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Audio Described play in Te Reo Māori for children who are blind

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Auckland children who are blind or have low vision will attend a bilingual audio described performance of Ngā Manu Rōreka, a play by Apirana Taylor in te reo Māori and presented by Taki Rua Productions as part of its 26th annual Te Reo Māori Season.

More than 50 BLENNZ Homai Campus students will enjoy the performance on Thursday 19 March. It follows Taki Rua’s audio described performance last year of Te Kuia me te Pūngāwerewere, a play based on Patricia Grace’s classic picture book The Kuia and the Spider.

Audio description is a commentary for blind and low vision audience members that describes the visual elements of a performance. In a play, it describes what is happening in between the dialogue or songs: for example, the setting, the costumes, facial expressions and movement across the stage.

At the BLENNZ performance, students can choose to listen to what’s happening in either te reo Māori or in English. Two audio describers will describe the action using a stenomask (a hand-held microphone). This will be transmitted to wireless receivers and headsets worn by the children.

Jamus Webster will describe the action in te reo Māori and Nicola Owen of Audio Described Aotearoa will provide the English description.

Blind and Low Vision Education Network NZ (BLENNZ) is a national network of educational services for children and young people who are kāpō (blind), deaf-blind or have low vision.

Tānemahuta Gray, Kahukura/Chief Executive, Taku Rua Productions, says the audio described performance of Kuia me te Pūngāwerewere was the first time a play had been audio described in te reo Maori.

“We are really pleased to provide another opportunity for blind students to experience te reo, both in the play and in the audio description,” he says.

In partnership with the Auckland Arts Festival, Taki Rua will present the play to 16 schools in Auckland, including BLENNZ Homai Campus, from 17 to 27 March. It will also give two free public performances at 11am and 2pm on Sunday 22 March in Aotea Square as part of the Festival’s Toitū Te Reo programme.

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