Rawiri paratene biography definition
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Rawiri Paratene in the Globe Shakespeare Global Tour
Friday, 25 April 2014, 4:14 pm
Press Release: Rawiri Paratene
Press release
For the past seven weeks veteran actor, Rāwiri Paratene has been in London, back at Shakespeare’s Globe theatre, in rehearsals for the World Tour of Hamlet. It has just finished its previews at Middle temple hall, where Shakespeare played in the original production of ‘Twelfth Night’.
This ‘never been done before’ venture opens at The Globe on April 23rd, 2014 (Shakespeare’s 450th birthday) then will be taken to EVERY country on the planet – 205 in all – over the next two years. The tour gets to NZ in early June 2015 and ends back at the Globe on April 23rd, 2016 (the 200th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death) which will also mark the end of Dominic Dromgoole’s term as Artistic Director.
Rāwiri is the only non-British based actor in the cast.
His relationship with the Globe began in 2007 when he did the International Artists Fellowship and was asked back by Dromgoole to play Friar Lawrence in ‘Romeo & Juliet’ in 2009; He also appeared as the villain in Euripides’ “Helen’ that year, and returned to play Gloucester in ‘King Lear’ last year. In 2012 Rāwiri took a production of ‘Troilus & Cressida’, which was performed in the Māori language,
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Intrepid Journeys - Nicaragua (Rawiri Paratene)
So hang around places guideline travel
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Whale Rider
2002 film by Niki Caro
This article is about the film. For the novel, see The Whale Rider.
Whale Rider is a 2002 New Zealand drama film written and directed by Niki Caro. Based on the 1987 novel The Whale Rider by Witi Ihimaera, the film stars Keisha Castle-Hughes as Kahu Paikea Apirana, a twelve-year-old Māori girl whose ambition is to become the chief of the tribe. Her grandfather believes that this is a role reserved for males only.
The film was a coproduction between New Zealand and Germany. It was shot on location in Whangara, the setting of the novel. The world premiere was on 9 September 2002, at the Toronto International Film Festival. The film received critical acclaim upon its release. At age 13, Keisha Castle-Hughes became the youngest nominee for the Academy Award for Best Actress before she was surpassed by Quvenzhané Wallis, at age 9, for Beasts of the Southern Wild, in 2012, less than a decade later. The film earned $41.4 million[3] on a NZ$9,235,000 budget. In 2005, the film was named on the BFI List of the 50 Films You Should See By the Age of 14.
Plot
[edit]The film's plot follows the story of Paikea Apirana. The village leader should be the first-born son, a direct patrilineal descendant of Paikea, the Whale Ride