• Beneath the Māori Moon

    A history of Māori Rugby

  • Beneath the Māori Moon

    A history of Māori Rugby

  • Beneath the Māori Moon

    A history of Māori Rugby

Beneath The Māori Moon

This show is currently off air

BENEATH THE MĀORI MOON, Thursdays at 8.00 PM, is an all areas access pass to Māori rugby. The programme begins with the early pioneers who helped spread the gospel of the game at home and abroad, through to the modern day men who will take to the field for the centenary series in June against Ireland and England.

The 15-episode series profiles important players and colourful characters, and examines the times in which they lived – both world wars, The Great Depression, urban migration of the 50s and 60s, through to the modern professional era of the game.

Whānau and whakapapa play an important role in Māori rugby, and this programme looks at the impressive contribution of the likes of the Goings, the Brookes, the Osbornes and the MacDonalds. Viewers also meet the first families to field husband and wife and mother and son national rugby representatives.

As Māori rugby gets set to celebrate its centenary in May, a landmark documentary series on Māori Television will trace the evolution of Māori rugby and examine its place in New Zealand society.

BENEATH THE MĀORI MOON does not shy away from the contentious issues. It touches on the battle between union and league for the top talent. It examines the changes brought on by the move to professionalism in the sport, and the impact the South African apartheid policy had on Māori players half a world away.

In the lead up to next year’s World Cup, BENEATH THE MĀORI MOON meets those that have left the shores of Aotearoa to play their rugby elsewhere – the player who donned the red rose of England, the Ngāruawaahia-born Wallaby and the Ngapuhi boy who hopes to thwart the All Blacks quest to win the World Cup.

We also check in with the players at the flaxroots – those who keep the game hearty and healthy – from regional legends such as Harry Jacob of Horowhenua, to the vigorously contested Pā Wars and those who ensured the success of the Ngāti Porou East Coast NPC team in the 1990s.

The series expands on the critically-acclaimed book of the same name by Malcolm Mulholland (Ngāti Kahungunu). It incorporates the views of legendary rugby commentator Keith Quinn and social historian Ranginui Walker, as well as speaking to a host of Māori rugby talents across the decades. It’s not all talking heads, there’s documentary footage, pictures and re-enactments as well as lots of the flair and exciting play we’ve come to expect of Māori rugby. It truly captures the X-factor that makes Māori rugby so magical.

BENEATH THE MĀORI MOON is a thorough review of the history of Māori rugby …and the pivotal role it plays in both Māori society and the overall history of New Zealand. It also examines the way that history can be built on as we move into the next hundred years of Māori rugby. Ka haere whakamua me hoki whakamuri.
 

 

 

 

Thanks to:
F.Humbert  / www.rugby-pioneers.com

Comments

Steve Scott wrote:
After viewing the first 4 episodes, I cannot compliment Maori TV enough. We in Canadian rugby have been very blessed to have the Maori tour and participate in the Churchill Cup in recent years. The importance of the Maori contribution to the way the game is played, has been understated and not given the respect and significance it deserves. Future Maori tours to Canada will always be a very welcome highlight as we develop our game.
Posted: 6/1/2010 1:37:15 PM
wiremu reedy wrote:
Hikama ka mau te wehi o tenei hotaka miharo. E tino rawe nga korero e paa ana ki to tatau kapa maori whutuporo...kei whea mai? Kaore he korero mo ratau katoa! I was impressed hugely and moved by how much maori have contributed to our national iconic game of rugby in this country... and STILLwe get hammered by heirarachy and baldheads. I will be watching the rest of the programmes with gusto and afection. tena tatau katoa!
Posted: 5/11/2010 2:39:33 PM
wiremu reedy wrote:
he hotaka ataahua, pono ki nga korero o nga kapa Maori katoa, me te hitori tonu o te nzrfu. A wonderful mosaic of maori rugby history. The personal profiles on so many maori players who left their mark on the game for the generations and the stories of profound value for all maori and pakeha to digest, enthrall and look to the future. Kapai Maori TV... you done it again! Whats da matta wid haamu? Kia ora ra!
Posted: 5/8/2010 10:21:28 AM
P & G Johnston wrote:
Hearty congratulations to all concerned after watching the first segment of the series can't wait for the next 14. You have done the players proud, the book, and yourselves.Well done.
Posted: 5/6/2010 9:45:50 PM
Taulealo wrote:
Te rawe hoki o tēnei whārangi...anyway, I think George Nepia should have been number 1, not 65...who else, Māori or Pākehā, is as famous as him from that era? Who remembers anyone else? It may not have been in my time but I havent heard of anyone else but him as a hero in my 40plus years on Earth...what a man!
Posted: 5/4/2010 1:53:59 PM
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