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Reviews - Tama Ma

"Tama Ma is a sensational new dance work which is inspiring, simple and honest as well as a bit raunchy and clever."
 John Daly-Peoples, National Business Review

"Tama Ma, the hit dance show by Taane Mete and Tairoa Royal, is a must see event!  It is rare to see such complicity and love expressed on stage; their partnership is extraordinary."
Lynne Pringle, theatreview.co.nz

"We do not often see choreography that is so deeply drawn from a core of Mâori culture and personal experience... This is profoundly important theatre" 
Jennifer Shennan, Dominion Post

"Tama Ma is a rich and powerful night of dance performed by two of this country’s most talented and respected dancers. If you see nothing else during this year’s Body Festival, see this."
Sheryl Robinson, Christchurch Press

 

TIME OFF (Brisbane, Australia)
Brisbane Powerhouse Theatre
By Matt O'Neill
6 April 2011

It's difficult to know what to expect wandering into Okareka Dance Company's Tama Ma. Billed as a five act autobiographical contemporary dance work with references to drag queens, Maori spirituality, and multimedia work, it's difficult to even imagine how the work will unfold.

It isn't until the brutally primal opening act a beautiful and horrifying short film of two primitive men (sole cast-members Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete) duelling each other in the wilderness segues seamlessly into a live drag queen performance from those same two men that you realise that your imagination never had so much as a chance of capturing the multi-faceted nature of the work.

The sheer scope of the production is almost incapacitating. Across the work's five acts, one will find fragments of humour, beauty, reminiscence, tragedy, and competition spread throughout images as lovingly familiar as a child warming oneself by an electric heater and as darkly ambiguous as criminals conferring in shadow.

Each component is a masterpiece of immersion, composer Eden Mullholland and lighting designer Jeremy Fern excelling at creating different experiences for each act.

In honesty, it's difficult to adequately capture the experience of observing the production in print. It simply feels too vast. There are so many interpretations one could discuss from representations of masculinity to meditations on culture while still missing the thrust of the work entirely. All one can definitively state is that it is a beautiful, masterfully crafted piece of work that is both challenging and exciting. If the chance to see it ever arises, take it with both hands.

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ARTSHUB (Perth, Australia)
By Gillian Clark
ArtsHub (www.artshub.com.au)
Friday 4 December 2010
Tama Ma and Twisting the Straight Line (double bill)

Tama Ma by Okareka Dance Company (NZ) in presentation by Strut Dance was a male duo dance piece in five acts performed by Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete. Two Maori men metamorphosising from babies to drag queens to tribute dancers with all the phases in between.

The muscularity of the dancers was not lost on the audience who commended their performance at each juncture which displayed modern dance and ballet. The beginning conveyed a primal mood via film which was graphic and beastial in its depiction and emphasised the vulnerability of birth with its connotations. Although what followed was electric and crowd pleasing and the act was the title piece for the show - on reflection it was somewhat gimmicky and only had humour to add. I felt its placement was odd in the work and could have been a great success in an entirely different show as they were exquisite in their presentation and surprise factor.

The highlight of the work was the final two acts which moved more into serious cultural territory with Hand to Hand where two suited combatives meet and with swift and lithe counterpoints they stalked and circled each other to arrive at well orchestrated conclusion.

Finally with a homage to their fathers, the physical terrain changed dramatically and the gentle mood was relayed in every synchronised gesture that they shared not only of a earthly nature as their Maori tradition proved present as they draw on the spiritual planes as well. The dance work was very unified and solid for the two performers commitment to the singularity of their purpose and here in lies its success largely – lots of emotional and spiritual investment that is important to share culturally and emotionally and is rare to see coming from indigenous men (and maybe I am alone in thinking the Tama Ma act was misplaced - it acts as a social shift reminder in the 21st century?). This work received an encore curtain call to pay testimony to its cultural importance and artistic merit.

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NELSON MAIL
8 June 2010
Tama Ma, Okareka Dance Company at The Theatre Royal last night.
Reviewed by Gail Tresidder

Taane Mete and Taiaroa Royal come to Nelson trailing rave reviews for their story/poem in dance, Tama Ma.

These two men are exceptional interpretive dancers. They take risks. They push themselves hard and make it seem effortless. They weave stories with their bodies and the heart and the soul shows through in every movement. They dance together with an intimacy that can at times be almost overpowering.

