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A Boy Called Piano

Ticket Information

  • General admission: $25.00 each
  • Concession: $20.00 each
  • Additional fees may apply

Dates

  • Tue 4 Oct 2022, 8:30pm–9:45pm
  • Wed 5 Oct 2022, 8:30pm–9:45pm
  • Thu 6 Oct 2022, 2:00pm–3:15pm
  • Thu 6 Oct 2022, 8:30pm–9:45pm
  • Fri 7 Oct 2022, 8:30pm–9:45pm
  • Sat 8 Oct 2022, 2:00pm–3:15pm
  • Sat 8 Oct 2022, 8:30pm–9:45pm

Restrictions

R16

Website

Listed by

katherinehfj

A Boy Called Piano

From The Conch

Auckland 1963, three eleven year old boys meet in a cell in the Family Court. Two Māori and one Samoan: Wheels, Piwi, and a boy called Piano. Made wards of state, they are taken to Ōwairaka Boys' Home. There begins a story into the heart of darkness, abuse and pain but also the resilience of the boys as they seek to survive through the power of friendship, culture, music, and the light of the human spirit.

Growing from the award-winning collaboration of The White Guitar’s creative team, Pacific NZ theatre company, The Conch is proud to walk beside Fa’amoana John Luafutu and the Luafutu Aiga as they courageously bring this true story of Fa’amoana’s experience in state care alongside thousands of Māori and Pasifika children into the light, building on The Conch’s kaupapa of harnessing the power of theatre as a force for social change.

Written by Fa’amoana John Luafutu & Tom McCrory and directed by Nina Nawalowalo, the play combines highly physical storytelling and breathtaking visual design - incorporating aerial and underwater photography from The Conch documentary film: A Boy Called Piano - The Story of Fa’amoana John Luafutu (Official selection: New Zealand International Film Festival 2022 & Winner of Best Feature Documentary: Spring edition, Montreal Independent Film Festival 2022). Starring Fa’amoana himself with his son, Matthias Luafutu together with Aaron McGregor, Rob Ringiao-Lloyd and the return to the stage of renowned Ole Maiava; alongside a stunning score performed live by NZ music legend Mark Vanilau.

Fa’amoana says that through this play he hopes to use his voice as "a vehicle to convey a cry of love to the past, present, and future."

“I began in innocence, new born, a blank page. The story was written, the story of thousands of children, has to be heard. Our History must be faced. May the truth set us free.”
Fa’amoana John Luafutu

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