“The only thing I like is teaching, and there’s less and less of that”.

Kings of the Gym by Dave Armstrong

A classic and outrageous New Zealand comedy from the renowned Tadpole Theatre Productions, is directed by Janice Finn and will be performed at the PumpHouse Theatre in Takapuna from 8th to 18th November.

“The only thing I like is teaching, and there’s less and less of that”. So says overweight and unfit Head PE teacher Laurie, at low decile school Hautapu High. Fed up with the constant assessments and obsessive box ticking set up by ultra PC headmistress Viv Cleaver, he and his assistant Pat, a former student, now gym teacher, do their best to subvert Viv’s over-earnest, te reo heavy curriculum.  They’re unaware that Viv is about to introduce young Maori student teacher, Annie, into their laissez-faire culture.  She is an ace netball player, a born-again Christian and determined to make her mark in the new school culture. The ensuing conflict is both wonderfully funny and affecting as people’s strongly held beliefs are challenged, serious truths are exposed, and love has a way of upsetting all apple carts!

Played by Paul Glover, Louise Wallace, Alexander Walker and Valeria Davis, the dysfunctional team of teachers embody people we all know – love them or despair of them!  Dave Armstrong is an award winning playwright (Niu Sila, King and Country) and television writer (Spin Doctors, Seven Periods with Mr Gormsby) and Kings of the Gym is a play full of satire, rude innuendo, belly laughs and heart.

An ideal show to get your friends together for a great night out, a block booking or a pre-Christmas office celebration.

 

Meet the Cast and Crew

Janice Finn – Director

Janice’s first career was as an actress in New Zealand and Australia.   She played major stage roles in both countries and became a company member in the early days of the Sydney Theatre Company before returning to New Zealand to train as a television director/producer with the classic soap GLOSS being her first foray into producing.  During the following decades she took time out occasionally to direct plays in Dunedin, Palmerston North and Auckland, including three plays at the Auckland Theatre Company, the most recent being Roger Hall’s “You Can Always Hand Them Back”.  For Tadpole Productions Janice has directed “Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks”, “Social Climbers”, “The Pink Hammer”, “Two” and “The Book Club” and is very happy to be adding Dave Armstrong’s comedy “Kings of the Gym” to the line-up.  Old school methods of teaching clashing with new methods is a great basis for entertainment and this terrific cast excel themselves as a bunch of disparate teachers pushing conflicting ideologies.

Paul Glover – Laurie

Paul Glover has been a regular in film, television and on stage since the early 90s. His film career includes The UglyThe Fall Guys, The Locals, Blood Crime and Fracture and award winning movie ‘Out Of The Blue’, based on the true story of the Aramoana massacre. On TV Paul played Salvius in the TV series Spartacus: Vengeance, the AMC recreation of the Al Capone story ‘Making of the Mob2′ and many years after playing Dylan Preston on the long running Shortland Street, Paul returned to SPP to shoot 800 Words.

Stage highlights include ‘Beautiful Losers’ and Richard with the formidably talented cast of the Kila Kokonut Krew created musical The Factory, a show which moved many audiences to ovation around Australia and at the Edinburgh Fringe. Auckland Theatre Co highlights include In The Next Room (Or The Vibrator Play), Cat On A Hot Tin Roof the Henrik Ibsen classic ‘A Doll’s House’ and the Michael Hurst inspired racy adaptation of the classic ‘Lysistrata’ in 2015. For Tadpole Productions, Paul has starred in Same Time Next Year, The Pink Hammer and Two. 

Louise Wallace – Viv         

Louise trained at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London, but it is her over thirty year career in television for which she is best known. Presenting credits include Celebrity Treasure Island, Shock Treatment, Top of the Class,  So You Want to be a Pop Star, The Weakest Link, 3News, Mobil Sport, 60 Minutes and 20/20. Louise’s TV appearances have included Shortland Street, The Jono and Ben Show, The Real Housewives of Auckland, a regular panellist on The AM Show, as core cast in the 4 seasons of successful drama, Street Legal and guest lead in The Brokenwood Mysteries. Louise has been a talkback host on Radio Live and reported for Health Matters on National Radio. Directing credits include the 2013 theatre production of Driving Miss Daisy and for television, World’s Strictest Parents, Celebrity Treasure Island, Dancing with the Stars and The Apprentice. In 2012 she co-founded Tadpole Theatre Productions and has starred in The Lion in Winter, Social Climbers and The Pink Hammer.