A strange black and white film, Pito, opened the evening. Two adult twins, held by a long umbilical cord, crept and crawled along the ground through leaves and undergrowth. They writhed and grimaced. There was a gory biting of the cord to separate them. Pito means blood and it dripped on to the earth. The whole was loaded with symbolism.

Then, in a change of mood, the film turned to colour – the red of the blood became dresses for drag queens in the film and then they appeared on stage, dressed up to the eyebrows. It was a fantastic lead-in and great stage business.

By the fourth act of this story, in a sequence that went from aggression to gentleness and with lovely lines woven in the air by their flowing hands, the two dancers held us enchanted. Everything was perfect, from the sound of cicadas and a dog barking, to the grey backdrop and drifting smoke with mysterious music beating out a rhythm to a powerful crescendo. Excellent choreography included Royal, with Mete over his shoulders, moving lightly, elegantly, touchingly.

Lighting designer Jeremy Fern rates a special mention. Throughout, his lighting effects were stunning.

There is another performance this evening. If you appreciate contemporary dance, a night at the Theatre Royal with two of New Zealand's dance royalty to entertain and delight could be a splendid thing.

Finally, much has been said in admiration of our reinvigorated Theatre Royal and yes, it is beautiful. I would like to give praise where praise is due to the wonderful women's loos; immaculate, tastefully decorated in tones of pale grey, lilac and pink – and with taps that are clever enough to know when you want to wash your hands.

My mother always said you could tell a lot about a place by the plumbing arrangements. She would have been impressed.

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Powerful dancing not to be missed
The Press, Christchurch
7 October 2009
Reviewed by Sheryl Robinson

Taane Mete and Taiaroa Royal have been performing together in other choreographers’ companies throughout their long careers in dance so it a is a long time coming and well worth the wait that they now present themselves in their own company.

Tama Ma is an autobiographical journey in five parts which included the choreography of the two performers supported by workds from Douglas Wright and Michael Parmenter. The five workds segue seamlessly together into one flued, powerful image-laden evening.

The film Pito opens the show with its atmospheric lighting and images that bring to mind creation myths and birth. Tane and Taiaroa are joined by a long dreadlock reminiscent of an umbilical cord. Thoroughout the film they work together to separate themselves, finally tearing the cord with their teeth. However, no matter how much they work to cut the cord their dancing throughout the show is so in sync they may as well be still joined.

Douglas Wright’s Tama Ma is a genius combination of lightning-fast contemporary dance and irreverent humour as the dancers strip away their drag characters to reveal a blank slate from which to build the rest of the show.

Rangatahi brings to mind that childhood blend of exhibitionism and shyness that exists around the body.

Hand to Hand, the fourth act of the evening choreographed by Michael Parmenter, plays to both the strengths of the two dancers and Parmenter’s exquisite ability to choreography sublime partnering sequences.

Finally Whanaungatanga, choreographed by Mete and Royal, completes the evening as they dance with angelic strength and grace.

Tama Ma is a rich and powerful night of dance performed by two of this country’s most talented and respected dancers. If you see nothing else during this year’s Body Festival, see this.

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Power, strength and much depth
Tama Ma on tour
Reviewed by Jennifer Shennan, 10 July 2009, The Dominion Post, Wellington NZ

Tama Ma is conceived, commissioned, choreographed and performed by Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete, two leading lights in New Zealand dance. We do not often see choreography that is so deeply drawn from a core of Mâori culture and personal experience, in which the performers are playing themselves in their own heritage.  

Te Papa seems a most appropriate setting for such a performance, and afterwards, instead of leaving through the front doors, I wanted to slip upstairs and spend the night in the shadows of the Mâori court. The imagery and content of the performance, by two males with such powerful, well-muscled, smooth-skinned, beautifully proportioned torsos and strong limbs, resonated with the strength of toi whakairo carving and sculpture, that hallmarks traditional Mâori art.

The opening film sequence had primaeval twin males emerging from dark earth, mud, water. The eels of fertility, the challenge of birth and the struggle for survival were all palpable. 

But there followed much contemporary resonance too - the transvestite "get up & go" of which these two are past masters, with antics that raise many a titter. At the same time the hard underlying edge of what motivates cross-gender hovers, and Douglas Wright's choreography brought out all the layered ambivalences at work here.

Another section, choreographed by Michael Parmenter, used intriguing images but primarily revealed the lyrical, strong beauty and total rapport of both performers as the forces of light and gravity found balance.

