Dianna Fuemana
Dianna Fuemana (born 1973) is a New Zealand Pacific writer, director and performer. She writes for theatre and screen. Her solo play Mapaki was the first that brought a New Zealand born Niue perspective to the professional stage. In 2008 Fuemana won the Pacific Innovation and Excellence Award, at the Creative New Zealand Pasifika Arts Award.[1] Fuemana was one of nine women writer-directors of the 2019 feature film Vai.
Biography
Dianna Fuemana was born in New Zealand in 1973 and is one of seven children. Her mother is American Samoan and her father Togavale[2] is Niuean.[3] The singer Pauly Fuemana was her cousin.[4] When she was a child she acted in church plays in her community. She went to Henderson High School in Auckland as a teenager, while she was there she attended a short course in performing arts run by Cath Cardiff and Jay Laga'aia.[3] In 2005 she graduated with honours with a Master of Creativity and Performing Arts from Auckland University.[1]
Career
In 1997 Dianna Fuemana was one of three women acting in the play Frangipani Perfume written by Makerita Urale and after this in 1999 Fuemana wrote and performed in her own play, a solo show called Mapaki.[5][6] For this she was nominated at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards for Outstanding New Writer and Best Upcoming Actress of the Year. After being performed in New Zealand Mapaki toured across the United States and in Athens, Greece.[1]
Her screen work includes writing and directing the short film Sunday Fun Day, which premiered at the New Zealand International Film Festival and includes the perspective of a transgender teenager and a solo mother.[5] She says of Sunday Fun Day:
This story came from the feeling of ‘vulnerability,’ as a mother raising teens. From my experience, teens don’t really understand vulnerability from a mother’s perspective. We have a load of films in New Zealand that focus on the child’s perspective but not from the strength and humor of a mother’s.[5]
Fuemana was one of nine writer-directors on the New Zealand Pacific Island feature film Vai released in 2019.[7][8]
Plays
- 1999 - Mapaki - writer and performer
- 2001 - Jingle Bells - writer[1]
- 2004 - The Packer - writer. Presentations include New Zealand, Australia, Edinburgh Fringe Festival[1]
- 2005 - My Mother Dreaming - writer[1]
- 2006 - Falemalama - writer[1]
- 2012 - Birds
Screen
- Interrogation - TV - writer of episodes[1]
- Good Hands - TV - writer of episodes[1]
- Sunday Fun Day - short film - writer and director
- Vai - (2019) - film - writer/director - made in sections this film is also directed by eight other Pasifika women filmmakers: Sharon and Nicole Whippy, Becs Arahanga, Amberley Jo Aumua, Matasila Freshwater, Mīria George, 'Ofa-ki Guttenbeil-Likiliki and Marina Alofagia McCartney.[9]
Awards
2008 - Pacific Innovation and Excellence Award, Creative New Zealand Pasifika Arts Award.
Personal life
Dianna Fuemana has three children and has attracted media attention as the Wife of Jay Ryan.[5] Her parents have been supportive of her career and her father wrote the song that opens her play Mapaki. Her father died in 2000 and she dedicated the Auckland season of Mapaki to him.[2]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Dianna Fuemana". Playmarket New Zealand. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
- ^ a b Budd, Susan (30 June 2000). "Dramatic tribute to a father's love". NZ Herald. ISSN 1170-0777. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
- ^ a b Warrington, Lisa; O'Donnell, David (2017). Floating Islanders : Pasifika theatre in Aotearoa. Dunedin, New Zealand: Otago University Press. ISBN 978-1-988531-07-6. OCLC 994638351.
- ^ Christian, Dionne (14 February 2007). "New face in powerful Niuean drama". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
- ^ a b c d Rogers, Victor. "SUNDAY FUN DAY / DIANNA FUEMANA". thecoconet.tv. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
- ^ Atkinson, Laurie; O'Donnell, David, eds. (2013). Playmarket 40 : 40 years of playwriting in New Zealand. Atkinson, Laurie,, O'Donnell, David, 1956-. [Wellington] New Zealand. ISBN 978-0-908607-45-7. OCLC 864712401.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "Vai". NZ On Screen. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
- ^ Chapman, Madeleine (5 April 2019). "Across the Pacific: Vai and the beauty in a chorus of voices". The Spinoff. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
- ^ "Vai". New Zealand Film Commission. Retrieved 22 June 2020.