Nelson Arts Festival Begins
Nelson Arts Festival Begins
Sixty performances in five
venues and community events that will draw in excess of
25,000 people. The Nelson Arts Festival is headed into its
16th year bringing the best of music, theatre and dance from
New Zealand and further afield to Nelson for a whirlwind
eleven days.
The shows begin on Thursday 14
October, but the real opening is on Friday 15, when the
annual Nelson Masked Parade will see thousands of school
children, community groups and families meandering through
the city centre, watched by a crowd of around
15,000.
“After the parade everyone stays on to
dance, eat and party in the streets,” says Nelson City
Council festival creative director Annabel Norman. “A few
years ago we had to work hard to get the carnivale
atmosphere happening, but now people know it’s a time to
lower their inhibitions under the cover of
masks.”
Meantime hot Wellington band Zirigidum
will have ‘christened’ the Granary Festival Café with a
Thursday night dance party, the raunchy circus comedy Ooh
Baby Baby will be opening at the newly refurbished Theatre
Royal and the Argentinean tango peso medio will be strutting
and sashaying at the Suter Theatre.
Tickets have
been selling well since the programme was launched in early
August, with a dozen shows that are close to selling
out.
“Popular shows this year include Miranda
Harcourt’s Biography of My Skin, Don McGlashan in a line
up called the Bellbirds that debuted at Womad, Hollie Smith,
Helen Medlyn and the interactive seats at APOLLO 13 Mission
Control,” Annabel said. “There are also three Page and
Blackmore Readers and Writers’ shows that have sold out
– Pecha Kucha, Wonky Donkey and The Thinking
Brunch.”
The Nelson Arts Festival has developed
its own distinct style over the years, with the community
events marking it out as a festival with something for
everyone.
“All week we’ll have school kids
singing, playing music and doing kapa haka at Westpac Red
Square in the city centre,” Annabel said, “then we wrap
up on Labour Day Monday with the Bluebridge Family Finale
featuring Pet Art Wear and our own Nelson World Ukulele
Orchestra.”
New to this year’s festival is Oi
You! An urban art installation at Founders Park showcasing
20 works by local young people and working artists from
Nelson and beyond, along with big reproductions of works by
street art icon, Banksy.
Another new event is the
Sonic 1903 Live Zone, being staged after the Masked Parade
to give young people a safe party with zero alcohol.
Organisers have worked with police and other agencies to
avoid the late night drunkenness that followed last year’s
parade and carnivale.
The Nelson Arts Festival is
produced by the Nelson City Council as a celebration for
locals and an attraction for visitors. It opens on Oct 14
and finishes on Oct
25.
Ends
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