Friday, February 21, 2014

Standing Room Only on Radio New Zealand National for Sunday 23 February 2014



12:43 Crowd Funding - The Donors: Aside from showing admiration for an artist and the thrill of seeing a project come to life, why do we give up our hard-earned cash to crowd-funding schemes? Habitual theatre donor Michael Wray; comic anthologist and serial donator Damon Keen (who’s currently pledging in the hope his name will be engraved in gold and taken to the moon); and first-time donor 75-year-old Robin Twinhame share their stories.

1:10 At the Movies with Simon Morris: This week Endless love, I Frankenstein and Are We Officially Dating?

1:31 Producing top TV drama: It’s a world-wide phenomenon: a sudden up-swing in quality TV drama.  Philippa Campbell, producer of TV mini-series Top of the Lake, and Helen Bowden, who produced The Slap, talk about developing high-end television drama.

1:41 Mercury Bay Art Escape: From Otama Beach in the north to Tairua in the south, Coromandel’s artists are at home to visitors. The Mercury Bay Art Escape is an open studio tour of some of the regions finest painters, potters and sculptors and it starts this weekend. Our arts reporter Justin Gregory went up for a sneaky early visit. He meets sculptor and painter Rick Swain at his studio in Whitianga at work on his latest piece.

2:05 The Laugh Track: Rarotonga’s unofficial but hard-working cultural ambassador Glenda Tuaine, whose picks include the glorious Tina Fey.

2:26 The Physician: ‘The Physician’ Jason Maling is opening the doors to his surgery at Wellington’s City Gallery for much of the New Zealand Festival. Jason explains Kunst Angst (art anxiety), and how not to lose the plot at an exhibition

2:38 Visiting Scottish poet Jen Hadfield: Jen Hadfield is based on the Shetland Islands. She talks about island life, lichens, poetry and her current exchange visit to the island nation of New Zealand.

2:48 Five Maori Artists: Historic Taonga, says Auckland Art Gallery curator Ngahiraka Mason, provide not just a foundation for contemporary Maori art but also argue strongly for painting as a long-term Maori practice. To prove it, she’s put modern Maori paintings beside significant historical works, plus some 19th century water colours, in an exhibition called Five Maori Artists. Justin Gregory asks her why.

3:05 The Drama Hour: The Elk Safari by Uri Khein


Visit our webpage for pictures and more information: http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/standing-room-only

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