Victor Rodger
Victor John Rodger ONZM (born 1969) is a New Zealand journalist, actor and award-winning playwright[1] of Samoan and Pākehā heritage. Rodger's play Sons won acclaim at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards (1998) and received the Best New Writer and Most Outstanding New New Zealand Play awards.[2] In 2001, he won the Bruce Mason Playwriting Award.[3] Other plays include Ranterstantrum (2002) and My Name is Gary Cooper (2007), produced and staged by Auckland Theatre Company and starred a Samoan cast including Robbie Magasiva, Anapela Polataivao, Goretti Chadwick and Kiwi actress Jennifer Ward-Lealand. BiographyRodger was born in Christchurch in 1969.[4] Rodger's father is from the village of Iva from Savai'i island in Samoa.[5] Rodger spent two years studying at Toi Whakaari, the New Zealand Drama School in Wellington graduating in 1997.[4] Also in 1997, his play Cunning Stunts was performed in the Young and Hungry Festival at BATS Theatre in Wellington. During 2004–2005, he studied film writing at the Maurits Binger Film Institute in Amsterdam.[6] He gained the Fulbright-Creative New Zealand Pacific Writers’ Residency (2006)[6] based at the University of Hawaiʻi.[2] In 2009, he was the Ursula Bethell Writer in Residence in Christchurch.[7] His play Ranterstantrum (2002) was commissioned for the biennial New Zealand International Festival of the Arts.[1] His play Sons was published by Huia Publishers in 2008, and My Name Is Gary Cooper was published by Playmarket in 2012, in the anthology Urbanesia: Four Pasifika Plays. He is also a writer and a storyliner for TV soap Shortland Street. He held the 2016 Robert Burns Fellowship at the University of Otago.[8]
His acting roles include Stickmen (2001), Mercy Peak and a recurring role on Shortland Street as Dr. Henry Mapasua. AwardsIn 2013, Rodger was awarded the Contemporary Pacific Art Award at the Creative New Zealand Arts Pasifka Awards.[10] In the 2021 New Year Honours, he was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to theatre and Pacific arts.[11] Selected plays
Selected publications
References
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