LUNCHEON

Basement Theatre, Lower Greys Ave, Auckland

20/05/2014 - 31/05/2014

Production Details



FIVE ACTRESSES.    ONE OSCAR.    IT’S GOING TO BE A BUMPY RIDE! 

It’s 1958 and Hollywood is preparing for the biggest night of the year – the Academy Awards. 

Four days before the big event, the five women competing for best supporting actress attend  a luncheon to celebrate their nominations. One of them is Miyoshi Umeki, the first Japanese actress and person of Asian heritage to be nominated for an Oscar. It’s an action packed gathering, filled with laughter, drama and glamour! 

Inspired by an image of Japanese actress and Oscar nominee Miyoshi Umeki wearing a kimono to the 1958 Academy Awards, playwright and award winning journalist Aroha Awarau wanted to explore what that moment would have been like for the shy and unassuming performer.

“It was ten years after the end of World War II and the relationship between Japan and the US was still very volatile,” explains Aroha, who is the former News Editor for Woman’s Day and is currently a senior writer for the NZ Woman’s Weekly.

“Miyoshi was the first Asian to be nominated for an Academy Award for her role in the Marlon Brando film Sayonara. Every Hollywood function she attended she wore a kimono, showing how proud she was of her culture, during a time when the war was still on many American’s minds.  I imagined what it would be like for Miyoshi, if she was in a room with the four other actresses who were nominated alongside her. This is how LUNCHEON was born.”

During his research, Aroha delved into the world of 1950s Hollywood and the five diverse women nominated for the 1958 Academy Award for best supporting actress. He discovered that each woman had their own unique and intriguing story, filling the play with historical anecdotes and an intimate insight into their lives.

“I discovered that many of the issues that the women faced in 1950s are still relevant today. Issues such as body image, the balance between work and home and domestic violence,” says Aroha, who is also  producing the play. It’s taken him two years to get LUNCHEON onto the stage.

“Although the play is set in Hollywood in the 1950s,  the themes are universal and would appeal to many women today.”

With a witty and dramatic script, Aroha has attracted some of New Zealand’s top creative talent for the play’s premiere season – at Auckland’s The Basement Theatre from May 20th to May 31st.

The darling of New Zealand stage and screen, Jennifer Ward-Lealand, is playing legendary actress Elsa Lanchester, a Hollywood star best known for her role as the Bride of Frankenstein. It’s a part that Jennifer can’t wait to sink her teeth into, allowing the Desperate Remedies actress to show her comedic and dramatic range.

“Elsa is a fabulous part to play and I know I will have lots of fun. I’m in the middle of researching her life and I’m wading my way through her films. I’m grateful that there is a wealth of material for me to research,” Jennifer explains.

“Aroha has captured a terrific sense of the time and the rapid and confident style of speaking. It’s unlike any other modern play I have read.”

Despite Jennifer and director Katie Wolfe having crossed paths many times, LUNCHEON will be the very first time that the two actresses have actually worked together.

“I’m looking forward to working with Katie,” Jennifer adds.  “Katie understands the style and the world of the play and will bring just the right sensibility to it,”

Katie is no stranger to directing a play with strong female characters. Her first stage production was a sell out season of the famous play The Women for Silo Theatre in 2004. After years of acting and directing television and films, Katie is excited to return to the stage. She was drawn to how LUNCHEON captures the pressures actresses face in this competitive world.

“Luncheon is a beautiful piece and there are aspects of the play that explore the anxiety and insecurities that many of us experience,” Katie says. “I’m looking forward to working with a bunch of talented actresses and bringing this fascinating work to the stage.”

Jennifer will be leading a cast full of enthusiastic and fresh faced actors. Hannah Banks will be playing the role of Carolyn Jones, the actress who became famous as Morticia Addams on the cult TV show The Addams Family. Hannah has worked with Katie in The Women, and was a core cast member on TV shows Shortland Street and The Jacquie Brown Diaries. Playing Hope Lange is recent The Actor’s Program graduate Lauren Gibson and Diane Varsi will be played by recent Unitec graduate Alex Jordan.

The role of Miyoshi Umeki will be played by newcomer Tomoko Taouma, a Japanese native now living in Auckland. The role of future TV mogul Aaron Spelling, the only male character in the play and who was married to Carolyn Jones at the time, will be played by Bede Skinner. Bede is best known for his roles on Spartacus and Shortland Street.

“It’s been two years in the making, and I’m finally getting to see my labour of love realised,” says Aroha. “I must have been good in a past life to have such high calibre actors and creative people involved. It’s a dream cast and director.”

