
He
Taonga Films arose out of a film and television training course called He
Taonga i Tawhiti (Gifts From Afar) operated from 1984 to 1990 by Don Selwyn.
It was established under the wing of the then Department of Maori Affairs
Tu Tangata programme. Its aim was to give Maori and Pacific people the technical
skills to enable them to tell their own stories. Many of the 120 people who
went through the course over its six-year existence are successfully established
in the industry today. In 1992, Selwyn and producer Ruth Kaupua Panapa formed
He Taonga Films to create job opportunities for course graduates and to provide
options for Maori drama writers.
He
Taonga produces drama for television and cinema in Maori, English and bi-lingual.
The company selects its crews on a racially-inclusive basis, depending on
skill, personality and the individual's ability to work to the kaupapa or
philosophy of the production. For example, the crew of Shakespeare's Te Tangata
Whai Rawa O Weniti (Merchant of Venice) included Maori, Pacific Islanders,
Pakeha, Croatian, Sri Lankan, Australian, English and Scottish.