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Kilimogo Productions

New Zealand theatre collective From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Kilimogo Productions is bicultural theatre collective based in Ōtepoti Dunedin that was founded in 1995 or 1996.[1][2]

Background

The founders of Kilimogo Productions include Rangimoana Taylor, Cindy Diver and Hilary Halba.[2][3] The intention was to look at theatre from both a Māori and Pākehā perspective. Founding member Taylor says of this in an interview with Halba, "I sometimes think we go quite painfully, as equals, but we discuss everything."[2]

Productions

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Ngā Tangata Toa

Nga Tangata Toa (1997) by Hone Kouka.[4] The play started with the Māori ritual of a karanga and haka pōwhiri blurring reality for the audience with this experience that bring a host group and a visitor group together and many in the audience would have experienced in different settings, overall the structure of the play was formed with the framework of a meeting on a marae.[2]

Whaea Kairau

Two years after presenting Nga Tangata Toa Kilimogo presented Rangimoana Taylor’s brothers play, Whaea Kairau: Mother Hundred-Eater (July 1999) by Apirana Taylor at the Otago Museum.[5][6] This play references Brecht's play Mother Courage and Her Children. In Apirina's re-telling the central character is an Irish women in New Zealand during battles and war at the beginning of settler colonisation starting in the 1840s.[7]

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