Taiaroa Royal | |
---|---|
Nationality | New Zealand |
Alma mater | New Zealand School of Dance |
Occupation(s) | Dancer and choreographer |
Awards |
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Taiaroa Royal CF is a New Zealand dancer and choreographer. Royal co-founded the contemporary Māori dance company Okareka with Taane Mete. As a dancer he has performed with New Zealand companies the Royal New Zealand Ballet, Douglas Wright Dance Company, Atamiria and Black Grace. He has choregraphed contemporary dance and also music videos including for Evermore and Ardijah, and for the World of Wearable Art (WOW) in Wellington. He is a 2023 recipient of an Arts Foundation of New Zealand Laureate Award.
Royal identifies with the iwi Te Arawa of the Rotorua and Bay of Plenty regions, Ngāti Raukawa, Uenukopako and Kāi Tahu of the South Island. [1] As a teenager at age 15 he won a disco dancing competition in the Bay of Plenty. [2]
Royal is a graduate of the New Zealand School of Dance, finishing in 1984. [3] [4]
Companies he has performed with as a dancer include the Royal New Zealand Ballet, Douglas Wright Dance Company, Human Garden, Commotion Dance Company, Atamiria Dance Company and Black Grace, and he has toured to England, Europe, Australia and America. [4]
In 2007, he started the Okareka Dance Company with Taane Mete. Okareka's 2008 show Tama Ma, premiered at the Tempo Dance Festival, Auckland, won awards and went on to tour New Zealand. It had seasons at the Strut Festival, Perth in November 2010 and The Powerhouse, Brisbane in March 2011. Tama Ma had autobiographical elements and was danced by Royal and Taane Mete. It included choreography by Michael Parmenter and Douglas Wright. [3] [5] [6]
He has choreographed operas for New Zealand Opera. [1]
Some of his choreography is commercial such as music videos for Maree Sheehan, Evermore and Ardijah, and event such as Christmas in the Park in Auckland. For the World of Wearable Art event in Wellington he has choreographed the South Pacific section. [4] [3]
Royal has a teaching practice having taught at the New Zealand School of Dance and Unitec Institute of Technology on the Bachelor of Performing Screen Arts. [1]
In the New Zealand Festival in 2020, he collaborated with American dance company Exhale to produce a work called Hōkioi me te Vwōhali From Spirit Eagles Land. [7]
In 2008, Tama Ma, produced and danced by Royal and Taane Mete, won four Tempo Dance Festival awards including ‘Spirit of the Festival’, and was also voted ‘Best Dance’ by Metro Magazine’s "Best In Auckland". [3] In 2010, he was included in the Tempo Dance Festival's Honouring a Dancer evening. [3] He received Te Tohu Toi Kē a Te Waka Toi, Making a Difference in Contemporary Dance, at the 2010 Te Waka Toi awards. [4] [8]
In 2017, Royal was awarded a Churchill Fellowship to travel to Cincinnati, to undertake choreographic research with Exhale Dance Tribe to start developing a united choreographic language and voice. [9] In 2023, he received an Arts Foundation of New Zealand Laureate Award. [10]
The following lists events that happened during 2002 in New Zealand.
Douglas James Wright was a New Zealand dancer and choreographer in the New Zealand arts establishment from 1980 until his death in 2018. Although he announced his retirement from dance in 2008, on the occasion of the publication of his first book of poetry, Laughing Mirror he subsequently continued to make dance works, including touring The Kiss Inside during April 2015.
Shane William Cotton is a New Zealand painter whose work explores biculturalism, colonialism, cultural identity, Māori spirituality, and life and death.
SalāLemi Ponifasio is a prolific international theatre director, choreographer, and artist. He is known for his radical approach to theatre, dance, art and activism, and for his collaboration with communities.
George Winiata Henare is a New Zealand actor with a career spanning over 50 years.
Atamira Dance Company is a Māori contemporary dance company in Aotearoa based at the Corban Estate Arts Centre in Auckland.
The Te Waka Toi awards are the premier awards in the field of ngā toi Māori. They have been awarded by Creative New Zealand and predecessors since 1986. The awards recognise tohunga, artists and community leaders across all arts forms including visual and performing arts.
Peter Robinson is a New Zealand artist of Māori descent. He is an associate professor at the Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland.
Michael Earl Parmenter is a New Zealand choreographer, teacher and dancer of contemporary dance.
Jack Gray is a choreographer, researcher and teacher of contemporary Māori dance, based in Aotearoa New Zealand.
The New Zealand School of Dance was established in 1967 and is a tertiary educational institute in New Zealand that teaches contemporary dance and ballet. It started as the National School of Ballet, and after contemporary dance was added in 1982 the name was changed to the New Zealand School of Dance.
Taane Mete is a New Zealand dancer, choreographer and yoga teacher.
Russell Ian Kerr was a New Zealand ballet dancer, choreographer, and producer. After spending the 1950s dancing in Europe, he returned to New Zealand where he was instrumental in the development of the New Zealand Ballet Company and ballet as an art form in New Zealand. He was recognised as one of New Zealand's most significant living artists in 2005 with an Icon Award from the Arts Foundation of New Zealand.
Louise Mary Potiki Bryant is a New Zealand choreographer, dancer and video artist. She has choreographed a number of award-winning performances, and is a founding member of Atamira Dance Company. She designs, produces and edits videos of performances for music videos, dance films and video art installations. She was made an Arts Foundation of New Zealand Laureate in 2019.
Tempo Dance Festival is an annual pan-genre professional dance festival held in Auckland, New Zealand and is the 'longest standing annual dance event' of New Zealand, founded in 2003.
Robert Hans George Jahnke is a New Zealand artist and educator, well-known for his graphic and sculptural artwork. He is a professor of Māori visual arts at Massey University.
Ariana Rahera Tikao is a New Zealand singer, musician and author. Her works explore her identity as a Kāi Tahu woman and her music often utilises taonga pūoro. Notably, she co-composed the first concerto for taonga pūoro in 2015. She has released three solo albums and collaborated with a number of other musicians. She was a recipient of an Arts Foundation Laureate Award in 2020.
Tupua Tigafua is a Samoan choreographer and dancer based in New Zealand. Tigafua was a recipient of the Creative New Zealand Arts Pasifika Award for Emerging Artist in 2017. In 2021, the Wellington Theatre Awards presented him with the Excellence Award for Choreography and Movement for original work Ciggy Butts in the Sand.
Selwyn Frederick Muru, also known as Herewini Murupaenga, is a New Zealand artist of Māori descent. His life's work includes, painting, sculpture, journalism, broadcasting, directing, acting, set design, theatre, poetry and whaikōrero. Muru was awarded the Te Tohu Aroha mō Te Arikinui Dame Te Atairangikaahu | Exemplary/Supreme Award in 1990 at the Creative New Zealand Te Waka Awards.
Kura Te Ua is a Māori performing arts practitioner, choreographer and artistic director. She specialises in kapa haka and has developed the new hybrid-form 'haka theatre'. Her company Hawaiki TŪ creates haka theatre events including in 2023 where Autaia is featuring 400 student performers.