1998 Performing Arts

The Performing Arts Stamp Issue.
This post was a hard one for us as none of us knows anything about the subjects behind these stamps. Since we have almost covered every stamp issue of New Zealand this one had to be included as well. We've decided to rely on information from the NZ Post website. 

The Stamps.

40c - Modern Dance.
Dance in New Zealand incorporated a wide variety of influences, from the indigenous tradition of Māori kapa haka (2011 Kapa Haka) to the slow movement of Japanese Butoh. While acclaimed New Zealand choreographers like Douglas Wright danced in theatres in New Zealand and overseas, a dance group like Footnote Dance Company toured schools up and down the country, introducing young people to dance through performing and workshops.
New Zealand's first fully professional modern dance company, Impulse Dance Theatre Company, was established in 1975. Since then scores of talented choreographers have given New Zealand a reputation for producing work which is distinctive to this country, paying little respect to overseas trends and instead building on the rhythms to be found in our place in the Pacific.
Important in this development was the formation of Limbs Dance Company in 1977. Limbs helped make modern dance a popular part of New Zealand culture, taking dance out into parks, halls and schools, and inspiring an independent spirit in a new generation of dancers and choreographers in the process. Since Limbs demise in the late 1980s, established choreographers have passionately continued to explore new ways of moving and presenting dance.
Dancers like Shona McCullagh in her work Quick and Michael Parmenter in The Dark Forest have explored on stage the interaction between dance and other forms like theatre and video. Groups like Footnote Dance Company have continued to make inroads into the community. Dance has a youth and vitality which saw it increasingly represent New Zealand in all its cultural colour, from young dancer Claire O'Neil's comment on city cafe culture in Caffeine to Sunny Amey, Jan Bolwell and Keri Kaa's combination of haka and the highland fling in Takitoru.

80c - Music.
New Zealand orchestras, chamber groups, ensembles and choirs have developed to an international standard of excellence since the late 1950s. The New Zealand National Orchestra (now the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra) was formed in 1946. In 1974 it was off on its first overseas tour, with the now internationally heralded pianist Michael Houston and with works by New Zealand composers like Edwin Carr and Douglas Lilburn.
Conductors like Sir William Southgate have taken our music to the orchestras of Europe and New Zealand musicians have gotten invitations to tour worldwide. Since composer Douglas Lilburn followed the lead of poets and writers in the 1930s, many others have striven to express the sounds of New Zealand in their music. In recent years, for example, there have been Eve de Castro Robinson's evocation of the Tui and Kākāpō for bass clarinet and Gareth Farr's exploration of rhythm reflecting New Zealand's place in Polynesia and position on the fault line. 1986 Music.
Indigenous tradition and a do-it-yourself mentality have also contributed to some innovative musical developments in New Zealand. Whilst Phil Dadson's ensemble From Scratch performed worldwide with instruments created out of everything from PVC pipes to hub-caps, Hirini Melbourne and Richard Nunns revived the forgotten skills of making traditional Māori instruments. These could be heard in everything from the orchestral work of composers like Jaz Coleman to the popular music of Moana and the Moahunters.

$1.00 - Opera.
With opera, New Zealanders have proven to the world that they can sing scales as well as they can scale mountains. Soprano Kiri Te Kanawa ( has become the symbol of New Zealand artistic achievement ever since she first stepped on to the stage at Covent Garden in England in 1971. Many other singers, like soprano Dame Malvina Major and bassists Donald McIntyre and Inia Te Wiata, have gone overseas to find work and returned home as stars.
Events like Auckland's Opera in the Park signalled new found public popularity for opera. What many don't realise, however, is that New Zealand had a grand operatic tradition long before the quality work of regional companies of today, like Opera New Zealand, Wellington City Opera and Canterbury Opera.
From 1862 until the introduction of cinema in the early 20th century, overseas touring opera companies travelled a well-trodden circuit around the country. Many of the singers from these opera companies eventually stayed in New Zealand and needing work, set up their own schools. For over 40 years, the Mobil Song Quest has proved to be a professional testing ground for the inheritors of this tradition.
Composers have also been jostling with the likes of Verdi and Puccini for space on the stage. From Alfred Hill's 1923 opera Tapu, through to Jack Body's opera on the life of Rewi Alley in 1998, Alley, New Zealand writers have not been shy about being operatic.

