Riddled With Vivid Snapshots of The Human Condition: “Waiting for Godot” in New Zealand
Vladimir and Estragon, who nickname each other Didi and Gogo, languish nowhere in particular and...
Read MorePosted by John Smythe | 22nd May 2019 | Ireland, New Zealand, Review
Vladimir and Estragon, who nickname each other Didi and Gogo, languish nowhere in particular and...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 9th May 2019 | New Zealand, News
As New Zealand has lost two of its longest-running professional theatres in the last seven years,...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 30th Apr 2019 | New Zealand, Review
I am not Margaret Mahy by Jane Waddell, based on Notes of a Bag Lady by Margaret Mahy, BATS...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 29th Apr 2019 | New Zealand, Review, Theatre and Gender
Despite being dead for 400 years and having lived and worked on the far side of Planet Earth,...
Read MorePosted by Andreea S. Calude, Laura Haughey, and Kellye Bensley | 15th Jul 2018 | Essay, New Zealand, Theatre and Disability
Would you go and see a bilingual or multilingual show if you only spoke one of the languages...
Read MorePosted by Hilary Halba | 21st Jun 2018 | Acting, Essay, New Zealand, United States of America
After a thirteen-hour flight from Auckland, New Zealand, I am in Jim Morrison country–or so I...
Read MorePosted by John Smythe | 8th Jun 2018 | New Zealand, Review, United States of America
In Welcome to the Murder House, Alfred’s story is told, in the popular vaudeville style of the day, by a group of prison inmates. For them, Southwick is a hero, given their shared belief that execution by electrocution will be more humane than hanging. And, as with the development of all high quality theatre, it takes a lot of trial and error to get it right.
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 20th May 2018 | New Zealand, Puppetry, Review, Theatre and Age, Transcultural Collaborations
Samoan playwright David Fa’auliuli Mamea’s Still Life With Chickens won the 2017 Adam Award for...
Read MorePosted by Hilary Halba | 19th May 2018 | Management, New Zealand, News
The mid-morning phone call I receive from a colleague brings bad news. The Fortune Theatre–the...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 29th Apr 2018 | Festivals, New Zealand, Review, Transcultural Collaborations
The Naked Samoans Do Magic Commissioned by the Auckland Arts Festival and co-produced with The...
Read MorePosted by Hilary Halba | 14th Apr 2018 | Festivals, Immersive Theatre, New Zealand, Review, Transmedia
An audience assembles on the grassy margins of Prospect Park in Ōtepoti/Dunedin, New Zealand, on a...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 5th Apr 2018 | New Zealand, Review, Theatre and Politics
Bless the Child by Hone Kouka. Co-produced by the New Zealand Festival, Auckland Arts Festival and...
Read MorePosted by Hilary Halba | 15th Mar 2018 | New Zealand, Review, Theatre and Politics
The newest theatre company to emerge from Dunedin, New Zealand’s funky, eclectic arts scene is...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 2nd Mar 2018 | Festivals, New Zealand, Review
Wellington, a portside city famed for its turbulent seas and hurricane-force winds, turned on a...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 29th Dec 2017 | LGBTQ+ Theatre, New Zealand, Review, Theatre and Gender
Since Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first to climb Mount Everest in May 1953,...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 23rd Dec 2017 | Directing, New Zealand, Review, Theatre and Gender
Merriam-Webster has recently named “feminism” as the 2017 “word of the year” and feminist issues...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 7th Dec 2017 | New Zealand, Review, Theatre and Politics, United States of America
For the past two years, Samoan playwright Victor Rodger has been tireless in bringing plays by...
Read MorePosted by John Smythe | 12th Nov 2017 | New Zealand, Review, Theatre and Gender
POTENTLY RELEVANT Warning: I’m about to give the (well-known) ending away because the play can’t...
Read MorePosted by John Smythe | 1st Aug 2017 | New Zealand
It captures a time when Māori were increasingly dispossessed of their lands and Chinese immigrants were subjected to appalling discrimination – not least (and I didn’t know this before) by the government.
Read MorePosted by Yana Meerzon | 22nd Jul 2017 | Festivals, New Zealand, Theatre and Gender
Standing in Time. texts by Rasha Abbas. Direction, scenography by Lemi Ponifasio; sound design...
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