If it wasn’t for disco, Taiaroa Royal might be best known as a farmer. Not one of Aotearoa’s most celebrated dancers and choreographers.
On Friday Royal became a 2023 Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi Laureate. In a career spanning more than four decades Royal has been a major creative presence within our most distinguished dance companies: Limbs, Atamira, Black Grace, Royal New Zealand Ballet, Michael Parmenter and Douglas Wright Dance Company, performing all over the world.
However, as the name of Royal’s own dance company Õkāreka suggests, he’s increasingly looked to his tūrangawaewae for strength.
Of Te Arawa, Ngāti Raukawa, Uenukopako, and Kāi Tahu descent, Royal has returned to where he grew up, the family farm on the banks of small Rotorua lake Õkāreka.
It was in the Bay of Plenty when Royal, aged 15, became the region’s disco dance champ. Royal subsequently left a horticultural degree, got himself a place in the National Ballet School and has been dancing professionally ever since.
Royal is working as a choreographer and dancer on this year’s World of Wearable Arts in Poneke, 20 September to 8 October.