Brother killed on K2 lives on in inspirational art


The sister of a man killed on the world’s deadliest mountain has organised an international exhibition of artworks he never got to show.

Marty Schmidt, one of New Zealand’s best mountaineers, and his son Denali, 25, were killed by an avalanche on 8611-metre K2 on the Pakistan-China border in July last year.

Marty, 53, and Denali were aiming to become the first father-and-son team to reach the summit of the mountain.

Delani, who graduated from the California College of the Arts a month before he died, left behind a San Francisco storage unit full ofartworks inspired by mountaineering and climbing.

His sister, Sequoia Di Angelo, 23, has spent the past year organising a campaign to take his paintings and installations around the world.

The works will go to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Austin, New York City, London, Berlin, Sydney and Wellington – all cities with”special significance” in Denali’s life.

A crowdfunding cause set up to raise $330,000 to fund the Peak Inspirations

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Keisha Castle-Hughes cast in Game of Thrones


It’s confirmed: Kiwi actress Keisha Castle-Hughes has landed a role in Game of Thrones.

At today’s Game of Thrones panel at San Diego Comic-Con, HBO put the casting rumors to rest.

Castle-Hughes, of Whale Rider fame, would be playing Oberyn’s eldest daughter, otherwise known as one of the eight Sand Snakes, Buzzfeed reported.

Obara Sand, a fearsome warrior in her own right, is described as a prickly, hot-tempered woman.

In a video of cast members introducing themselves, 24-year-old Castle-Hughes said she was “super excited” to be part of the show.

Castle-Hughes rose to stardom in 2002 in an Academy Award-nominated performance as hero Paikea in Kiwi film Whale Rider.

She is also known for Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005), and The Nativity Story (2006).

It has been reported that Castle-Hughes considered giving up acting after a luckless 2013 in Los Angeles. But she headed back to Hollywood earlier this year to give it another crack.

Six other actors were also reported to be joining the fifth season of the American fantasy drama: Jonathan Pryce as the High Sparrow, Alexander Siddig as Doran Martell, Toby Sebastian as Trystane Martell, Nell Tiger Free as Myrcella Baratheon, and Enzo Cilenti as Yezzan.

The fifth season would be airing mid-2015.

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Game of Thrones cast talk death a Comic Con

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Mike Tyson, Jamie Foxx collaboration?

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Film Review: The Broken Circle Breakdown


REVIEW:

The Broken Circle Breakdown was nominated for a Best Foreign Language Academy Award last year. The prize was taken out Paolo Sorrentino’s The Great Beauty, which was probably a fair call, but this Belgian/Flemish gem must have pushed it awfully close.

The Broken Circle Breakdown (The title refers to the bluegrass/folk standard Can The Circle Be Unbroken, first made popular by the Carter family) is set in the present day. Didier and Elise are in hospital, anxious at the bedside of their daughter, who is deathly ill.

The film unspools back six or seven years, so that we encounter these gorgeous people as they first meet each other, and fall immediately, wildly, and joyously in love. He lives in a trailer, raises chickens, and fronts a bluegrass band. She is a tattoo artist, blessed with the gift of a golden voice. In a deft and well weighted hundred minutes, back and forth across the years, we watch as these two alternately build and tear apart their lives together.

Like the best of the American country songbook, this film goes to some dark and tragic places, but it also celebrates life and love with a rare whole-heartedness and earthiness. This is a sensual, celebratory film; one that skirts uncommonly close to melodrama, makes a couple of odd editing decisions, occasionally devolves into overt politics, but always stays just this side of utterly absorbing. With a soundtrack to die for (much of it performed by the cast), two exceptional adult leads, and from six year old Nell Cattrysse, one of the most astonishing performances from a child actor I have ever seen, The Broken Circle Breakdown is a film to be savoured.

– The Broken Circle Breakdown, M.

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Digging deep for a yarn


Hinemoana Baker’s career was written in stone from an early age. “My accountant told me that you should do for a living whatever you were doing at age 8. He was counting money. I was writing.

“I was writing a novel on my sister’s typewriter. All I can remember is that there was a shipwreck in every chapter, possibly metaphorical.”

All these years later, Baker’s writing can’t be defined by one genre. And shipwrecks don’t get a look in, though the metaphorical ones might.

As a singer-songwriter she has put out five albums. She has published several books of poetry, including her most recent – waha/mouth.

The 46-year-old Wellingtonian has been a self-employed musician, writer, editor and broadcaster for 20 years, juggling lots of small and medium-sized contracts, so this year, as the Victoria University writer in residence, she has 12 months to focus her energies on one project. “Knowing you’re not going to starve is the main thing. But it’s a real luxury this year to say I’m just going to do one thing and that one thing is writing. And this project is probably some of the hardest work I’ve ever done.”

The subject matter is deeply personal.

