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DOG & BONE


Written by Helen Pearse-Otene
Directed by Jim Moriarty
Te Rakau Hua O Te Wao Tapu Trust

at Whitireia Performance Centre, 25-27 Vivian Street, Wellington
From 14 Aug 2012 to 1 Sep 2012



Reviewed by:  Helen SimsMaraea RakurakuEwen Coleman (The Dominion Post); Lynn Freeman (Capital Times);

“But all we'll do is throw you a bone, a single bone and then watch all you mongrels turn on each other.”  

The second Taranaki War is raging and New Plymouth is a garrison town under siege. The British Imperial Army have returned to England, leaving the country to Māori and Pākehā to fight over “He iwi tahi tātou” no longer. To the victor the spoils: a lush unspoilt country ripe for farming and the right to rewrite history as they see fit. To the loser: the slow, systematic loss of everything held dear, starting with their land and freedom.

But in 1869 the war is a far cry from the south coast of Wellington, where Tāiki Kenning has settled in marital bliss with his Pākehā bride Hannah-May. There, Tāiki and Hannah-May keep the homefires of Te Miti burning, in the hope that one day his people will return. But as a storm brews overhead and Hannah-May begins to dream of terrors in the forest, a pack of dogs appear with a warning for Tāiki.  

the underTOW project is a series of plays that aim to cast light on the legacy and unknown stories of our country's founding document, Te Tiriti o Waitangi   

Whitireia Performance Centre, 25 Vivian Street, Wellington 
11th August – 1st September
Tuesday – Saturday
7pm