Sunday, December 18, 2016

Standing Room Only

Standing Room Only

Standing Room Only for 12/18/2016

Standing Room Only is literally radio with pictures... and arts, theatre, film, comedy, books, dance, entertainment and music – all the things, in other words, that make life worth living.
Full programme details are available on the Standing Room Only webpage
                       

Tiffany Singh and the stories of refugees

Refugees are a world problem right now - but what happens after they make it safe to our shores? Boats along the Waiheke Island coastline will be used to broadcast the stories of refugees - their hopes and their disappointments - as part of an ambitious art installation. Artist Tiffany Singh has called her project The Journey Of A Million Miles Starts With One Step. It's part of the Headlands Sculpture On The Gulf exhibition.
Dec 18, 2016 02:50 pm

Deborah Challinor's new novel The Cloud Leopard's Daughter

With 15 novels to her name, Hamilton's Deborah Challinor is a prolific and successful historical fiction writer - here and overseas. Her popular series include The Convict Girls, Children of War and The Smuggler's Wife, set during the Gold Rush years of the 1860s. The latest of that series is called The Cloud Leopard's Daughter, in which her protagonist Kitty sails from Otago to China on a rescue mission. Lynn Freeman talks to Deborah about turning history into fiction.
Dec 18, 2016 02:40 pm

Remembering Featherston Military Training Camp

More than 60,000 men went through Featherston Military Training Camp in World War One, and a plan to remember them is gathering momentum. The group behind the project believe it will highlight just how significant the camp was in local and indeed national history. They also know exactly what and who they want - large scale bronze sculpture specialist Paul Dibble. Jean McDowell of the Featherston Camp Sculpture Trust takes Lynn Freeman back to when the project started.
Dec 18, 2016 02:25 pm
The rebirth of Dulcie Castree's Surfeit of SunsetsThe words "self-published" covers a huge range of material these days - but sometimes a diamond pops out of the crowd. In the 1980s writer Dulcie Castree wrote a novel that came within a whisker of being published. But when the deal fell through, Dulcie was so hurt she did nothing more with the manuscript of A Surfeit of Sunsets. Fast-forward a few decades and her grandson Finn Johansson had a bound book made for Dulcie. The family later printed a limited run of 100 books, though Dulcie, who was in her 90s, didn't live long enough to see it. But the story took an unexpected turn when publisher Mary McCallum read the book, was blown away and handed it to her star editor Jane Parkin. Finn and Jane tell Lynn Freeman the story of A Surfeit of Sunsets and Dulcie Castree.
Dec 18, 2016 01:44 pm

The Charles Brasch Studio - no more kitchen table art!

The "residence" part of Dunedin's Caselberg House Artists In Residence scheme is working fine. But the "art" part... Well, let's just say, many of the artists and sculptors have had to draw on the kitchen table! Not for much longer. After two years of fundraising, a purpose built studio space will soon be completed for visiting artists staying in Broad Bay on Dunedin's peninsula. The studio, named after one of the city's literary heroes, publisher Charles Brasch, may be just the size of a single room, but it's still costing tens of thousands of dollars. Lesley Hirst from the Caselberg Trust tells Lynn Freeman that it's been a long held dream.
Dec 18, 2016 01:34 pm
Juliet Arnott - rekindling KaikouraMaterials from red-stickered buildings being dismantled in Kaikoura are likely to find a new home rather than ending up in the tip. Locals are so keen to recycle they brought in Juliet Arnott from the group Rekindle, whose projects include having artists and craftspeople turn an entire house into a range of artworks and furniture. Lynn Freeman talks to Juliet about the Kaikoura Recycling - and upcycling - project.
Dec 18, 2016 12:50 pm
Cinema Club queen Hilda Brodie SmithHome movie making was huge in The 1960s. But while most people filmed domestic scenes, in Porirua Hilda Brodie Smith was writing, directing and starring in mini dramas and filming documentaries. Hilda was a member of one of the many amateur cinema clubs that sprung up, and her work was so distinctive and professional that she regularly won prizes. In the 1990s she deposited about half of her 30 films with Nga Taonga Sound & Vision. This year these fragile and grainy old films have been fully restored using the latest digital technology. Lynn Freeman talks to Hilda - now 92 and living on the Kapiti Coast - and to Nga Taonga's digital conservator Richard Faulkner.
Dec 18, 2016 12:16 pm

Older stories

The choreographer and the supermarket trolleys
Alexandra Tidswell's new novel inspired by secrets
George's Marvellous Medicine becomes a stage play
Canadian Steven Loft and First Nations curators
Textile queen Susan Holmes
Not all audio is available due to copyright restrictions

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