8
Featuring Music & the arts | Kitchen living | On the home front... THE WEEKEND Photo: Bruce Barnard. Your very own piece of paradise See page 2

Life + Style 19 February 2016

  • Upload
    sunlive

  • View
    219

  • Download
    2

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Life + Style 19 February 2016

Citation preview

Page 1: Life + Style 19 February 2016

21 August, 2015 life+style The Weekend Sun 1

Featuring Music & the arts | Kitchen living | On the home front... THE WEEKEND

Ph

oto

: Bru

ce

Barn

ard.

Your very own piece of paradise

See page 2

Page 2: Life + Style 19 February 2016

2 life+style The Weekend Sun 21 August, 2015 19 February, 2016

It’s unlike any paradise you’ve ever seen – four walls of concrete, the rooms blackened out with curtains and

foam padding, and in mid-February, little to be seen of the actual summer vista that lies outside.

But inside the lower quarters of a Tauranga home are the mak-ings of one man’s radio paradise, a community station that director David Williams says fills a gap that is lacking on our airwaves.

Paradise 105.4FM has been a longtime goal of David’s and his collective friends group in Wellington, when they noticed there was nothing in New Zealand to cater for the type of music they loved and listened to.

“We thought it was about time someone did something about that.”

Launched on Valentine’s Day, Paradise FM caters for men and women, aged 35-65, who are seeking an alternative to mainstream radio play.

“We play a whole mix of genres, starting with Americana and under that banner comes alternative country, folk, reggae, blues, plus we also feature a lot of NZ music and contemporary tracks from rock albums, with an additional emphasis on Irish and Scot-tish music.

“Further down the road, we’d love to have live acts in the studio too, playing their music and coming in for a chat about their work.”

Then there’s the comedy factor – hosts are all witty in their own right, with quips a-plenty at their fingertips. The humour is evi-dent already, as Life + Style tries to pull all personalities into one room, a task that frequently saw the crew in fits of laughter.

It’s also David and co-director John Stephens’ goal to become a community focused entity, as Tauranga currently has no commu-nity radio.

“Everything, bar one local show, is based in Auckland, so I think we have a real advantage having feet on the ground here in Tauranga,” says David.

“We see community radio as a huge opportunity to connect with locals, chatting with them about their events or supporting non-for-profit groups in the area.”

To complement David’s drive for community, passionate locals are currently at the heart of Paradise. While David has no radio experience – his background is in hospitality – the radio is a real passion project and has already garnered a small group together to support his venture.

“We’re doing a lot of this with volunteer labour,” he explains. “But the long term is to broaden our horizons, and ensure longev-ity and support for our staff.”

The long-term plan is to move to a more visible site and David is optimistic it won’t be long before they explore other

Paradise foundTauranga’s new radio station

areas as the station grows. “We’re for the people. We will be dedicating about half of

all programming to community radio – involving community groups, getting out there amongst the people and talking to everyone from school fairs to major concerts. It’s what the Bay of Plenty needs.” Laura Weaser

Ph

oto

s: Bru

ce

Barn

ard.

Hunter Boyu, breakfast co-host.

John Stephens, director.

The Paradise FM crew.

Page 3: Life + Style 19 February 2016

21 August, 2015 life+style The Weekend Sun 3 19 February, 2016

Kitchen creationsThe kitchen is essentially a

workshop but there’s many things

you can add to make it a stunning

area to cook and relax in. Bring

back the love by checking out all

the cool kitchen trends in some

of our local stores.

Candles in mason jars and iron recipe

book holders: Available in the CBD

at Indelible, 39 Devonport Rd.

Setting a fresh new look for your table is easy with dinnerware, cutlery, accessories and linen

from Home Etc.

Payless Plastics has a great range of brightly coloured essentials for

your kitchen.

Make your house a home

with FURNISH’s fabulous range

of kitchen and dining accessories. It’s easy to make

your own slushy with a Frosty Mug from Payless Plastics.

Page 4: Life + Style 19 February 2016

4 life+style The Weekend Sun 21 August, 2015 19 February, 2016 21 August, 2015 19 February, 2016 21 August, 2015

Tauranga playwright Devon Williamson is a huge fan of the ‘wonderfully absurd’.

For example, of all the scenes he’s written, his favourite is in his

2013 play ‘My Inlaws Are Outlaws’.

It involves Finn, an Irish assassin, who’s been trying to teach his idiot son Donal the deadly arts. But Donal’s more fi xated on the idea his name means ‘chief ’ – which he takes to mean ‘Indian Chief ’.

“He kind of blackmails his dad to call him chief,” explains Devon. “When Finn fi nally does, Donal’s hiding behind a window wearing an Indian headdress, pops up and goes ‘yer caulled?’”

“It’s just so wrong. It reinforces the idiocy and there was quite a bit, I mean, Donal was frightened of doorways because sometimes they’d be there, but then disappear when the door was closed.”