One aspect deals with her father’s traumatic experiences at Sunnybank children’s home, a Catholic institution in Nelson that took in boys aged between 5 and 15, often from broken or troubled homes. Her father, Valentine Rangiwaititi Baker, 76, was at the home with his four brothers for three years between the late 1940s and early 1950s, says Baker, who is descended from Ngai Tahu, Ngati Raukawa, Ngati Toa and Te Ati Awa. The boys’ mother had died and their father couldn’t look after them. He didn’t want them split up, so put them all in the institution.

Valentine and his brothers had it rough at the home. “There were two nuns at Sunnybank who were particularly cruel and vicious. Imaginatively cruel. I think their punishments were extreme. They involved not just beatings, as if they weren’t bad enough – and for Dad that was almost daily – the kids would get into bed at night and compare welts. But when they tried to run away, they would be thrown into the duck pond. This happened even in winter. The pond was filthy and deep and Dad was only about 8 years old at the time. The nuns would get the other boys to hold them down. It was ugly.”

Her father remembers a time when a child did something that was perceived to be bad behaviour and no-one was owning up to it. “At the time the boys were digging the foundations for a meat safe, so the nuns took the toys that had been donated by the community for Christmas and made the boys put the toys one by one into the foundations and cement them in.”

The second aspect to her story is Baker’s own experience trying unsuccessfully to have a child.

Because she was in a same-sex relationship, that meant organising donors. With one miscarriage and many disappointments, it was a rough road to travel, she says.

Each month, when she discovered she was not pregnant, it felt like a death, but an invisible one and one she couldn’t talk about.

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“I couldn’t stop trying. I felt like it was such an obsession, an almost pathological obsession. It was really hard to connect with people who were not either doing it at the same time or had been through it. It was especially hard when everyone around me was getting pregnant.

“It was terrible for my partner at the time and it had a massive effect on our relationship. It would have been like being with a crazy person.”

After seven years of trying, Baker called it a day. She had no emotional headroom left to keep trying. Baker had depression in the past and this relentless pursuit was making her ill again.

“I was becoming not such a great prospect for motherhood. [Giving up] destroyed me. It was gutting. I was really dysfunctional for about 18 months.”

Baker says she learnt a hell of a lot from her ordeal about grief, not to mention anatomy and biology. Her sense of humour has taken a step towards the dark and inappropriate.

She has reframed her life towards things she can do without children. “I have slowly let other things in my life blossom. Being Maori, it’s such a whakapapa-based culture, everything is about genealogy. Even as a queer woman you sometimes wonder how you fit in to that. I have not felt alienated on that level, but I have really had to let go of another preconception of who I am as Maori and what that means.”

There are strong connections between her father’s story and her own, she says. At the beginning of the year she didn’t know how they were connected. But she knew they both had the same energy, a sort of twin impulse.

“Now I know why I want to tell those stories together. It’s to do with children and loss and burial.”

– The Dominion Post

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Life after starring on reality TV


Poor, nerdy Zac Klavs. Look at those glasses! See the way he stumbles over his words when he’s trying to talk to girls. And, seriously, why doesn’t he get a haircut

Beauty and the Geek, season five. Instead of attending his lectures at Victoria University in Wellington,

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How pirate radio ruled the airways


Dreams of launching pirate radio in Auckland made a breakthrough once the station was able to be broadcast out on the water.

“The key moment was getting a boat,” explains David Gapes, one of a group of men in their 20s who, in 1966, defied the New Zealand government and launched a pirate radio station in Auckland’s Hauraki Gulf.

“It wasn’t real until we actually got our mitts on a boat. Then we realised we could do it.”

The boat David is referring to is the Tiri – later replaced by Tiri II after the original ran aground on Great Barrier Island – which in December 1966 became the broadcast base of operations for the ground-breaking Radio Hauraki.

Fittingly enough, the first song the radio station played was Born Free.

Over the next three and a half years this small group of people would experience all manner of highs, lows, triumphs and even tragedy – but they would also clear the way for privately run commercial radio.

It is a story begging to be told – and while that story hit the big screen this year in the form of the drama 3 Mile Limit, it is also getting the Sunday Theatre TV treatment with the docu-drama Pirates Of The Airwaves.

David says he does not know why the tale is being retold now – just a couple of years shy of the station’s 50th anniversary.

“It has always bubbled along as a potential film subject, ever since it happened. Over the years I’ve been interviewed by lots of would-be producers for movie versions, so it was inevitable that one or two of them would come through and these both happened about the same time.

“But they’re both very different projects – one is based on fact but loosely fictional, and the other one is a docu-drama, so factual.”

Asked what his single most vivid memory of that turbulent time was, David, a journalist, struggles to pick just one.

“There were a lot, but I guess the obvious one is hearing the bloody thing on the air at last, from the comfort of my Orakei living room. Bang – there it was on the radio. That was pretty extraordinary. There were a lot of highlights, and quite a few lowlights too.”

Speaking of lowlights, one of the challenges Radio Hauraki faced in the early days was the wild weather in the Hauraki Gulf – weather which would result in them running aground several times.

“Yeah, it ran aground three times,” remembers David. “I was on board once – actually, it didn’t run aground then, it got smashed at the wharf on Great Barrier Island by a bad storm.

