Blog Layout

Young dancers to take stage in Te Anau

57 invited to join Dance Company show

Fifty-seven young highland dancers from throughout New Zealand will be converging on Te Anau over Easter to join the cast of the Highland Dance Company of New Zealand on stage at the Te Anau Tartan Festival.


Company directors Julie Hawke and Robyn Simmons issued an invitation to young dancers to apply to learn and perform specially choreographed cameo roles in the Heart of the Highland stage show which opens this year’s festival at the Te Anau Community Events Centre on Friday 7th April.

The sheer volume of interest from young dancers keen to take the stage alongside their dance role models has both surprised and excited festival organisers.


Festival convenor Kirsty Pickett said she was thrilled the directors had been able to accommodate so many aspiring dancers in the show. Each dancer would be accompanied by family members travelling to Te Anau from all from all corners of the South Island. She knew of one family that was even making the trip from Hawke’s Bay, especially for the festival.


“This will give Te Anau a huge boost, with every family associated with the show staying at least three to four nights in town,” Pickett said. “When we secured a Regional Events Fund grant to enable us to invite the dance company to perform, we really hoped it would resonate with dancing families but this response is beyond our wildest dreams.”


The Highland Dance Company of New Zealand is an elite dance company of New Zealand's champion highland dancers, renowned for performing innovative choreography worldwide. The highland dancing equivalent of the Royal New Zealand Ballet, the key difference with this group is that they are all amateurs, coming together for intensive workshops to prepare for specific performances, mostly outside of New Zealand. Domestic shows are few and far between. The week after the festival they will fly out to perform in Virginia, USA.


Pickett said that although grounded in traditional technique, the choreography and costuming is contemporary and dynamic – akin to what Riverdance did for the popularity of traditional Irish dancing.


Leading the cast is New Zealand’s only senior male competitor, Angus Hendry. A 28-year-old lawyer from Tauranga, Hendry is also one of the oldest highland dancers still actively competing and performing. A past New Zealand champion who is in a very exclusive group to have attained the prestigious Solo Seal endorsement, he is currently still ranked second in the country.


Heart of the Highlands tells the stories and legends that are said to be the origins behind the traditional highland dances of Scotland. It will be performed twice during Easter weekend, the first to open the show on Good Friday and then again the following evening.


Pickett urged anyone interested in seeing the show to not leave buying their tickets till the last minute.


“Almost a quarter of the available tickets have already been snapped up and when we know so many families are coming from out of town specifically to see the show it’s important to get in quick to secure seats,” Pickett said.

By David Pickett 04 Feb, 2024
Organisers of the Te Anau Tartan Festival have today confirmed the popular event will continue to be held biennially in the future, but invite people to come and dance the night away this year at a one-night-only, tartan-tangled, social celebration on April 1st.
18 Apr, 2023
Organisers of the 8 th Te Anau Tartan Festival held over Easter weekend are recovering and celebrating after their biggest and best event ever.
By Ashburton Guardian 05 Apr, 2023
Competition hots up for Te Anau Tartan Festival invitational
24 Mar, 2023
Elite invitational highland heavyweight competition added to highland games programme
14 Mar, 2023
Angus Hendry talks to The Outlet Southland about the Highland Dance Company of NZ
Share by: