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One (Auckland) Regional news show screened exclusively in the upper North Island broadcast from TVNZ studios in Auckland. Originally screened during a time period where each region screened a regional news show during the network news, later moved to before the network news. Presented by Judy Bailey and John Hawkesby. Top of the Class: 30 April ...
Shows included feature from TVNZ, Discovery New Zealand, Māori Television, Prime, Sky, PBS, and CTV. This television-related list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items . ( October 2021 )
The Royal Victoria Theatre closed in 1844 due to the competition of another new theatre, the Britannia Saloon (1844) in Willis Street. In Auckland the Fitzroy on Shortland Street opened in 1844. [1] J.C Williamson's built and leased theatres operating in New Zealand including the Theatre Royal that opened in 1907.
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The festival's main objectives are to engage Aucklanders in the arts, to support New Zealand art and artists, and to reflect what is unique about Auckland. [9] Its program features many events including dance, music, cabaret, burlesque, theatre, ballet, visual arts, film, and public forums, occupying most of Auckland's theatres, galleries and concert halls.
Taken outside of Q Theatre in Auckland, during the 2015 NZ International Comedy Festival.. The New Zealand International Comedy Festival (NZICF; sometimes the NZ Intl Comedy Fest) is a comedy festival in both Auckland and Wellington, New Zealand, run by the New Zealand Comedy Trust and held across three weeks during April and May. [1]
The Civic Theatre is a large heritage combination performing-arts theatre, live-music venue, and cinema seating 2,378 people [1] in Auckland, New Zealand.First opened on 20 December 1929, it underwent a major renovation and two-year conservation effort in the late 1990s, and was reopened on 20 December 1999 (its 70th birthday). [2]
This was the Concert Programme logo when it was launched in 1975. Classical music broadcasting began in New Zealand with the opening of 2YC in Wellington on 24 February 1933, [5] with further YC stations starting in Auckland, Christchurch and Dunedin in the following couple of years (see Call signs in New Zealand).