A libretto for the whole work could have appeared in print, in English and Mâori, and also been chanted, spoken, whispered at intervals, to give the work overall a stronger central thread, and to identify with the almighty power that te reo holds in the Mâori world.  But we had plenty of involvement piecing such things together for ourselves, and that makes for an inclusive experience.

This is profoundly important theatre, and these mature and powerful performers should not have to go into personal overdraft so we can see their work. We should be whakama over that, but hopeful that arts management can do something about it fast.

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Love is a duet

Tama Ma on tour
Reviewed by Lynne Pringle
9 July 2009
www.theatreview.co.nz Wellington NZ

Tama Ma, the hit dance show by Taane Mete and Tairoa Royal, is a must see event! 

It is rare to see such complicity and love expressed on stage; their partnership is extraordinary.

Before the show a good vibe segues into a beautiful mihi framing the event and guiding our senses and spirits to the stage. With a clap of thunder we are in a butohesque birth film; the movement language squat, grotesque, primordial as two brothers, connected by their hair, jerk and fling themselves to separation and humanness, spilling slimy eels from their plait of hair as they gnaw it apart. Darkened faces, staring eyes, earthy stirring images morph into two crimson drag queens.

This is a cheeky surprise, magnified as the two projected divas are joined by the real things - very much alive. Magnificent and meticulously groomed, the impact of both these artists in their drag personas is powerful.

I wanted more of them in their playful mode before Douglas Wright, the master of sardonic and sarcastic cruel, deconstructs them. The dark underbelly of dragdom contains marvellous elements. I enjoyed the pace and craft of the choreography, the jumps in absurd imagery - scared squawking late night street girls, silly shoe phone conversations, chomping teeth ripping eyelashes off and a peak moment where a snake puppet insouciantly sidles across the front of stage tattooed with "etcetera".

Is the choreographer bored with our presence or the antics on stage? Hard to say but it is a nice reality check. Still I would have liked a little more levity less cynicism, just a touch of saccharine; this world is a heightened show business after all and these boys delight in being girls. Being more individual in their genius gender cupping androgyny? Maybe.

There is a disjoint into the next act which, although tender, doesn't lift off despite the simplicity of the heater and gumboots image.  It is difficult to register the exact intention of the scene and the sexuality of it, but it leads to a beautiful diagonal solo from Taane Mete in fully-fledged soft lyrical mode - dancing a familiar vocabulary fabulously, breathing grace and purity.

What I particularly appreciate about Michael Parmenter's exquisite and baroque duet is the filmic quality of it. Costume, lighting, setting all contribute to transport us to another world; from the furtive meeting of lovers to settling into fully fledged man to man love - it evokes the sometimes difficult 'coming out' journey and then transcends into perfectly expressing the possibility and promise of love between two humans.

Love is a duel, round after round after round; layers peel away, gestures dance between caress and a strike, feet slap the earth. Eden Mulholland's music swirls ... We get dizzy, intoxicated by the myriad possibilities that the choreographer mines, heats in the furnace of investigation then sculpts into startling forms. At the heart of the whirling movement, a stillness and hush that great art creates: the eye of the Okareka hurricane.

In the final act two beautiful men/gods are lifted forward on Mahinarangi Tocker's sacred vocal chords to evoke the spiritual realm. Tairoa Royal transports me - he defines for me what it means to be a dancer by the honest, sensual and fine flurry of limbs connecting to his heart.

Together these two artists and their collaborators express something important about themselves and about this particular part of the earth that their feet dance upon. I feel grateful that they do it for me.

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Inspiring new dance work

Tama Ma on tour
By John Daly-Peoples, 25 June 2009, National Business Review, Auckland NZ

Tama Ma is a sensational new dance work which is inspiring, simple and honest as well as a bit raunchy and clever. It’s danced by Taane Mete and Taiaroa Royal who are two of the most experienced dancers in New Zealand having worked with all the major choreographers and dance companies.

Through Okareka Dance Company they have established a series of dancers which owe much to the influence of Neil Ieremia, Michael Parmenter and Douglas Wright.

The dances are both grand mythic accounts of life as well as being tales which have grown out of the dancers own experiences.

Tama Ma tells the story of two men travelling from boyhood to manhood paralleling the human journey from the primal to the and contemplative.

The first section is a filmed dance sequence in which the two dancers are both connected and estranged by an umbilical cord. It is a powerful work in which birth takes on mythic proportions.

This potent and feverish work gets turned on its head by the sudden morphing of the two into red clad, drag queens who move from the screen to the stage and we are given a burlesque routine.

