Pacific Dance Festival Returns To South Auckland This June With Bold Pan-Moana Lineup

Pacific Dance Festival returns this June with a powerful celebration of contemporary Pacific identity in Aotearoa, bringing together artists from across the Moana in an expanded 2026 programme.
Returning to South Auckland, the cultural heart of the Pacific diaspora, the festival finds home in the Māngere Arts Centre – Ngā Tohu o Uenuku, Te Oro Music and Arts Centre in Glen Innes, Toi Tū – Studio One Toi Tū in Auckland Central and includes a special Matariki season presentation in Kerikeri.
Festival Director Iosefa Enari MNZM says: “Pacific Dance Festival 2026 is a declaration of who we are now - a diverse, global, future-focused Pacific. Our artists are innovators, storytellers and cultural leaders. This year we honour the full Moana, from Micronesia to Polynesia, and we do it from South Auckland- the home of Pacific creativity.”
The 2026 programme brings together artists from Wallis & Futuna (Uvea), Kiribati, Rotuma, Samoa, Aotearoa, and the Indigenous Pacific diaspora of Te Whanganui-a-Tara. Across six performance events and workshops, the festival spans traditional, contemporary and street-based practice, showcasing established, emerging, and youth voices.
A new visual identity by Ōtara designer Jesse Gibson (CocoShakim) anchors the season, reflecting a bold, future-focused Pan-Moana aesthetic.
2026 FESTIVAL PROGRAMME HIGHLIGHTS
CALL TO WALLIS - Justin
Haiu
5–6 June | Māngere Arts Centre
– Ngā Tohu o Uenuku
July (Matariki
season presentation) | Turner Centre Te Puawai,
Kerikeri
A contemporary work honouring
Uvean identity and ancestral memory.
Opening the
festival, Call to Wallis by acclaimed choreographer
Justin Haiu returns with renewed energy. Blending
contemporary movement with street and cultural forms, the
work traces belonging, ancestry and the pull of home.
Produced by Mele Taeiloa, it places a rare spotlight on
Wallis and Futuna while speaking to the wider Pacific
diaspora.
Featuring: 5 performers and a live
musician.
MOANA
SHOWCASE
9 June | Māngere Arts Centre -
Ngā Tohu o Uenuku
One night only - new
works from Aotearoa’s leading dance
institutions.
Featuring new choreography from Unitec –
Te Pūkenga School of Dance, Ngā Akoranga Kanikani
(University of Auckland Dance Studies), and the New Zealand
School of Dance, the annual MOANA Showcase highlights the
next generation of Pacific choreographers and performers
working across contemporary and cultural
forms.
KAMATAGA × IN THE FALE × VIGNETTE OF
THE FRIGATE [BIRD] - TRIPLE BILL
11 June
| Māngere Arts Centre – Ngā Tohu o
Uenuku
Three works exploring identity,
memory and transformation across the Moana. This triple bill
brings together bold new Pacific choreography spanning
womanhood, beginnings and diaspora experience.
In the
Fale - a feminist, Melanesian-led work by Julia
Mage’au Gray - sits alongside Kamataga (The
Beginning) by Kapieri Samisoni and Antonio Matagi, both
exploring cultural knowledge, identity and connection
through embodied storytelling.
Completing the programme with an ensemble of 10 dancers is Vignette of the Frigate [Bird] by emerging Samoan choreographer Viliamu Yandall, a contemporary reflection on Pacific diaspora, migration and shifting ideas of “home” and success.
MAREWEN KIRIBATI YOUTH GROUP - FULL
SHOW
12 June | Māngere Arts Centre –
Ngā Tohu o Uenuku
A celebration of Kiribati
culture and youth leadership.
Performed by Marewen, Te
Rabakau Kiribati Unit from Finlayson Park School - the only
Kiribati unit in Aotearoa. This work is led by educator and
cultural leader Erika Taeang and is focused on language,
heritage, and intergenerational cultural
continuity.
SHIFTING CENTRE - THE
CIRCLE
15–16 June | Māngere Arts
Centre – Ngā Tohu o Uenuku
Contemporary
Indigenous dance from Te Whanganui-a-Tara.
Directed by
Sefa Tunupopo and produced by Tamia Filipo, The
Circle explores support, celebration, and collective
liberation. First premiered at Kia Mau Festival 2025, it
blends high-energy choreography with reflective
storytelling, examining how communities hold each other
through change.
SAMOAN LANGUAGE WEEK
WORKSHOPS
Early June | Toi Tū & Te
Oro
Community movement workshops celebrating
Gagana Samoa.
A series of open workshops during Samoan
Language Week inviting participation through movement,
language and cultural exchange.
Full programme and bookings: pacificdance.org.nz
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