Rowley Habib

Rowley Habib

Habib in 1969
Native name Rore Hapipi
Born (1933-04-24)24 April 1933
Died 3 April 2016(2016-04-03) (aged 82)

Rowley Habib (24 April 1933 – 3 April 2016), also known as Rore Hapipi, was a New Zealand poet, playwright, and writer of short stories and television scripts.

Biography

Of Lebanese and Māori descent, Habib identified with the Ngāti Tūwharetoa iwi. He was educated at Te Aute College and then attended teachers' training college for a time, before working in a variety of jobs including in a bookshop, timber mills, freezing works, and on hydroelectric dam construction sites.[1]

He was the first Māori to write an original television drama: his 1979 work The Gathering looked at tensions around an elderly woman's tangihanga.[1] He also wrote the Māori play, Death of the Land, in 1976, a courtroom drama which sets in conflict opinions about the proposed sale of a block of Māori ancestral land.[2] The 1978 television adaptation of the play includes footage of the 1975 Māori Land March.[3] Habib's television drama The Protesters won the award for best script at the 1983 New Zealand Feltex Awards. The cast of The Protesters included Merata Mita, Jim Moriarty, Billy T. James and Don Selwyn.[1]

In the field of short story writing, from 1956 to 1971 Habib was a regular contributor to Te Ao Hou The New World, a magazine for Māori.[4]

In 1984, Habib was awarded the Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship,[5] In 2013, Creative New Zealand awarded him a Ngā Tohu a Tā Kingi Ihaka Te Waka Toi Award in recognition of his lifetime of service to Māori arts,[6] describing his play Death of the Land as a "landmark in the development of Māori theatre."[1]

Habib died on 3 April 2016.[7]

Selected works

Television scripts

Poetry

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Rowley Habib (Rore Hapipi)". NZOnScreen. 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  2. Trisha Dunleavy. Ourselves in Primetime - A History of New Zealand Television Drama. Auckland University Press 2005
  3. "Death of the Land (video)". NZOnScreen. 1978. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  4. Ed. Maggie Awadalla and Paul March-Russell. The Postcolonial Short Story: Contemporary Essays. Palgrave Macmillan 2013
  5. "Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship: list of fellows". Creative New Zealand. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  6. "Creative New Zealand mourns the passing of Rore Hapipi (Rowley Habib)". Creative New Zealand Arts Council of New Zealand Toi Aotearoa. 5 April 2016. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
  7. "Prominent Māori writer Rowley Habib passes away". Māori Television News. 4 April 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
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