The series of dances they move through range from the pensive and measured to the energetic and dramatic.

The “Hand to Hand” sequence is particularly vigorous resembling a wrestling match more than a dance. It is a work in which the two dancers place an emphasis on force and reaction. We become aware of the weight and shape of their bodies, the tensions in their muscles and limbs. It is a piece which is alluring in its simplicity, a combination of classical and contemporary dance and day top day bodily movement.

The final sequence, Whanaungatanga, is performed in an almost ritualistic manner, the two dancers garbed in white skirts like ancient priests. The dance performed in shadows is like a journey to the underworld.

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Powerful journey from boyhood to manhood
Tama Ma on tour
Sue Cheesman, 26 June 2009, www.theatreview.co.nz Auckland NZ

Okareka Dance Company presents Tama Ma in Auckland at the Maidment theatre giving the opportunity for those who did not see this extraordinary production last year another chance.

Tama Ma has five sections presented as an "autobiographical dance journey" performed by Taane Mete and Taiaroa Royal. Bodies honed and mapped by years of extensive dance training, their performance extols power, skill and artistry.

Choreographers Douglas Wright and Michael Parmenter along with film maker Mark Summerville have contributed to make this contemporary performance collaboration outstanding.

Tama Ma begins with a short film entitled Pito. Very elemental and stark, the opening shot is a striking image of both Taane and Tai perched on tree stumps connected by a length of long thick hair like an umbilical chord. The environment, weather and clouds set a very foreboding atmosphere. The chord is torn apart by their teeth as they scramble and crawl on all fours exploring the rugged primeval environment, capturing the struggle and varying polarities around an awakening or birth.

The sudden change from Pito to Metamororphosis catches me by surprise as the maroon short dresses zoom across screen to clothe Tai and Taane. This works very well to snap from first section to the next.  I really enjoy the four divas' interplay; two on screen and two on stage until the ones on screen are marched off up the back and faded out. Maybe two of these divas with the 'killer' red high heels are quite enough.

Choreographed by Douglas Wright, Metamororphosis is both comic and tragic at the same time and deconstructs the drag queen, stripping away the layers of femininity with much pathos.

Hand in hand, choreographed by Michael Parmenter, seems to really embrace kinship on many levels between these two extraordinary contemporary dancers. The fluid partner work is captivating to watch and not at all full of the Michael Parmenter standard lifts, falls and recovery signature of his partner dancing. The exciting "yet fraught territory between set composition and improvisation" makes this duet richer as the interplay of touch, connect, support, recover, and reconnect pans out over time. 

Viewing the last section, my thoughts drift back to the first time I saw this production in the Auckland Town Hall Concert Chamber [reviewed by Jack Gray] and I miss the depth of field that space provided. I lose the sense of mystery and elongation to the length of the walk both dancers perform towards the audience. Instead I am immediately aware of the black net backdrop slowly peeling off to reveal the two powerful figures dressed in white pants.

Whanaungatanga does not have the complexity of previous sections but certainly has a reverence and honouring of the past as it acknowledges the importance of whanau. Their looking upward with uplifted arms and torsos is a very powerful image, beautifully captured by light. Sitting close enables me to viscerally experience the spirituality of this moment. The beautiful voice of Mahinarangi Tocker permeates the theatre and is at one with the ending.

The story of these two men journeying from boyhood to manhood is in my opinion powerfully told through their dancing.
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Waikato Times Review
Academy Playhouse
Reviewed by Karen Barbour, 17 June 2009, Waikato Times Review, Hamilton NZ

Okareka Dance Company opened their national tour of Tama ma in Hamilton last night to an enthusiastic audience. The five-act performance is the story of two men travelling from boyhood to manhood and was danced by Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete.

There is rarely an opportunity to witness the artistry of two mature dancers as transparently honest and passionate as these men.
From the opening mihi to the closing act, Royal and Mete courageously revealed their personal journeys and their struggles with gender and masculinity.

The first act Pito is a film directed by Mark Summerville in which two men wake from a slumber joined by a long dreadlocked umbilical cord. It was a dark, uncertain world that confronted these newborns. They eventually chew themselves free, leading to a metamorphosis as the film ends and the dancers enter the stage.

Next is Douglas Wright’s duet, a series of complex identity transformations.

Act 3, Rangatahi, allows the dancers to reflect on their childhood memories.
Act 4, Hand to Hand, was choreographed byMichael Parmenter with music by Eden Mulholland. Face-to-face in dark suits, Royal and Mete gesture with dramatic intensity.