Alexander Walker – Pat 

Alex graduated from UNITEC’s Performing and Screen Arts programme in 2011 and has since performed at venues around the country, including the Court Theatre, the Fortune Theatre and Rotorua’s Blue Baths. He is excited to return to the Pumphouse, where he previously appeared in Tadpole Productions’ Lion In Winter in 2012. He has made recent television appearances in The Cul De Sac, When We Go To War and Power Rangers. Alex is also a keen motorcyclist and rock drummer and a proud member of Actors Equity NZ. After having performed in the Court Theatre season of Kings of the Gym in 2013, Alex is reprising the role of Pat.

Valeria Davis – Annie

Valeria is a recent graduate of Toi Whakaari: NZ Drama School with a Bachelor of Performing Arts (Acting). She has since travelled to Los Angeles where she trained under the guidance of film maker and acting coach of The Technique; Joan Sheckel.  She has also been strongly influenced by her training with international voice coach Patsy Rodenburg. Her previous theatre credits include Mother Courage, Dying for It and Like Sex. Valeria is looking forward to her first major production with Tadpole Productions.

 

Click here to book your tickets! Opens Nov 8th, preview Nov 7th (limited seating).

Join Our Bohemian Rhapsody Fundraiser!

We’re thrilled to be hosting a premiere screening of the new movie Bohemian Rhapsody on Thursday, 1 November 2018 at Bridgeway Cinemas in Northcote.

Your $25 ticket includes the movie and pre-show nibbles and a drink. Funds raised from tickets sales support The PumpHouse Theatre’s goal of being an inclusive and affordable performing arts venue for everyone.

Bohemian Rhapsody is a foot-stomping celebration of Queen, their music and their extraordinary lead singer Freddie Mercury.

The film traces the meteoric rise of the band through their iconic songs and revolutionary sound. They reach unparalleled success, but in an unexpected turn Freddie, surrounded by darker influences, shuns Queen in pursuit of his solo career.

Having suffered greatly without the collaboration of Queen, Freddie manages to reunite with his bandmates just in time for Live Aid. While bravely facing a recent AIDS diagnosis, Freddie leads the band in one of the greatest performances in the history of rock music.

Queen cements a legacy that continues to inspire outsiders, dreamers and music lovers to this day.

Book Now

The details:
Date: Thursday, 1 November 2018
Time: Drinks and Nibbles from 5:30 pm, Movie starts at 6:15 pm
Location: The movie is screening at Bridgeway Cinemas, 122 Queen Street, Northcote Point, Auckland
Note: We can’t do door sales – so book your ticket now!

“Severe propriety surrenders to decadent delight.”

A new romantic comedy set in Victorian Era Auckland.

Penelope Williams has been sent to her now home, Alberton, in Mt Albert to become Mrs Jonathan Alexander. The only person to accompany her on her new life is George, her family’s trusted butler. Unknown to Jonathan, Penelope’s heart belongs to someone else, Richard, her mysterious piano tutor, who sadly she thinks she’ll never see again.

Unknown to Penelope, Jonathan too has a secret, one which keeps him graded and cold. A secret that keeps himself and Penelope apart. What will happen if Penelope finds out about Jonathan? Will Richard ever return to Penelope? Even then, when all scandals are revealed- how will they ever find a way to live in the repressive age of their time? Perhaps they will all live in solitary unhappiness… or will a little mysterious magic unlock the window and set them all free?

The Scandalous Four opens this Wednesday, 17th October.
Book Tickets from $20.

Jubilation Choir – Something of a Sensation

Jubilation is a unique beast, an acapella gospel choir with a rock & roll heart.

Jubilation ChoirBorn in Auckland in the year 2000, Jubilation is a virtual gospel supergroup including R&B legend Rick Bryant, entertainer extraordinaire Jackie Clarke and theatre supernova Jennifer Ward-Lealand.

This diverse ensemble includes professional musicians, teachers, actors, a yacht maker, a master builder and a lecturer in Russian.

They sing soul, blues and country-infused gospel, from the songbooks of Nina Simone, Tom Waits, Curtis Mayfield, Blind Willie Jackson and ranges from the 1800’s to the present day.

Jubilation has performed all over New Zealand to crowds large and small – from 10,000 on WOMAD’s main stage to 60 at Arrowtown’s tiny Old Cheese Factory.

They’ve sung at the openings of the Auckland Art Gallery, Auckland’s Q Theatre and performed flash-mobs on the vintage trams at the Wynyard Quarter. They fundraise and tour festivals including Nelson’s Opera in the Park, Waiheke Jazz Festival, Christchurch Arts Festival, New Plymouth’s Festival of Lights and Wanaka’s Festival of Colour.