“I was on board then, when the mast came down and all that… That was a pretty hairy business.”

“Pretty hairy” barely seems to cover it. By the sounds of it, the undertaking was fraught with peril – physical, financial and mental.

“Obviously I was acutely aware of the dangers,” says David. “I was in a state of terror every day that something would go wrong.

“But luck stayed with us – right until the last day,” he adds, bitterness inherent in his voice as he recalls the death of announcer Rick Grant, lost overboard during Tiri II’s final voyage home in June 1970.

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“Would I have done anything differently Hell yes – if I knew what I know now, well, I wouldn’t have done it, because a friend got killed. But things don’t work that way.

“It was clear from the start it was a risky business, and that there was always danger involved, but we were all young. The fire was in our blood.”

Pirates Of The Airways (Sunday Theatre)
TV1
Sunday July 27

-TV Guide

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Home & Away star’s love dilemma


It might not quite be raining men but Jessica Grace Smith is definitely being showered with male attention.

As Summer Bay’s Denny, the Kiwi actress is at the centre of a love triangle involving two of Home And Away’s most popular heartthrobs – Chris Harrington (Johnny Ruffo) and Casey Braxton (Lincoln Younes).

Denny’s job at the bait shop owned by Summer Bay stalwart Alf Stewart (Ray Meagher) has also led to some heart-warming scenes between the pair.

It is all great fun, says the former Dannevirke farm girl, who is happy that her character shares her own tomboy inclinations.

“It’s really nice sharing that with her,” she says. “It means I don’t have to wear too many of the high heels that I’m terrible at walking in.”

But while she may not be a girly girl, Denny is not immune to romance.

“I assumed with a show like Home And Away that you are going to have love interests, but it was cool to know that I was going to have two guys; that it wasn’t going to be me and another girl fighting over someone,” Jessica says.

“I was like, ‘This is great. I’ll just sit back and they can fight it out’.”

The battle for Denny has reached the point where fans are starting to opt for Team Chris or Team Casey.

“Last night the… guy who works at the supermarket was like, ‘Hey, it’s Denny. You’ve got to stay with Chris, the way he looks at you.’ I was like ‘OK’,” Jessica says.

And while the boys really do come to blows, there is physical action of a different kind for Jessica when Casey and Denny kiss for the first time.

“I think the director told Lincoln to kiss her really good. It’s the longest kiss in Home And Away history,” she says, adding that her real-life boyfriend, also an actor, finds the storyline hilarious.

“I try to cover his eyes during the kissing scenes, but he doesn’t care.”

Which is lucky given her time on Home And Away is a dream come true for the 2009 Toi Whakaari: New Zealand Drama School graduate who moved across the Tasman after several successful roles in New Zealand on television (Spartacus: Gods Of The Arena) and movies (Diagnosis: Death, Sione’s 2: Unfinished Business).

“When I got to Australia, I was like, ‘I want to be on Home And Away. Working at the beach with a lot of hot guys; what more could you ask for'” says Jessica, who admits to being a huge fan of the show as a teenager.

However, after three years in Australia and many, many auditions, she did not think she would ever achieve her goal so made plans to move to Los Angeles.

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After losing the role of Kyle Braxton’s girlfriend Phoebe to Isabella Giovanazzi, Jessica was a week away from departing for the US when the show’s producers offered her the role of Denny.

However, Jessica did make use of that plane ticket during a break from filming and has not lost sight of her American plans.

“I have a green card so I have to keep going back to the States to maintain it,” she says, adding she has no regrets about the way things have turned out.

“Home And Away has been so much fun and I’ve made some of the best friends ever on the show.

“Me and Tai Hara (who plays Andy Barrett) and his girlfriend and my boyfriend are all going to Thailand for our mid-year break, like a double-date trip,” Jessica says.

“That’s been the best part and I’ve had great storylines as well. You should wait and see what’s coming up. It’s so exciting. I can’t wait for you to see it.”

Home And Away
TV2
Weeknights, 6.30pm

-TV Guide

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Robyn Malcolm’s dual role


Robyn Malcolm is stepping back from the screens and onto the stage for her performance in Bertolt Brecht’s Good Soul of Szechuan.

The play, which opens to the public this Saturday at Auckland’s Q Theatre, explores the line between good and evil.

Malcolm plays dual roles of Shen Te who she calls a “tart with a heart” and Shui Ta (“a total hardass”).

The play is set in a geographical combination of China and post-earthquake Christchurch, says Malcolm.

“So we’re in a devastated part of the world that is racked with poverty. Three gods appear and need somewhere to stay the night but no one will take them in because everyone is too poor.”

Prostitute, Shen Te, offers some hospitality and in return is gifted money. As a way to help her world she buys a tobacco shop.

“But because she’s surrounded by incredibly poor people who are only interested in their own survival she gets taken for a ride and her goodness is exploited.”

To survive she creates an alter-ego – her cousin, Shui Ta.

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