Surprising reversals in movement direction, swirling lifts and sudden changes in pace reveal the depth of trust and generosity between these dancers and the value they place on relationship.

The final act expresses the solace that might be found in dancing and a tribute those who have passed on.

Enhanced by the sumptuous costuming of Elizabeth Whiting, sublime lighting by Jeremy Fern and visually stunning set design by John Verryt, this was a night of dance to remember.

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Taking Quality Work To A New Brilliance

Tama Ma on tour
Choreographers: Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete; Douglas Wright; Michael Parmenter
Okareka Dance Company
Telecom Playhouse Theatre, WEL Energy Trust Academy of Performing Arts
Reviewed by Terri Crawford, 22 June 2009, www.theatreview.co.nz Hamilton NZ

Tama Ma is an extraordinary work produced by Okareka Dance Company and performed by two of our most renowned contemporary dancers Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete.  It is rewarding to see such high quality dancers venture out on their own, and invigorate audiences with their professional partnership in this work. 

Starting their 2009 tour of the 5 act work in Hamilton with a four night season of Tama Ma at the Wel Energy Trust Academy of Performing Arts seemed ambitious but in reflection, as the Telecom Playhouse Theatre is one of the best intimate theatre spaces in Aotearoa, it was a great place to settle and tease the company's performance work into a new season and ultimate perfection.

Tama Ma is unequalled as a quality two-piece theatrical dance work.  Taane Mete of local hapû Ngâti Koroki was pleased to be able to bring their work to this area, and it was a proud moment for Karaitiana Tamatea of Ngâti Koroki, and lecturer from within The School of Education at The University of Waikato, to welcome in the Tama Ma season with a mihimihi and karakia on opening night.

Act 1. PITO
Challenging, courageous, scary and extreme.  Royal and Mete reassess their past artistry in choreographing themselves as primeval savaging Medusas with film director Mark Summerville. When Tairaroa Royal bounds into the air, there is no sky, there is no earth, there are no winds, nor seas. Tai's unique inextinguishable energy, surpasses all earthly elements, ko te ira atua, ko te ira tangata. 

Pito is a return to bloodline, rangatiratanga, bones and earth.  Ko te Iho matua, inception, creation, nurturer. Pito is the salivation and manifestation Okareka's grounding as new directors and choreographers.  The 'pito' gore sets the field for performance engagement and shifts audience perceptions promptly, but wait, surprise! slip on that red dress and high heels! It's Moulin Rouge Fan Fare! Red Velvet drapes and Chaka Kan Linda Lepou whoop doops!  What a way to portray the search for the female essence of Taane (Taane Nui-a-Rangi). Hilarious! 

Act 2. TAMA MA
Drag queens deconstruct down dirty unhallowed streets: what a metamorphosis! A grand stripping of layers, in parts very difficult to face. What happened to our entertainment!? Cheek to cheek, breast to breast ... tragedy and death. Such revealing moments of rawness that only true experience and expert direction can pull off.  Taane is outstanding in this work, a technically divine centrifugal partnership with Tai, and extraordinary looking in black lingerie. 

What bodies, legs to die for, and rippling fleshy backs and buttocks ... Aaah sumptuous! But what of the drag, the distorted faces, the brutalisation, the sex trade? Trust in choreographer Douglas Wright to bring in sick and absurd street affairs, and theatrically expose the dark side of the happy smiling Drag Queen existence ... I can hear them say are we not people too? Are we not human? With sensitivities? And responsibilities? The strength of Taane's split second haka stance is gender juxtaposition. It is a rollercoaster experience, with immense highs, and devastating lows.

Kei hea to tâtou nei poutokomanawa?!

Act 3. RANGATAHI
Here we are led to explore childish innocence amidst Mâori family life. Cozied Conray heater thoughts fill the lazy daydreams and inspire a dance in Dad's gumboots.. We all have these memories of secretly wearing Mum's or Dad's or the big sister's shoes, and we mirror image our loved ones.  Ko koe nei au, ko au nei koe.  Is that your hand or my hand?  We are the same. We are one and I am home in my original skin.  Time passes, tick tock, and Eden Mulholland's audio-scapes are an integral part of the Tama Ma journey as and we are drawn into the internal rhythms of childhood memories and Tai's extraordinary sense of swift tiger-like pounce, pose and play.  This seems to be work in progress, but will develop as time with rehearsal director Daniel Cooper continues to bring zestful insights to the overall execution of Tama Ma.

