Tawata Productions is contemporary Māori and Pasifika performing arts company established in 2004 based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara (Wellington), New Zealand. They produce theatre, screen and digital work as well as the festivals: Kia Mau, Breaking Ground and the Pūtahi Festival. Tawata showcases work by Māori, Pasifika and Indigenous writers and makers and is led by Hone Kouka and Mīria George.
Tawata Productions was founded by playwrights and directors Mīria George and Hone Kouka in 2004 and their home base is Te Whanganui-a-Tara, Wellington.[1][2]
Tawata are invested in promoting, producing and developing work, to this end they have started several events. In 2010 they created an annual festival called the Matariki Festival, first held at Circa Theatre,[1][2]Matariki is the Māori New Year in midwinter.[6] The Matariki Festival had a development programme that since has been renamed as Breaking Ground. Breaking Ground is a festival of new writing and ideas curated and produced by Tawata Productions.[2][7] Kouka and George were inspired by a development dance festival hosted by Native Earth Performing Arts in Canada.[8] The first plays workshopped at Breaking Ground in 2010 were Hui by Mitch Tawhi Thomas, The Prospect by Maraea Rakuraku and Taikaha by Hinekaa Mako.[2] The Matariki Festival won Tawata Productions the Critics’ Wildcard award in 2015 at the Wellington Theatre Awards.[9]
The Pūtahi Festival is for emerging practitioners to test and show works to an audience. It started in 2013 and for the first few years was held at Studio 77, the Theatre Department of Victoria University of Wellington. In 2021 it ran over nine days.[15][2][16][17]
Director, Hone Kouka, Set design, Tony De Goldi, Costume design, Natalia Huaki Gwizdizardski, Lighting design, Rob Larsen, Sound design, Stephen Gallagher.
Simon Vincent, Erina Daniels, Semu Filipo, Rina Patel, Sam Selliman
Director – Mīria George, Set Designer – Mark McEntyre, Lighting Designer – Natasha James, Sound Design – Te Aihe Butler & Chris Ward, Hohepa Waitoa and K*Saba, Costume Designer – Cara Louise Waretini, Stage Manager – Karena Letham. presented at the New Zealand Festival and the Auckland Arts Festival and winner of the Adam New Zealand Play Award.[4]
Directed by Tammy Davis, Sound design, Karnan Saba, Lighting design, Laurie Dean, Music, Rawiri and Joseph Hirini, Set and costume, Wai Mihinui, Jaimee Warda
Grace Hoet, Ralph Johnson, Rob Lloyd, Tola Newbery, Joe Dekkers-Reihana, Moana Ete