Hobson’s thrilling escape!

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The Tauranga festival that promoted itself as “the little festival with big ideas” certainly lived up to that billing. Famous names from the world of literature packed out the Baycourt Theatre and audiences went home with plenty to think about. As we approached the theatre on Sunday morning, people were leaving the first session of the day talking excitedly and debating what they had heard.

Our first session was a lively hour of discussion between Nicky Pellegrino (latest book Under Italian Skies) and author of The Antipodeans, Greg McGee. He turned out to be a highly engaging character, full of life and certainly full of stories. He is that unlikely mixture of a successful rugby player who went on to become a lawyer and then on to become a writer. Every element has given him wonderful stories to tell and he regaled us with hilarious tales of his time coaching rugby to Italian sides near Venice. The local dialect was so different to the Italian he was struggling to learn that for a while he was calling his whole team “flowers” instead of the local word for boys.

Nickey Pelligrino and Greg McGee Photo Marcus Hobson

Nickey Pelligrino and Greg McGee Photo Marcus Hobson

Commenting on his preference for being a lawyer or a writer, McGee simply said “It was much easier solving problems for people who weren’t real.”

I’m not sure if I was the only person in the audience who didn’t know that Greg McGee had also written two successful crime novels under the pseudonym Alix Bosco, but that is the fun of these events, learning stuff you didn’t know. Turns out that Greg’s agent used to start giggling when he rang, not sure if he was talking to Greg or Alix and if Greg would be wearing a dress. Greg feels that now her secret is out of the closet that he may not be able to write another novel as Alix, but I hope he does.

I enjoyed the way that Greg was able to flit between his writing styles, and explore the differences of writing novels, or writing for TV where you have to put your characters under pressure so that they reveal their true desires. This is obviously not like books where you spend a lot of time in characters heads.

On the strength of what I heard I bought a copy of The Antipodeans, since Books a Plenty were on hand to sell me a copy, and I could get it signed by the author.

Second up was the wonderfully knowledgeable Dame Anne Salmond, who fascinated a packed house with stories of how she got into Maori studies. Having gone to the United States as a Field Scholar, she realised that she knew almost nothing about her national heritage. She was lucky enough to listen to JFK in person speak to the visiting scholars on the White House lawn. I love hearing people tell stories like that, when they were part of something that now for us is history.

Anne Salmond is a tremendously charismatic lady who went to study for her doctorate in Anthropology at Cambridge (at the same time as raising her children). She is an expert in the Maori world, fluent in Te Reo and her love of the subject shines through. As she told stories of well-known figures from Maoridom with whom she worked and learnt, I could tell that she feels it is important for her to pass on the learning from these figures.

Now she not only writes, but also is actively involved in conservation and education. She spoke passionately about the need for inspiring teachers and supportive parents to motivate children to excel.

In recent years she has begun to champion our waterways as living forces and speak about the need to keep them free from pollution. As she rightly points out, water from underground aquifers can take 80 years or more to flow out. If we have been poisoning these with chemicals for the last fifty years we may not yet even know what damage we have caused.

I could have gladly listened to Dame Ann for hours and allowed her to get into detail about some of the projects she is passionate about. It is good to know that a champion like this often works with some of our biggest corporations on matters of environment and education. If anyone can help Air New Zealand to be the greenest airline in the world, I am sure Anne Salmond can.

The final Act for us at our Sunday of escape was a story telling feature, called appropriately “The Great Escape”. Six of the festival speakers gave us the benefit of a short seven minute piece from their life, their work or their imagination. Nicky Pellegrino talked about coming to New Zealand with the aim of finding a husband and being introduced to someone squeezed into what she described as a “sausage suit”. Donovan Bixley narrated the dangers of drunken toga parties where being wrapped in the same sheet as someone else is not always ideal when trying to use the lift.

Scientist Siouxsie Wiles Photo Marcus Hobson

Scientist Siouxsie Wiles Photo Marcus Hobson

Pink haired scientist Siouxsie Wiles gave us a history of helpful bugs, every one of which that was the next great thing and then stopped working. Geoff talked about his love of film and also New Zealand’s little cinemas. Conservationist Rob McGowen talked about what he has learnt about the healing properties of our native plants and made the wonderful comment that the world will live without us but we cannot live without the world. And finally Greg McGee again had the audience rolling around with laughter as he described childhood and growing up in Oamaru. His father’s view of punishment for trying out a bit of teenage shoplifting was to enroll him in singing practice, the church choir and boxing classes to keep him out of trouble. It seemed to have the opposite effect, with hilarious consequences.

A quick taste of just three of the escape Festival’s many events. If I had but more time (and money), I would have gone to more features. The one man Shakespeare performance, No Holds Bard, by Michael Hurst was apparently stunning. The concept of Macbeth telling Hamlet that he would have made a better Dane sounds wildly inventive and amusing. Elsewhere Peter Gordon taught us how to cook and The Human Library opened eyes to a completely different type of performance. Well done to escape Director Claire Maybe and her team for putting on such a wonderful event. Let us hope that popularity continues to grow year on year, seats all fill up and we can have another great festival next year.

I could have seen more!! Photo Marcus Hobson

I could have seen more!! Photo Marcus Hobson

Photo0586Marcus Hobson is the ARTbop Literary Editor, regular book reviewer, writer, and the Secretary of the Tauranga Writers group Marcus has been, and continues to be, lots of things. An aspiring author of both novels and reviews, he has always said he wants to be a writer and 40 years later is making that come true. He has in the past done such varied things as study ancient and mediaeval history at Uni in London, worked as an archaeologist, as an economist in central and southern Africa, and as truck driver in a quarry. About two years ago he relocated to the beautiful Bay from a finance job in Auckland. He is a lover of art, the written word and a full-time fanatical book collector, with over 3,000 volumes on his shelves. He lives close to Katikati with his wife and sometimes their three daughters, two cats, a library and the odd chicken. Marcus is currently working on a “factional” work about World War One.

If you would like to contribute your original book reviews to ARTbop WORDS please forward them to info@artbop.co.nz for the attention of the Literary Editor Marcus Hobson. We prefer the work is emailed in docx format We appreciate one or two jpg images (not enormous ones as they become an uploading issue for ARTbop)

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