LUNCHEON 
The Basement, Lower Greys Avenue, Auckland
May 20th – May 31st
8pm 
Tickets – From $25 – $20 
www.iticket.co.nz 

With support from WALLACE ARTS TRUST




Assured new talent offers engaging look at allure of high culture

Review by Paul Simei-Barton 24th May 2014

The debut of playwright Aroha Awarau marks the emergence of a distinctive talent and highlights a growing trend among Maori artists asserting the freedom to move beyond specifically Maori issues and engage creatively with the wider world. 

Our enduring fascination with the rich and famous is given a historical perspective as the production drops us into the glamorous world of the 1958 Oscars where five nominees for Best Supporting Actress trade barbed compliments at an informal luncheon. [More]

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Definitively feel-good

Review by Nik Smythe 21st May 2014

Aroha Awahau’s first stage play tells a tale from over half a century ago, at a place halfway around the world.  It has universal appeal however, given that for one night a year, Hollywood, California, the play’s location, is the centre of the universe. 

The date is a few days off the big night in 1958, and these 30th Academy Awards are historically significant for two reasons: they are the first ones to be televised, and they include the first ever (and only to date?) nomination of a Japanese woman for Best Supporting Actress. 

There are five nominees in the category and one of them, Carolyn Jones (Hannah Banks), has taken it upon herself to invite her four rivals for a luncheon in her ritzy LA mansion.  I gather this particular event is fictional but the characters have clearly been crafted with a great deal of research, and everything they discuss during the 80-minute show presumably has some authentic basis.  I further assume the women’s personal views on race and culture, domestic issues, fame and professional conduct, etc, are to some degree imagined by the author out of necessity.

Directed by local screen and stage veteran Katie Wolfe, the cast roundly deliver strong portrayals of their roles. Besides Jones and the Japanese contender Miyoshi Umeki (Tomoko Taouma), the other nominees are two younger actresses – platinum blonde Hope Lange (Lauren Gibson) and scruffy angst-ridden Diane Varsi (Alex Jordan) – and seasoned English veteran Elsa Lanchester (Jennifer Ward-Lealand).

Bede Skinner’s depiction of Aaron Spelling, Carolyn’s husband at the time, is a likeable portrait of the noble 50s husband just breaking into television production, although his accent sounds as much South Island as Southern Californian.   

Their diverse backgrounds make for a sort of microcosmic sampling of Hollywood life: Carolyn the well-meaning but highly-strung hostess; Elsa the party queen with the forthright wit; Hope the venomous competitor; the sweet, natural and unpretentious Diane; the delightful, controversial Miyoshi, the very model of politeness and oriental grace.  Elsa is the only one with preceding fame, having played the title character in Bride of Frankenstein, but a little online investigation reveals the varying subsequent careers of the younger women. 

John Verryt’s splendidly appointed set has the Basement decked out in smart vintage 50s style, with its long white sofa centrepiece surrounded by classic ‘futuristic’ furniture and matching kitsch hanging lampshades, bookended with Venetian blinds.  Although the black painted brick wall suggests more New York loft than LA glamour-pad, the level of class achieved is admirable. 

Rose Jackson’s adorably vintage costume designs contribute a significant degree of the period flavour, as does hair and make-up artist Luisa Petch’s quietly lavish range of hairdos and wigs.  From the opening swelling orchestral strings to the timeless strains of ‘As Time Goes By’, the fitting selections of musical director Paul Barrett are evidently wholly informed by the material. 

There are pointed moments in Awarau’s script that touch on issues as topical now as then: race, gender (the bitchiness of women vs. the cruelty of men), the price of fame and glamour (e.g. plastic surgery), the arguable perceived value of winning such an award, and so on.  Food for thought certainly, made all the more gripping by the engaging and diverse performances.  

But if there is a main point to the play, I cannot distinguish which of its numerous layered aspects that may be.  To me it reads as a simple classic behind-the-scenes exploration of an exciting and pivotal time in Hollywood’s history.  While there seems to be potential for the more dramatic sections to be more moving, there’s enough affinity with the characters generated to produce a definitively feel-good result.

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And the Oscar goes to...

Review by James Wenley 21st May 2014

For a play that deals with the fickleness of fame, the most telling feature that of the five actresses gathered for luncheon to mark their nominations in the 1958 best supporting actress race, none of the them are well-known today. Certainly, reading the characters names down the program, none of them were immediately familiar to this sometimes film buff.

The 1958 Oscar ceremony was notable as the first live televised Oscar-cast, and the dominance of Best Picture The Bridge on the River Kwai. That years supporting actress race included the first nomination for a Japanese actress, Miyoshi Umeki, who co-starred with Marlon Brando in Sayonara. First time playwright, journalist Aroha Awara, has taken this footnote to craft a bubbly comedy that has attracted some top-shelf talent, including the return of director Katie Wolfe to the theatre. [More]

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