What’s clear is they love what they do, and audiences love them in return!

After a sell-out show last time they performed at the PumpHouse in 2017, Jubilation are delighted to be returning to Takapuna’s iconic venue on Sunday October the 28th for a soulful, heartfelt and roof-raising evening.

 

“Jubilation have brought heart and soul — and a damned fine choir and soloists — to festival audiences up and down the country.” — Philip Tremewan – Director of Wanaka’s Festival of Colour and Christchurch Arts Festival

“With voices raised to testify, celebrate, console and sound a warning, this choir will move you and shake you.” — Liam Ryan, Artistic Director – National Jazz Festival

Sun 28th October 6:00 pm
Book Tickets.

Badjelly The Witch on Stage for School Holidays

Auckland’s leading children’s theatre company, Tim Bray Productions presents Spike Milligan’s all-time favourite story Badjelly The Witch!

Millions of children worldwide have grown up with the story of Tim and Rose’s madcap adventure through the great black forest and into Badjelly’s castle, and in New Zealand it regularly featured on morning radio with the album selling more than 40,000 copies and achieving double platinum status.

Originally written by Milligan for his children, it was adapted for the stage by Tim Bray, QSM in 2010 and returned in 2016.

“We’re delighted to be bringing it back again for 2018 due to popular demand,” says Tim Bray. “This is a classic piece of theatre – and the adults enjoy it as much as the children.”

Badjelly, Tim Bray Productions

Badjelly, Tim Bray Productions, Pumphouse Theatre, Takapuna, Auckland, New Zealand, Friday, July 01, 2016. Photo: David Rowland / One-Image.com

The show features The Goons’ ‘Ying Tong’ song along with Monty Pythonesque comedy and Tim hopes audiences will once again join in the fun and cheer as Tim and Rose set off to search for their beloved lost cow Lucy, laugh with the enchanted characters Dinglemouse, Mud-wiggle and Binkle-bonk, and boo at Badjelly when she captures Tim and Rose and threatens to turn them into sausages.

Well-known Tim Bray Productions’ actor Tim Raby reprises his role as Badjelly, with Jessica Hunt as Rose, Jacob Dale as Tim, Donogh Rees as Dinglemouse (and other roles), Dylan Underwood as Mud-wiggle (and other roles), and Jeff Szusterman and Charlotte Heath playing a variety of roles. Music will be performed live by Nick Garrett.

Children are encouraged to dress up as a character from the show for the onstage Costume Parade at the gala and every school holiday season performance.

Badjelly runs from Saturday 22 September to Saturday 13 October. Book Tickets Today!.

Community Theatres Bring New Talent

Community theatre group Shoreside Theatre attracts hundreds of talented individuals, who inspire to get involved with the Performing Arts. They are in a unique position to provide those interested with opportunities to get on stage or backstage, to simply ‘give it a go’ or to take on roles that will help further their professional career.

Known mostly for producing the Outdoor Summer Shakespeare season each year at The PumpHouse (for the last 22 years) and the Mid-winter Murder Mystery, Shoreside is excited to add to their repertoire a One Act Play Festival this Spring. This combines many of Shoreside’s growing initiatives as a Community Theatre Company – producing diverse exciting theatre for a wide audience, offering experienced and inexperienced cast and crew much valued and rare live stage experience, and utilizing some of North Shore’s best theatre venues.

The One Act Play Festival consists of:

Duncan Edwards & Miriana McGechieTHE ACTORS NIGHTMARE
By Christopher Durang
Directed by Catherine Boniface
One man. No lines. What could possibly go wrong?

&

THE ZOO STORY
By Edward Albee
Directed by James Bell
Peter and Jerry meet on a park bench. Peter is a wealthy publishing executive.  Jerry is an isolated and disheartened man, desperate to have a meaningful conversation with another human being.

Ciara and StephenTHE LADY’S MAID’S BELL
By Edith Wharton
Directed by Jason Moffatt
A classic ghost story. Alice Hartley is the new lady’s maid at gloomy Brympton Hall. But why won’t Mrs. Brympton use the servant’s bell that connects with the room of her new lady’s maid?

This line up of plays offers something for everyone whether you be a seasoned patron of the arts, or someone who has never seen a play before.

26 September – 13th October
The Coalbunker Studio @ The PumpHouse Theatre

View the event page here.