‘Necessity is the mother of invention’ is a saying Devon’s very familiar with, as his foray into playwright began due

to his struggle to fi nd plays “relevant to blokes” that he could produce.

Having written smaller shows previously, he penned his fi rst full-length play ‘Understanding Women!’ in 2003 which was hugely well-received and convinced him to continue.

Since then, he’s gone on to create 10 comedic tales, which in total have been performed about 70 times by theatre companies in New Zealand, Australia, North America and the United Kingdom.

“I just love the fun of them and the thing with comedies is they can be fi lled with drama too. You can have all of those dramatic qualities alongside those laugh out loud moments at the same time too.”

For Devon, the big thing for him when writing is fi nding a reason why a bunch of diverse people are in the same place at the same time. It’s all about fi nding an opportunity for characters to interact and where there can be a status quo can be challenged.

His characters are not based on any person in particular, but at the same time, his characters are all identifi able, he says.

When it comes to comedy

‘Funny is funny’

Ph

oto

: David

Tauran

ga

Devon Williamson and wife Kim.

Drive away in an incredible new Audi with no money down and an exceptionally low finance rate of only 3.9% per annum. But be quick, because this offer is available on all new Audi vehicles during February only. audi.co.nz/OpenHaus

Put your foot down,and nothing else.

No deposit. 3.9% finance. Across the entire Audi range.*

Only in February

*Finance offer is applicable to all new Audi vehicles registered from the 1st of February to the 29th of February 2016. Finance is over a 36 month term at a fixed annual interest rate of 3.9% p.a. A $275 establishment fee and $10 PPSR also apply. Offer is only available through Audi Finance & is subject to normal lending & credit criteria. Offer is available until 29 February or while stocks last.

Farmer Audi

116 Hewletts Road, Mount Maunganui Phone: (07) 578 6017

www.farmermotorgroup.co.nz

Page 5: Life + Style 19 February 2016

21 August, 2015 life+style The Weekend Sun 5 19 February, 2016 21 August, 201519 February, 2016 21 August, 2015

“I’m after characters that people will say ‘Oh yeah, I know someone like that’ when they’ve seen my shows. I’m not like Noel Coward that’s for sure, in his show ‘Hay Fever’ he wrote about people he knew and none of them would talk to him again for the rest of his life,” he says laughing.

Of his 10 shows, nine of them have been performed overseas and Devon says he’ll also create Australian, UK and American versions of all the plays he writes.

He says very little that has to be changed, so if someone says ‘mate’ in the Kiwi version then it becomes ‘buddy’ or ‘pal’ in the US version.

“What I’ve found fascinating is, two of my plays where I wasn’t sure if the humour would work in America were interestingly the two which were picked up over there. Comedies are fairly universal, because at the end of the day funny is funny.

“Kiwis are quite fortunate because we see a lot of American and British stuff. So it means we have quite wide comic infl uences without really realising it.

“A theatre in Kansas recently performed my show ‘The Old People

are Revolting!’ and you could see the audience commenting on their Facebook page.

“That’s the brilliant thing about social media, you get a little bit of feedback from the theatre but you don’t know if they’re being polite or not, but with social media you fi nd out the audiences opinions, warts and all.”

David Tauranga

“I just love the fun of them and the thing with comedies is they can be

fi lled with drama too”

EXCELLENCE IN DERMATOLOGY

Page 6: Life + Style 19 February 2016

6 life+style The Weekend Sun 21 August, 2015

e3series™series™series

The Fujitsu

19 February, 2016 21 August, 2015 19 February, 2016 21 August, 2015

Inside the Judea house of Theresa Tingey, Life + Style photographer Bruce Barnard

snaps away, capturing the mum-of-four in a place she feels, well, at home.

Although outwardly confi dent and full of fun, The-resa jokes being the centre of the camera’s attention is her least favourite location – even in a place she feels at ease. But as the newest star on TV One’s ‘Our First Home’, surely she’s used to it by now?

“Somewhat, but try seeing yourself on a massive billboard in the middle of Auckland!” she says with a laugh.

Theresa, her son Josh Tingey, his girlfriend Bex Wotton and her father Henry Wotton are one-third of the renovation reality TV show’s next set of family teams, all vying to make a profi t on a West Auckland property and give their children a head start with their own fi rst home.

The Kiwi show’s second season once again sees the family teams purchase and renovate a potentially profi table do-up, then for eight weeks, they will reno-vate in a bid to add the most value to their property at auction.

It’s not just the hard work our families have to con-tend with. There’s also the business of living together under the same roof, the navigation of family dynam-ics and power struggles as the parents loosen the reins and learn to let the kids take control.

But the rewards are great: Last year all three families won big on the show, with the winning Schreuder family walking away with $290,400.

