Category Archives: Campus

Welcoming Mel Edmon

9667008113_d9f1751bc4_cOn Friday 23rd August Massey formally welcomed artist-in-residence Melissa Edmon at the Turitea Campus. Our 29th visiting artist on the successful and popular scheme, Mel is a renowned documentary filmmaker (see her Vimeo page for examples of her amazing work) and a senior lecturer and programme coordinator at UCOL’s School of Photography, Arts and Design in Palmerston North.

Whilst at Massey, Mel is intending to make a short fiction film, entitled Are You Happy? which will involve Massey media production students as crew members, allowing them to experience working on a professional film set first hand. Mel has also already given guest lectures and workshops on the Creative Communication and Media Practice II papers at Palmerston North.

We’re thrilled to have Mel with us and look forwards very much to working with her over the coming months.

 

Challenging male stereotypes with theatre

The-Brave_Massey_Tour

A theatre show that challenges stereotypes and focuses on the experiences of New Zealand men will be performed in Albany next week at the Massey’s Theatre Lab on August 14 and 15 2013. The production of The Brave, performed by Massive Theatre Company, is a collaboration between Massey University and Massive. It is part of an exciting research project theatre lecturer Dr Rand Hazou says uses theatre to explore the issues around male identity in New Zealand.

The four performances – two lunchtime and two evening shows – are open to the public and will feature a post-show forum to enable the audience to discuss their perceptions and experience with the performers and Massey academics.

The Brave is a powerful work that explores what it means to be a man in contemporary New Zealand,” he says. “This is a unique opportunity to develop research around contemporary approaches to devising performance in New Zealand. It is also a great opportunity to explore the impact of theatre as a pedagogical tool and register what impact (if any) the performance might have on audience conceptions of masculinity and male identity. We want to know if this production challenges stereotypes about what it means to be a man in New Zealand today.”

The Brave features eight men from different backgrounds who take to the stage to honour those who were once, or are still, in their lives. Combining true confessions with raw athleticism, contemporary dance, and kapa haka, they strip away every façade to reveal their innermost thoughts and feelings.

Dr Hazou is an Australian/Palestinian academic and theatre facilitator. His research interests lie in theatre that addresses human rights and engages with issues of social justice. He hopes that The Brave tour will reflect the growing cultural diversity of our region, and that the event will play an important role in facilitating networks of participation and belonging.

“As a creative producer, I am proud that Massey is in a position to facilitate creative work and community networks and I hope that the Theatre Lab will continue to consolidate its position as cultural hub in the region.”

Dr Hazou’s last production A Night in Iran was a sold-out event that drew audiences from across Auckland.
For more information on Massive Theatre, go to their website.