 

Beautiful Voices, Beautiful People

Committed to Making a Difference

The Auckland Girls’ Choir nurture young ladies, 9 to 16 years of age from the wider Auckland community. They are tutored by Founder and Musical Director, Mrs Leonie Lawson MNZM. By perfecting their voice, pitch, diction, projection, and presentation, these young women learn the discipline they need to enhance their self-worth, confidence, and team spirit. We provide a safe haven for young girls of different ethnicities to come together for the love of music and choral singing.

The choir was created to bring together girls from any Auckland school whether they have musical training or not. If we see a spark of talent, they are mentored and coached in all areas of choral singing and music.

The Auckland Girls’ Choir Farewell Tour
Sat, Sep 15 – 7:00pm

This concert is the show-stopping finale of months of preparation for the Choir. One week later they will fly out to Los Angeles to sing around California, including concerts in Disneyland and San Diego, mentored and conducted by Leonie Lawson MNZM.

They choir will be entertaining the crowds with music from across the world and ages, including a phenomenal ABBA medley.

The choir is in hot demand for performances at major Auckland Events and Community Centres, and are frequently heard on TV One Praise Be! In the World Projects International Music Festival in Sydney, 2016 they were awarded a silver award and received a standing ovation after their performance in the Sydney Opera House.

As a 100% not-for-profit organisation, please come and support our city’s future musicians and help raise money to send them to LA and allow them to continue as ambassadors for Auckland across the World.

They are delighted to be joined by The Connolly School of Irish dance which is one of the oldest dancing schools in New Zealand. Throughout the last four decades, the Connolly School has competed and performed locally, nationally and internationally. Their Director, Siobhan Connolly spent 11 years in Michael Flatley’s ‘Lord of the dance’. Their dancers will be showcasing some of their top performances to round off an amazing show.

Book Tickets.

Rawiri Paratene Champions Māori Storytelling on the Shore

To celebrate the end of a year-long endeavour to provide a showcase of Māori theatre on the North Shore, The PumpHouse is delighted to confirm that they will once again be joining forces with the inimitable Rawiri Paratene for Kōrero Pūrākau from September 6-8.

A beloved hero of the screen and stage in Aotearoa, Paratene (Ngāpuhi) has devoted his career to amplifying the voices of Māori performers. The 2018 season marks the second time that he will work with The PumpHouse on Kōrero Pūrākau, acting as mentor, director and storyteller for a group of students to devise a staged retelling of local Māori legends.

Four drama students from Birkenhead College and Takapuna Grammar will collaborate with the legendary performer to develop their skills to create a bi-lingual work involving te reo, waiata, storytelling, and audience participation. The result will be a brand-new piece of theatre that will be performed in a strictly limited six-show season.

Passing through the ancient cultural tradition of oral storytelling to a new generation of Māori talent, the students joining Paratene on this journey of exploring their local kaupapa are Ivy Pondman-Carmont, Skye Murphy, Zebion Te Kauru, and Giorgia Doughty.

Timed to coincide with the inaugural New Zealand Theatre Month, Kōrero Pūrākau marks the final production of The Pumphouse Toi Takapuna season – a year-long programme of Māori works performed at The PumpHouse, aimed at championing and amplifying Māori work in a suburban setting. Working with a variety of Māori theatre makers, the season has also included performances of Shot Bro, Rob Mokaraka’s personal story about depression and redemption; Heaven and Earth – Rangi and Papa, a magical glow-in-the-dark Matariki puppet show; and Te Rerenga – The Flight, the world’s first Maori rock-art puppet show. Toi Takapuna has also played host to four workshops sharing fundamental aspects of Māori culture and craft including Harakeke weaving, Poi and Waiata.

With an ongoing commitment to increasing the number of events with a Māori kaupapa, The PumpHouse hopes that both audiences and artists will consider the venue as having tikanga Māori values at the core.

Kōrero Pūrākau is the final production for ‘Toi Takapuna 2018’.

6th – 8th September.
Book Tickets.

Feeling A Connection with Māori Theatre

After seeing my first Shakespeare at The PumpHouse age six I dived into theatre, with a passion, seeing as many productions as I could.

In 2016 I made the leap into acting and working behind the scenes. I’ve now begun a degree in costume and production design and hope to work in theatre in the future.

When I was young I would be with my family or at my marae frequently, however this changed when my parents separated, and we gradually grew apart. Since then I have been in a sort of limbo, trying to connect to my Maori culture but finding barriers in place preventing me from taking up a lot of opportunities.

“To be Maori and see Maori stories presented by Maori people makes me feel a sense of pride.”

