Pork and Poll Taxes 人頭猪税
It all begins with an idea.
A play by Talia Pua
1890s New Zealand. A family struggling to forge a better life by sending their men to New Gold Mountain, must reconsider their beliefs on belonging, sacrifice and family when the father chooses to immigrate.
Role
Playwright
Director
Year
2021
Producers
Proudly Asian Theatre
Hand Pulled Collective
Funders
Creative New Zealand
Chinese Poll Tax Heritage Trust
Awards
Pork and Poll Taxes underwent development in 2020 thanks to the support of Creative New Zealand and Chinese Poll Tax Heritage Trust.
It had its sold out premiere season at the Herald Theatre, Auckland, 2021.
Talia’s playwriting and directing debut, Pork and Poll Taxes, explores the early Chinese immigrant experience in New Zealand. Set in the 1890s amidst the backdrop of increasing civil unrest and poverty in China, and the mounting racism in New Zealand which culminates in the raising of poll tax from £10 to £100.
Premiere Season Credits
Producer: Marianne Infante
Assistant Producer: Natalya Mandich-Dohnt
Directing Mentor: Chye-Ling Huang
Script Advisor: Renee Liang
Movement Director: Yin-Chi Lee
Language Coach and Cantonese Translator: Audrey Chan
Marketing Manager: Alyssa Medel-Khew
Stage Manager: Lisa Joe
Set Design: Micheal McCabe
Sound Design: Nikita Tu-Bryant
Costuming: Wilson Ong Jun Liang
Lighting: Paul Bennett
Props Design: Cinta Damerell
Photography: John Rata
Graphic Design: Alyssa Pua
Script Development Movement Workshop
Script Development Credits
Producer: Natalya Mandich-Dohnt
Mentors: Chye-Ling Huang & Marianne Infante, Proudly Asian Theatre
Dramaturgy: Renee Liang
Movement Director: Yin-Chi Lee
Script Advisor: Eleanor Bishop (Asian Ink)
Script Development Table Read
Script Developed with
Proudly Asian Theatre
Asian Ink
Red Leap Theatre – The Greenhouse Programme
How to Throw a Chinese Funeral 婆婆再见
A play by Jill Kwan
When Lily and Anna’s grandmother passes away, they must reunite with their family in Malaysia to orchestrate her Taoist funeral - a custom lost even to their headstrong mum and outrageous Auntie.
Role
Set Design
Year
2023
Co-Produced By:
Hand Pulled Collective
Proudly Asian Theatre
Venue
Basement Mainspace
Creative Team
Co-Producers - Natalya Mandich-Dohnt, John Rata
Playwright & Director - Jill Kwan
Lighting & Scenet Design, Operator - Rae Longshaw-Park
Props Design - Cinta Damerell
Props Assistant - JingCheng Zhao
Set Design Mentor - John Veryt
Set Assistant - Tema Pua
Shadow Puppetry & Projections Design - Darryl Chin
Shadow Puppet Assistant - Yin-Chi Lee
Music Composition & Sound Design - Fiona Chua
Directing Mentor - Ahi Karunaharn
Dramaturge - Renee Liang
Cantonese Translation & Coach - Audrey Chan
Marketing Mananger - Jennifer Cheuk
Photography - John Rata
Stage Manager - Lisa Joe
Cast - Lisa Zhang, Ann An, Janet Tan, Yoong Ru Heng, Mustaq Missouri and Charles Chan
What drew me to this project was the fact that it was based in Malaysia. As a New Zealand born Malaysian-Chinese, I cannot recall any other time I have heard my parents’ accents and our culture depicted on a New Zealand stage. Jill’s directorial vision was ambitious, involving puppetry and projection, which made for fun design challenges.
婆婆 Po Po’s altar is the obtrusive “mountain” at the centre of the story, which all the characters and plot revolves around. Drawing upon Taoist and Buddhist beliefs, that the spirit remains on earth for a few days before going to heaven, I wanted to extend the altar to the entire house. I drew inspiration from the materiality of Chinese paper offerings and joss paper.
In Chinese ancestor worship, burning paper offerings is a physical expression of kinship and filial piety to ensure the wellbeing of the deceased in the afterlife.
Suspended white screens displaying the architecture of the house form the joss paper backdrop to the golden centre of the altar. This transforms the house into a transient space, the meeting place between the living and the dead, past and present. As character Yi explains, “ [婆婆 Po Po] is still with us!”.
Rituals of Similarity
A contemporary dance duet by Brittany and Natasha Kohler for Dance Plant Collective, unravelling the intricate layers of twinhood.
Role
Set Design
Year
2023
Co-Presented By:
Dance Plant Collective and Q Theatre
Venue
Q Loft
Creative Team
Choreographers and Performers - Brittany Kohler and Natasha Kohler
Producer - Julie Zhu
Costume Designer - Zoë McNicholas
Lighting Designer & Op - Paul Bennett
Sound Designer - Lucien Johnson
This was a very special collaboration. Being a twin myself, there was an instant understanding which made for a seamless design process.
At the start of the project, Brit and Tash presented me with a beautiful mood board of inflated spaces and soft moldable forms, all in a striking colour scheme of pinks and oranges. We wanted to transport the audience into the world of the womb.
The drape of the sheer curtains echoes the shape of ultrasound scans and cocoons the dancers in a womb-like arena that feels altogether otherworldly yet familiar, enveloping yet expansive, homely yet sacred.
Photographs by Amanda Billing
Not Woman Enough
It all begins with an idea.
Not Woman Enough is a shocking, gut-wrenching and snort-laughingly, bare-all conversation into the wonder of womanhood through the lens of three different Asian women.
Role
Set & Prop Design
Year
2023
Venue
Basement Theatre
Mainspace
Creative Team
Presented by Proudly Asian Theatre
Director: Sanada Chatterjee
Playwright: Hweiling Ow
Producer: Natasha Daniel
Lighting: Rachael Longshaw-Park
Sound: Carawei Gao
Stage Manager: Ariadne Baltazar
Premiere Cast: Shervonne Grierson, Isla Mayo, Anjula Prakash
To make the set, I only used second-hand textiles, primarily bras, bedsheets and stockings, which I sourced from opshops. This creative constraint led to many interesting discoveries on ways to transform these ‘feminine’ textiles into biomorphic sculptures that are both beautiful and repulsive.
For me, this really capture the struggle each of the characters have with womanhood: something that is both beautiful and messy, and ultimately human.
I was very much inspired by the term ‘bare all’, taken from the show’s blurb. Each of the three women in the play suffer from a female-related medical condition. This got me interested in exploring rupturing surfaces, cancerous growths and body horror. I took a lot of inspiration from the striking yonic forms of Magdalena Abakonowicz and visceral body horror sculptures of Tina Kim.