Offering a roller-coaster of emotion with all the light and dark of human experience, Over My Dead Body: LITTLE BLACK BITCH returns to the stage in 2020 in its fully realised form. Embarking on a three-centre tour with two seasons in Auckland before heading north to Whangarei, this fully professional version of the award-winning script will play March 3-21.
When Matiu took his own life, his little dog Toto took off with the suicide note. The whole community has been turned upside down. When the dog turns up outside Rangi's window he knows he must help. He must adopt her - whangai - and he must protect and hide her. But as he feeds her, his toto (blood) begins to run deeper and darker than ever before. Rangitoto has awoken. The earth begins to dance, and the sky bleeds. She's little. She's black. She's a bitch.
Winning the 2018 Adam Play Award for Best Play by a Māori Playwright, LITTLE BLACK BITCH is a powerful exploration into the way that suicide affects communities and individuals. Grappling a powerful and hard to discuss topic with grace, nuance and humour, writer and director Jason Te Mete blends mythology and waiata in this black comedy that has been partially inspired by his own history. Channelling his personal experiences wrangling with his own black dog of depression into his debut work as a playwright, this bi-lingual work will be performed by a stellar cast of seven Māori actors - including Bronwyn Turei, Matu Ngaropo and Akina Edmonds.
"Little Black Bitch will not necessarily find a solution to our horrific suicide statistics, but it will provide a platform to have an open kōrero, inspire healing, and remind us that it is the responsibility of the whole whānau to raise our rangatahi and encourage them to take their 'dog' for a walk now and then," said writer and director Jason Te Mete.Performances will take place at Mangere Arts Centre, Auckland - March 3-8, TAPAC, Auckland - March 11-14, at OneSixSix, Whangarei - March 18-21.
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