$1.20 - Theatre.
New Zealand plays have had a phenomenal success in local theatres, like Roger Hall's Social Climbers, in which a group of school teachers gets trapped by rain in a tramping hut, and Anthony McCarten and Stephen Sinclair's Ladies Night, the tale of a group of blokes who find work as strippers. New Zealanders were able to both take pride in their country and laugh at themselves on stage.
New Zealand theatre had become a melting pot for performance traditions and fresh ideas about local culture, a place for issues relating to New Zealand to be played out. Māori theatre groups, for example, have brought together Māori and European traditions to reflect New Zealand's biculturalism, and plays like John Broughton's Mana and Briar Grace Smith's Purapurawhetu have interwoven Māori myth with contemporary social situations. Increasingly, New Zealand's place in the Pacific Theatre has looked at the way Polynesian people have ingrained into New Zealand urban culture.
It wasn't until the 1950s with the New Zealand Players that professional theatre began to develop. In the 1960s the formation of regional theatres like Auckland's Mercury and Wellington's Downstage, and the institution of a national drama school in 1970, fostered New Zealand performers and directors and encouraged New Zealand writers to explore issues relating to the country's identity. Previously Bruce Mason's first plays in the 1950s were met with uproar. Today it is plays by Mason like End of the Golden Weather and The Pohutukawa Tree which remind us of our history.

$1.50 - Song.
New Zealand has little of the folk song tradition that gave Australia Waltzing Matilda. Most of the settlers who came to New Zealand were more skilled and educated, and the folk traditions less strong. Māori however, had developed their own strong tradition of waiata or song, passed down as a connection to their past. These were songs to be sung publicly at both important occasions and in everyday situations, used to express feelings, sway emotions or convey a message. 1986 Music.
With the arrival of Europeans, Māori embraced the English choral traditions and waiata became influenced by Western melody and harmony. No wonder then that New Zealand's answer to Waltzing Matilda would probably be Pōkarekare Ana or How Great Thou Art, as sung in both English and Māori.
World War brought with it a stronger European song tradition, as New Zealanders from a distance sung of home and expressed a sense of newfound pride. Then in 1949 with the pressing of Ruru Karaitiana's Blue Smoke and Ken Avery's Paekākāriki, a local recording industry was born. With songs like Puha and Pākehā and the Howard Morrison Quartet's My Old Man's an All Black New Zealand culture became something to sing about.
Popular songs like Dave Dobbyn and Herbs' Slice of Heaven were distinctly Kiwi without the need to state it and rap groups like Dam Native and guitar groups like The Muttonbirds looked to New Zealand as well as American sounds.

$1.80 - Ballet.
In 1997 The Royal New Zealand Ballet had a large touring company and received acclaim overseas. In 1953, when founder Paul Gnatt from the Royal Danish Ballet took the company on its first tour, only four dancers, a pianist and a stage manager hit the road. With the historical elegance of its steps and accessories like the tutu and pointe shoes, ballet may seem like one of the most traditional of the performing arts. Its professional history in New Zealand is relatively short - the first ballet examinations weren't held here until 1935. 2003 Royal New Zealand Ballet.
In 1997, New Zealand's national company was joined by regional companies like Christchurch's Southern Ballet Theatre, whose work demonstrated the talent and discipline of ballet dancing throughout the country. The standard of The Royal New Zealand Ballet Company has also been internationally recognised. In 1998, for example, the company was given the great honour of presenting a work by one of the world's greatest living choreographers, Jiri Kylian.
Meanwhile, ballet choreographers in New Zealand continued to explore new ground, finding new ways of making ballet relevant for today's audiences. Classics like The Nutcracker and Swan Lake continued to be performed and inspired thousands of children to take up ballet classes, and choreographers brought new performance elements to ballet.
In 1997, Eric Lanquet's Alice for The Royal New Zealand Ballet saw the company act and sing as well as dance, while Mary Jane O'Reilly's Romeo and Juliet for Auckland Ballet brought New Zealand poetry to the music of Tchaikovsky.


First Day Cover - 14 January 1998.

1998 Performing arts Prestige Booklet. 
 Above is the booklet cover.
Below are four of the six miniature sheets.

1998 Performing Arts 80c Music - Guitar. 

 1998 Performing Arts $1 Opera - Singing.

1998 Performing Arts $1.20 Theatre - Acting. 

1998 Performing Arts $1.50 Song - Singing.


Technical information.
Date of issue: 14 January 1998.
The number of stamps: Six.
Denominations: 40c modern dance, 80c music, $1.00 opera, $1.20 theatre, $1.50 song, $1.80 ballet.
Stamps and first-day cover designed: Norris Childs, Wanganui, New Zealand. 
The miniature sheet designed: Design Sector, Auckland, New Zealand.
Printer and process: Southern Colour Print, Dunedin, New Zealand by lithography.
The number of colours: Four.
Stamp size and format: 30mm x 40mm (vertical).
Miniature sheet size: 100mm x 135mm.
Paper type: 103 gsm red phosphor coated gummed stamp paper.
The number of stamps per sheet: 100. 
Perforation gauge: 14.
Special blocks: Plate/imprint, positional or value blocks could be obtained by purchasing at least six stamp sheets. Colour blocks ('traffic lights') are included in plate blocks. Barcode blocks were available in both A and B formats.
Period of sale: These stamps remained on sale until 14 January 1999.


Some of the images in this post were used with permission from the illustrated catalogue of StampsNZ
You can visit their website and Online Catalogue at, http://stampsnz.com/

Information & images for this post came from.


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