I’m proud that this year, The PumpHouse Theatre, where I work, is presenting a year-long season of uniquely Maori theatre.  With Maori theatre so close to me I have a place where I can feel and express my culture with others through theatre, a passion of mine.

The season has included performances of Shot Bro, Rob Mokaraka’s personal story about depression and redemption; Heaven and Earth – Rangi and Papa, a magical glow-in-the-dark Matariki puppet show; and Te Rerenga – The Flight, the world’s first Maori rock-art puppet show.

Te Rerenga felt like home to me, the sharing of knowledge, music and whole families joining in really made this show as fantastic as it was.

I connected to Shot Bro on a bit of a different level. Within Maori families, particularly mine, the presence of mental health related illnesses is something rarely touched upon, more often dismissed than discussed.

Rob brought his struggles to the stage, and held a korero afterwards with a whole room of people – digging deep and sharing things they once thought they couldn’t. It meant so much to me and showed that there is potential for more sharing and expression to be communicated by Maori through art.

Being able to come along to a workshop and learn about Harakeke on a Saturday morning and bring home pieces that I had made felt amazing.

To be Maori and see Maori stories presented by Maori people makes me feel a sense of pride. It sparks my creativity and pushes my mind into thinking of all the ways theatre can grow and develop using Maori influence.

“The experience is personalised to the audience and woven with traditions and customs. It is warm and nurturing, like family.”

For me, Toi Takapuna provided a place close to me where I could feel Maori, and surround myself with others sharing my culture. I don’t have access to any place for that in my personal life. I didn’t need to be fluent in Te Reo to come and see these shows, I didn’t need to be a history expert, I just needed to be open, to want to learn, and to listen.

The environment of these shows cannot be compared to regular theatre.

They aren’t ‘typical’ in the sense of turning up, seeing a nice show and heading home. Instead, you are welcomed and made a part of the show.

The experience is personalised to the audience and woven with traditions and customs. It is warm and nurturing, like family, with the sole objective of sharing stories and history together, presented in such a way that they can be enjoyed by anyone.

Afterwards everyone can stay and korero, share kai and digest the performance – audiences and performers together.

Integrating this culture into our community events and theatre should be encouraged and Toi Takapuna is a great step towards that goal.

Coming up next as part of Toi Takapuna is Kōrero Pūrākau – Maori Storytelling.  I’m so excited to be able to experience the legendary Rawiri Paratene acting as mentor, director and storyteller alongside young people just like me, working together to create a brand new, and uniquely New Zealand, piece of theatre.

I truly believe that anyone would benefit from coming to see this show. It is exciting, beautifully told and an experience like no other in the world.

Aria is from Ngati Raukawa and her marae is Tangata Marae, Matamata. She is a costume designer and actor, studying production design and management at Unitec, and works in The PumpHouse Box Office.

Kōrero Pūrākau is a short season of Maori storytelling in English and te reo Maori for tamariki and rangatahi at the PumpHouse in Takapuna, from Thursday September 6 to Saturday, September 8.

 

Post Credit, The Big Idea.

North Shore Concert Band 40th Anniversary

Members of the North Shore Concert Band are celebrating the group’s 40th anniversary this year with a special concert at the PumpHouse Theatre on Sunday 5th August.

The band was started in 1978 by three musicians who realised that there were very few opportunities for musicians to perform in a band once they had left school. Two of those founders, Colin Hill and Peter Ward will be playing with the band this year along with several other members who have been with the band for most of that time.

The band’s aim was, and still is, to provide an opportunity for adult musicians of all ages and varying skill levels to make music together and to share it with the wider community.

Originally called the Shoreside Concert Band, changed to North Shore Concert Band in 1993 the group includes brass, woodwind, string bass, and percussion instruments.

They have played music at a huge variety of venues over the years, including schools, churches, theatres, shopping malls, parks, retirement villages and Christmas Parades.

As well as encouraging local musicians to keep up and improve their skills, the North Shore Concert Band has been a great training ground for learner conductors. From 1990 to 1994, the band was led by a young man called Peter Thomas, who is now highly renowned as the conductor of the Auckland Symphony Orchestra.

The PumpHouse Theatre have hosted the North Shore Concert Band for most of these past 40 years. The band took part in The PumpHouse’s 40th anniversary celebrations in 2017 and is proud to be celebrating their own milestone there this year.

Join us for a very special celebration.

40th Anniversary Concert, Sunday 5th August, 2pm
Tickets from www.pumphouse.co.nz

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