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Red Mole (theatre company)

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Red Mole was an avant garde theatre company from New Zealand. It was founded by Alan Brunton and Sally Rodwell in 1974.[1]

Biography

Red Mole was formed in 1974 by Alan Brunton and Sally Rodwell. Other members of the company included Deborah Hunt, Ian Prior, Jan Preston, Rose Beauchamp (Wedde), Jean McAllister and Martin Edmond.[2] Red Mole was one of the best known alternative theatre companies in New Zealand.[3] In 1977, they toured New Zealand with Split Enz.[4] Red Mole later travelled internationally. From 1978 to 1988 it was based in the United States and Europe.[1][5]

In both New Zealand and overseas, Red Mole was backed by the band Red Alert.[6]

Red Mole was known for its rough, political and experimental style. Its productions often combined a low life New Zealand style humour and sentiment with high-art European Modernism.[7] Authorship of Red Mole works was complex as Brunton and Rodwell wrote for the company both individually and together, but many other works were devised by the entire company.[7]

In 1979, Sam Neill wrote and directed a documentary on Red Mole, titled Red Mole On the Road.[3]

Red Mole created a manifesto with five principles:

  1. to preserve romance.
  2. to escape programmed behaviour by remaining erratic.
  3. to preserve the unclear and inexplicit idioms of everyday speech.
  4. to abhor the domination of any person over any other.
  5. to expend energy.[8]

With the deaths of Brunton in 2002 and Rodwell in 2006, Red Mole effectively dissolved.[9]

Works[10]

  • Wimsy and the Seven Spectacles (1974)
  • Siddhartha (1975)
  • Cabaret Paris Spleen (1975)
  • Vargos Circus (1976)
  • Ace Follies (1976)
  • Towards Bethlemhem (1976)
  • Cabaret Pekin 1949 (1976)
  • Cabaret Capital Strut (1977)
  • Slaughter On Cockroach Ave (1977)
  • Pacific Nights (1977)
  • Ghost Rite (1978)
  • Our World (1978)
  • Crazy In The Streets (1978)
  • Bitter Lemons (1978)
  • Goin' To Djibouti (1978 and 1979)
  • Last Days of Mankind (1979)
  • Blood In The Cracks (1979)
  • Dead Fingers Walk (1979)
  • Numbered Days In Paradise (1979)
  • Lord Galaxy's Travelling Players (1980)
  • I'll Never Dance Down Bugis St Again (1980)
  • The Redmole Version (1980)
  • The Early Show/The Late Show (1980)[11]
  • The Excursion (1982)
  • Childhood of A Saint (1982)
  • 2 Quacks on Io (1983)
  • The Rise & Fall of T D Lysenko (1983)
  • Liberty Is Not Won With Flowers (1983)
  • Dreamings End (1984)
  • Poems for the Young At Hearts (1984)
  • Cabaret Katti Mundoo (1985)
  • Circi Sfumato (1985)
  • Lost Chants For The Living (1986)
  • Playtime (1987)
  • Hour of Justice (1987 and 1988)
  • Gas Attack!! (1988)
  • New Hope (1988)[12]
  • Comrade Savage (1989)[13]

References

  1. ^ a b Cardy, Tom. "Theatre Revolutionary". NZEPC: New Zealand Electronic Poetry Centre. NZEPC: New Zealand Electronic Poetry Centre. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
  2. ^ Atkinson, Laurie. "Actors and Acting - The rise of professional theatre, 1960 to 1980". Te Ara - The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Te Ara - The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Red Mole on the Road | Short Film | NZ On Screen". www.nzonscreen.com. NZ On Screen. Retrieved 2017-08-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^ "Art New Zealand 10 - Red Mole". www.art-newzealand.com. Winter 1978. Retrieved 2017-08-16.
  5. ^ Edmond, Murray (August 2002). "Jacket 18 - Alan Brunton, 1946–2002: A Memoir". jacketmagazine.com. Retrieved 2017-08-16.
  6. ^ "The Drongos - AudioCulture". www.audioculture.co.nz. Retrieved 2017-08-16.
  7. ^ a b Edmond, Murray. "From Cabaret To Apocalypse: Red Mole's Cabaret Capital Strut And Ghost Rite". NZEPC: New Zealand Electronic Poetry Centre. NZEPC: New Zealand Electronic Poetry Centre. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
  8. ^ Edmond, Murray (2014). Then It Was Now Again: Selected Critical Writing. Pokeno, New Zealand: Atuanui Press. p. 96.
  9. ^ Calder, Peter. "Obituary: Alan Brunton". New Zealand Herald. New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
  10. ^ "NZEPC - Alan Brunton - RED MOLE : A CHRONOLOGY OF WORKS 1974-2002". www.nzepc.auckland.ac.nz. Retrieved 2017-08-16.
  11. ^ Murphy, Roy. "Red Mole Burrows into Broadway". murphyroy.com. Phoenix Story Productions llc. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  12. ^ Brunton, Alan (1989). A Red Mole Sketch Book. Wellington, New Zealand: Victoria University Press. pp. 79–83.
  13. ^ "Red Mole". TeAra.gov.nz.