera 17 The comedy The Untold Tales of Maui by the Humour Beasts Taika Waititi and Jermaine Clement was produced by Taki Rua and toured New Zealand over 2003 and 2004 A 2004 review states simple yet sophisticated flippant yet strangely relevant and affirming 18 The first play performed in te reo Maori for adult rather than child audiences to tour Aotearoa He Kura E Huna Ana premiered at the Forge at the Court Theatre in 1995 in a development season 19 In 2015 Taki Rua produced Briar Grace Smiths play Nga Pou Wahine twenty years after the first presentation at Taki Rua in 1995 The new version was the directing debut for Miriama McDowell and the solo debut of Kura Forrester In 1995 it was directed by Nancy Brunning and performed by Rachel House 20 21 References Edit a b c Smythe John 2004 Downstage upfront the first 40 years of New Zealand s longest running professional theatre Wellington N Z Victoria University Press ISBN 0 86473 489 1 OCLC 60386677 Dekker Diana 2013 03 18 Taki Rua Brave new frontiers Stuff Retrieved 2020 02 27 a b c d e Atkinson Laurie O Donnell David eds 2013 Playmarket 40 40 years of playwriting in New Zealand Wellington New Zealand Playmarket ISBN 978 0 908607 45 7 OCLC 864712401 a b c Kouka Hone 1999 Te Matou Mangai Our Own Voice Victoria University Press ISBN 978 0 86473 348 1 a b Grace Smith Briar Derby Mark 22 Oct 2014 Maori theatre te whare tapere hōu Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 2020 02 25 Te Hau Kainga bringing theatremakers together RNZ 2016 06 12 Retrieved 2020 02 26 Te Haukainga Taki Rua Retrieved 2020 02 26 About Taki Rua Archived from the original on 2021 06 07 Retrieved 2021 06 07 Derby Mark Grace Smith Briar 22 Oct 2014 Consolidating Maori theatre 1990s onwards Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 2020 04 30 Huria John 2013 Ma te Rehia e Kawe Maori Theatre in the 1990s Playmarket 40 40 years of playwriting in New Zealand Atkinson Laurie O Donnell David ed Wellington New Zealand Playmarket ISBN 978 0 908607 45 7 OCLC 864712401 Depot Theatre Le Matau Taotahi Ma Uo at the New Depot 8 pm Feb 3 4 7 10 15 18 1984 National Library of New Zealand in Samoan 1984 01 01 Retrieved 2020 02 25 a b Maufort Marc O Donnell David 2007 Performing Aotearoa New Zealand Theatre and Drama in an Age of Transition Peter Lang ISBN 978 90 5201 359 6 Depot Theatre Wellington Posters for productions 1987 National Library of New Zealand 1987 01 01 Retrieved 2020 02 25 Chambers Colin 2006 05 14 Continuum Companion to Twentieth Century Theatre A amp C Black p 477 ISBN 978 1 84714 001 2 Hone Kouka 1994 Nga Tangata Toa The Warrior People Wellington Te Herenga Waka University Press ISBN 0 86473 278 3 OL 1235357M Wikidata Q106815726 Maunder Paul 2013 Rebellious mirrors community based theatre in Aotearoa New Zealand Canterbury University Press ISBN 9781927145456 OCLC 861221640 a b Theatre Aotearoa tadb otago ac nz Retrieved 2020 02 27 Smythe John 2014 03 12 Untold Tales flattened by drizzle The National Business Review New Zealand 170 Years of New Zealand Theatre The Court Theatre 2018 09 25 Retrieved 2020 02 25 Delilkan Sharu 2015 06 27 REVIEW Nga Pou Wahine Taki Rua Productions Theatre Scenes The Auckland Theatre Blog Retrieved 2020 02 27 Smythe John 2015 06 25 NGA POU WAHINE Full of life and very welcome Theatreview Retrieved 2020 02 27 External links Edithttps www takirua co nz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taki Rua amp oldid 1158954801, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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