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With the blessing and support of Te Arikinui Te Ātairangikaahu in 2005, Te Pou o Mangataawhiri (TPM) was reformed under the leadership of Ngāria and Tony Walker. Since its return, TPM has represented Tainui waka at the past three Te Matatini Ffstivals, and in each one, claiming a spot in the Top 9 placings. Formed by Princess Te Puea Herangi in the 1920s, Te Pou o Mangatawhiri began as a concert party to raise funds for the construction of Tūrangawaewae Marae in Ngāruawāhia. TPM was in limbo for decades but, after two unsuccessful attempts, the rōpū was revived in 2005, and it has since been finding plenty of inspiration from its past. The rōpū is tutored by the Walkers who are both school teachers and started tutoring kapa haka at Bernard Fergusson school in Ngāruawāhia. Most of the members of the group are former school students or their families. Te Pou o Mangatāwhiri competed in the 2013 Matatini competition hosted by Te Arawa in Rotorua. Although they did not secure a spot in the top 3 placings, they took out the Haka Composition and Waiata Hou categories, and placed third in the Poi Composition. For the past year, Te Pou o Mangatāwhiri have taken the plunge and helping the homeless of Hamilton under the initiative the Hamilton Homeless Trust. Female leader Melaina Huaki says, "This is a way for my team to be inspired and continue on the philosophies of Te Puea and that's our kaupapa we take with us down to Christchurch." Followed by brief highlights/recap of the final three Te Ihu groups.

Te Matatini 2015. Every two years, Te Matatini organises the Te Matatini National Kapa Haka Festival, where top kapa haka teams from New Zealand and Australia compete for the honour of being crowned the best of the best. The festival started in 1972 and is now the world’s largest celebration of Māori traditional performing arts, attracting over 30,000 performers, supporters and visitors. The competition is held over four days with 45 teams split into three pools, Te Ihu, Te Haumi and Te Kei. The three teams with the highest combined marks from each pool will compete in the competition finals. The nine finalists are then judged afresh to determine the new Toa Whakaihuwaka - overall agreggate winner. Kapa haka teams are required to perform six disciplines within their performance piece - whakaeke (a choreographed entry), mōteatea (traditional chant), poi (light ball swung on the end of a rope), waiata-ā-ringa (action song), haka and whakawātea (exit). They must perfect every discipline in a polished 30 minute performance.

Primary Title
  • Te Matatini 2015
Episode Title
  • Day 1: Te Ihu - 15. Te Pou-o-Mangataawhiri
Date Broadcast
  • Thursday 5 March 2015
Start Time
  • 18 : 34
Finish Time
  • 19 : 10
Duration
  • 36:00
Channel
  • Te Reo
Broadcaster
  • Maori Television Service
Programme Description
  • Te Matatini 2015. Every two years, Te Matatini organises the Te Matatini National Kapa Haka Festival, where top kapa haka teams from New Zealand and Australia compete for the honour of being crowned the best of the best. The festival started in 1972 and is now the world’s largest celebration of Māori traditional performing arts, attracting over 30,000 performers, supporters and visitors. The competition is held over four days with 45 teams split into three pools, Te Ihu, Te Haumi and Te Kei. The three teams with the highest combined marks from each pool will compete in the competition finals. The nine finalists are then judged afresh to determine the new Toa Whakaihuwaka - overall agreggate winner. Kapa haka teams are required to perform six disciplines within their performance piece - whakaeke (a choreographed entry), mōteatea (traditional chant), poi (light ball swung on the end of a rope), waiata-ā-ringa (action song), haka and whakawātea (exit). They must perfect every discipline in a polished 30 minute performance.
Episode Description
  • With the blessing and support of Te Arikinui Te Ātairangikaahu in 2005, Te Pou o Mangataawhiri (TPM) was reformed under the leadership of Ngāria and Tony Walker. Since its return, TPM has represented Tainui waka at the past three Te Matatini Ffstivals, and in each one, claiming a spot in the Top 9 placings. Formed by Princess Te Puea Herangi in the 1920s, Te Pou o Mangatawhiri began as a concert party to raise funds for the construction of Tūrangawaewae Marae in Ngāruawāhia. TPM was in limbo for decades but, after two unsuccessful attempts, the rōpū was revived in 2005, and it has since been finding plenty of inspiration from its past. The rōpū is tutored by the Walkers who are both school teachers and started tutoring kapa haka at Bernard Fergusson school in Ngāruawāhia. Most of the members of the group are former school students or their families. Te Pou o Mangatāwhiri competed in the 2013 Matatini competition hosted by Te Arawa in Rotorua. Although they did not secure a spot in the top 3 placings, they took out the Haka Composition and Waiata Hou categories, and placed third in the Poi Composition. For the past year, Te Pou o Mangatāwhiri have taken the plunge and helping the homeless of Hamilton under the initiative the Hamilton Homeless Trust. Female leader Melaina Huaki says, "This is a way for my team to be inspired and continue on the philosophies of Te Puea and that's our kaupapa we take with us down to Christchurch." Followed by brief highlights/recap of the final three Te Ihu groups.
Classification
  • Unknown
Owning Collection
  • Television Vault
Broadcast Platform
  • Television
Languages
  • English
  • Maori
Captions
Live Broadcast
  • Yes
Rights Statement
  • Made for the University of Auckland's educational use as permitted by the Screenrights Licensing Agreement.
Subjects
  • Kapa haka
Genres
  • Dance
  • Music
  • Performing arts
Hosts
  • Mātai Rangi Smith (Host)
Contributors
  • Kahurangi Maxwell (Interviewer)
  • Chey Milne (Interviewer)
  • Pango (Production Unit)
  • Te Wānanga o Raukawa (Funder)
  • Te Māngai Pāho (Funder)
Subjects
  • Kapa haka