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Home / Rotorua Daily Post

No pressure, says leader of 1983 Te Matatini winners as kapa haka festival kicks off

Hawkes Bay Today
22 Feb, 2017 06:58 PM2 mins to read

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BACK AGAIN: Rotorua kapa haka legend Trevor Maxwell back to support Ngati Rangiwewehi, the group he led to festival triumph the last time it was in Hawke's Bay in 1983. PHOTO/PAUL TAYLOR.

BACK AGAIN: Rotorua kapa haka legend Trevor Maxwell back to support Ngati Rangiwewehi, the group he led to festival triumph the last time it was in Hawke's Bay in 1983. PHOTO/PAUL TAYLOR.

A Te Matatini life member who was one of the stars of the national kapa haka festival the last time it was held in Hawke's Bay is back 34 years later to support the club in any way he can.

For Trevor Maxwell, leader of Rotorua-based Ngati Rangiwewehi when they won the top honours at the Hawke's Bay Showgrounds in 1983, it includes getting to practice as often as possible, despite the workload that also goes with being one of the country's longest-serving local body politicians.

At McLean Park in Napier for yesterday's powhiri for the 47 teams in this year's festival at the Hawke's Bay Regional Sport's Park's Kahungunu Park in Hastings - from today to Sunday - he said his reminder for his successors was: "No pressure. No pressure."

But then he reminds them of the big win, which it repeated in Rotorua in 1996. "It sets the bar," he said.

A Rotorua district councillor in his 40th year of local body service, Mr Maxwell and his late wife Atareta were immersed in kapa haka and Ngati Rangiwewehi, as they saw it lead the development of the iwi's people over the years, and among his roles yesterday was to bring back the Atareta Maxwell Memorial Trophy.

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Sister of Sir Howard Morrison, she was the festival's top female leader twice, and it was after her passing 10 years ago that the greenstone trophy was produced by Mr Maxwell's younger brother, master carver Hepi Maxwell, to recognise those who succeeded her.

Like many at the festival, the whanau extensions abound. There's a nephew in Ngati Rangiwewehi Kapa Haka vintage 2017, and Mr Maxwell's daughter, former festival performer Kahurangi Maxwell, will be among a team of presenters with Maori Television in its full cover of the performances.

Trevor Maxwell says the benefits of Te Matatini's development are everywhere, not simply in the realm of performing arts.

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He recalls smoking during practice in the era of the 1983 win was common. Now it's banned, by popular consent, anywhere near the environment, and other unhealthy indulgences are replaced by such ventures as "going to the gym".

"What I love is that it is so strong now," said Mr Maxwell, whose Ngati Rangiwewehi hit the ground running today, on the boards at 11.21am, the fifth performance of the festival.

"I'll be in the grandstand, relaxing. But I will be a little bit nervous."

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