10 Feb 2023

Whanau-written play to hit stage at unique Maori theatre

From Nine To Noon, 10:05 am on 10 February 2023
Ten-year-old Te Rongopai Curreen Tukiwaho leads a cast of 9 actors in the new play, Hemo is Home.

Ten-year-old Te Rongopai Curreen Tukiwaho leads a cast of nine actors in the play, Hemo is Home. Photo: Supplied

When Auckland went into Covid lockdown in 2021, Auckland actor Tainui Tukiwaho wanted to find a way to keep his five tamariki busy and help them with their written English.

The result was an award-winning play. Hemo is Home will premier next month as the first production to be staged at Te Pou Theatre - a unique home for Māori performing arts. 

The ghostly comedy features a number of well-known Māori actors and stars the youngest of the play's creators, 10 year old Te Rongopai Curreen Tukiwaho. Te Rongopai and his mother - producer and actor Amber Curreen - tell Kathryn about the whanau-inspired play and the project to create a purpose-built, kaupapa Māori performing arts facility in west Auckland.

Tainui Tukiwaho and his five children in his blended whanau, and writers of the new play, Hemo is Home.  

From left:  Jade Fernandez, 12, Mia Curreen-Poko, 17, Te Rongopai Curreen Tukiwaho, 10, Tainui Tukiwaho, Letoya Fernandez, 16, Paku Fernandez, 16.

From left: Jade Fernandez, 12, Mia Curreen-Poko, 17, Te Rongopai Curreen Tukiwaho, 10, Tainui Tukiwaho, Letoya Fernandez, 16, Paku Fernandez, 16. Photo: Supplied