Being the ‘unconventional’ family of the show – typically teams have two parents, their son or daughter, and their partner – was an advantage, The-resa says, as there was a certain degree of politeness that potentially put an end to any brewing disagree-ments.

“In lots of ways it was the best combo. There was no emotion behind it, it was like we are on the job and that’s it. I think Josh had said to me at the beginning, ‘Actually Mum I’m glad you’re doing it, in other families there a three-to-one scenario, but for

Home is where the heart isTheresa puts on a good show for the kids

It was worth it

to give the kids a

fi ghting chance in the

challenging property

market.

Ph

oto

s: Bru

ce

Barn

ard.

?

Page 7: Life + Style 19 February 2016

21 August, 2015 life+style The Weekend Sun 7 19 February, 2016

us we are a balanced team and that made it easier.”

In a weekend the Tingey-Wotton’s changed forever, and within a week they were facing the reality that would be an eight-week renovation challenge under the microscope of camera crews, and later, the New Zealand public.

“On a Saturday afternoon in October, Henry and I were chatting, and he said Bex had applied for ‘Our First Home’. I told to him, ‘It will be Janice and you, right? [My husband] Graeme and I wouldn’t handle it!’

“Come Sunday Bex got a call saying they liked her application and could she get time off work.”

Juggling three jobs, time off wasn’t a pos-sibility for Bex’s mum Janice and Bex turned to Theresa – much to her surprise.

“By the Monday night I was driving up to see my parents in the north of Auckland, and Bex calls me up and begs me to do it. I’m a bit of a sucker and will do anything for my kids. It was a big thing for Bex to ask me, and she would have loved to have her Mum there – you have to be pretty trusting to choose your mother-in-law to be!”

Theresa, 56, has put her life in the Bay on hold while the show is being filmed, taking time off from her role at the Acorn Founda-

tion on the distributions committee and from her doctor husband Graeme, with whom she owns and operates the Girven Road Medical Centre. But she says it was worth it to give the kids a fighting chance in the challenging property market.

“It’s a great project show because it shows anyone can do it. You just need to be smart and you can afford to change your environ-ment, the look and feel of a home. I think that is cool for other Kiwis watching it. There are less and less people that get exposed to that can-do attitude that we grew up with.”

Growing up on farm in Kaipara Flats, Northland, where her parents still live, The-resa has since lived with Graham in Tauranga for the last 30 years, arriving by chance when her husband secured a position at a GP practice. Theresa went to work at the hospital and also threw herself into various com-munity projects, including co-founding the Garden and Arts Festival and the Tauranga Arts Festival.

“I have a heart for my community – the better the city is, the better it is for my children. I’ve been here 30 years now and it’s such a growing area. I grew up rural where community was community and you needed others to function, so I have a bit of a passion for that.” Laura Weaser

“It’s a great project show because it shows

anyone can do it. You just need to be smart and

you can afford to change your environment,

the look and feel of a home”

‘Dance for life’

New Zealand’s Quietest Heat Pumps

Page 8: Life + Style 19 February 2016

8 life+style The Weekend Sun 21 August, 2015

NEW ZEALAND’S

LARGESTINDEPENDENTBEDDING GROUP

PROUD TO BE LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED

NEW ZEALAND’S

LARGESTBEDDING GROUPINDEPENDENT

PROUD TO BE LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED

NEW ZEALAND’S

LARGESTBEDDING GROUPINDEPENDENT

NEW ZEALAND’S

LARGEST INDEPENDENT BEDDING GROUP

50 STORES NATIONWIDE

PROUD TO BE LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED

VISIT US ONLINE TO FIND YOUR CLOSEST STORE WWW.BEDSRUS.CO.NZ

*Offer valid 1/2/2016 to 21/02/2016 or while stocks last. Excludes Everyday Dream Prices and clearance stock. Q Card and GE Finance lending criteria, fees, terms and conditions apply.

STORE NAME BEDS R USAddress DetailsPh: 00 123 4567

Chiropractic Elite Sleeper• Available in soft, medium and firm options for one

great price.• Features Latex Gold® and Dreamfoam® comfort layers

with the Torquezone spring unit endorsed by New Zealand Chiropractors’ Association.

OFF

Swisstek Lugano• Medium feel. • Features Latex Gold® and Dreamfoam® comfort layers that

work together with the Swisstek 7 zoned Pocket Spring system that respond to your body, evenly distributing your weight + aligns your spine.

Queen Set WAS $5,099

NOW $3,059

40% OFF

Epic Sleep• Firm feel. • Great for the spare room or a holiday house.• Eco-friendly Dreamfoam® and Nuvole fibre layers.• Truflex™ heat tempered coil spring system. • Available in: S, KS, D, Q.

Single

FROM $529

vailable in: S, KS, D, Q.

Queen Set WAS $3,199

NOW $1,599

%50