Act 4. HAND TO HAND
You can feel the dewy chill of the night as Jeremy Ferns' lighting design uncovers itself and becomes a noticeable part of the designer collaboration.  Action based, Mafioso struggle, peaking and undulating, push and shove, thrust and parry, balance and counterbalance ... 

This is a dance of negotiation and sensibility where past insecurities meet tender maturity and trust and partnership are strengthened. Michael Parmenter's choreography is an epic partnering masterful tangle, so sophisticated and truly uplifting is this realm of seamlessly executed intrigue.

5. WHANAUNGATANGA
Beyond the veil, the bright light of Tane Te Waiora, the cradle and calling of Hine Nui te Po where we cross the threshold and arrive at a place of illumination.  A presentation of love and grief for those that have passed on, the dance and spirit of their existence still dances within and all around.  The boys celebrate their joy for dance and their duo 'bookend' style is reiterated in this simple legato finale. 

Although Tai and Taane as choreographers are not yet at the level of Wright and Parmenter, the need for balance and simplicity in this piece is a welcome release back into reality and whakanoa.

I am excited for Tama Ma as Okareka takes this work to a new brilliance this year.  Their standard of work is of such quality, that this tour is only the beginning of its international potential.

I wish Tama Ma all the best for their remainder 2009 tour to Matariki Festivals in Auckland and Wellington (and to Christchurch in October).  No reira e Tama ma, ko Okareka, ka tu kaha tonu ki te whai ao, ki te ao marama!

Tihei Mauri Ora!

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Tama Ma with the Okareka Dance Company at the Auckland Town Hall

Raewyn Whyte, 11 October 2008, New Zealand Herald, Auckland NZ

A sustained standing ovation greeted dancers Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete at the closing of Tama Ma on opening night.

The applause honoured the breadth and depth of their richly satisfying performance, their extraordinary artistry, and the excellence of all aspects of this highly collaborative project. And it honoured their courage, after 20 years of dancing for others, in establishing the Okareka Dance Company as a vehicle for further artistic collaborations of this far-reaching nature.

Tama Ma presents a cyclic tale, starting in birth and ending at the gates of heaven. Autobiographical in nature, it revisits an array of the life experiences of the dancers, in the process acknowledging the significance of family members and spiritual and cultural practices in sustaining their personal and professional lives.

Act One is Pito, opening with a splendidly evocative film directed by Mark Summerville and produced by Heather Lee, with a rich soundscore by Eden Mulholland and contributions from Lindah Lepou and Lasolo Elia.

It is a wild and stormy night in a primeval world, just after the birth of adult-sized twins whose muddied, slimy bodies are still connected by a thick umbilical cord. When they tear the cord with their teeth, much of it is absorbed by the earth but splashes of blood magically transfer them into our performance arena ... in completely different guises.

Act Two is Tama Ma, cleverly choreographed by Douglas Wright, a demanding duet of post-show, backstage metamorphosis set to Prokofiev's Vision Fugitive and Legend, played by David Guerin.

This dance focused on the realities of the drag artiste, stripping back the layers of personae, costume and makeup until the burgundy-clad exotic dancers were replaced with the men within.

Act Three, Rangatahi, danced on opening night by Mete, is a jointly choreographed solo about childhood memories, such as cold winter mornings huddled as close as possible to the heater, or the potential of a white shirt to be many kinds of clothing other than a shirt. With an ambient score which included fragments of children playing in the distance, and a ticking clock, this was memorable for a series of isolated movements which built slowly into a sustained sequence.

Act Four, Hand to Hand, is superbly choreographed by Michael Parmenter and builds on the exquisite sense of timing which Royal and Mete share after more than a decade of dancing together.

Starting in anger, this conversation between two men is conducted entirely through exchanges of full bodied movement punctuated by emphatic gestures. Bodies are lifted and turned and swung and redirected by a judiciously placed palm. The action flows with an unhurried yet intense sense of pace which is supported by diverse flurries of Mulholland's music.

The final act, Whanaungatanga, choreographed by Royal and Mete for their deceased fathers and in tribute to the late Mahinarangi Tocker. They are free spirits, dancing towards heaven and their tupuna on the golden path of the setting sun, with projections of ferns and leaves and tree trunks at times washing over them. Dressed in voluminous white pants, they whirl and cavort and kick their legs high, and run in circles, until a distant karanga calls them home.


 


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