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All set for a European adventure
All set for a European adventure

Otago Daily Times

time2 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

All set for a European adventure

PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Kaikorai Valley College students Alyssa Bayne (left) and Amy Hitchcox, both 17, pose with a skull and a globe in front of their peers, ahead of their European trip later this month. The group of 25 students will spend eight nights in London and three nights in Paris as well as visiting World War 1 battlefields. The students will be hosted by the New Zealand embassies in London and Paris, where they will meet the ambassadors. Alyssa is holding the skull to represent the group's planned visit to the Globe Theatre in London to watch a Shakespearean play. Amy said she was "very excited" for the opportunity to go to Europe. "Some people I know haven't left the country, let alone gone to Europe." She was most looking forward to going to Paris, climbing the Eiffel Tower and eating a snail.

Play's themes ‘still relevant'
Play's themes ‘still relevant'

Otago Daily Times

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Otago Daily Times

Play's themes ‘still relevant'

A Dunedin secondary school is bringing back a play one of its physics teachers wrote 19 years ago because its themes are still relevant today. Kaikorai Valley College had the opening night for Copper, written by Gregory Cook, last night. Mr Cook said when he wrote the play in 2006 his daughter had just been born. Now she is in her first year at university. He said he did not have to make too many changes to the script, but had added an extra scene near the end to make it flow better. "It's quite interesting because the themes and stories behind it are still relevant today. "I haven't had to change anything." Kaikorai Valley College year 13 student Laurence Gordon, 17, in character as Head Basher the troll, walks across the stage behind physics teacher Gregory Cook, who wrote the school's production of Copper in 2006. PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH The play is about Copper, an orphaned child raised by dwarfs who moves to the city of "Dunerdan" to be a watchman. Mr Cook said the themes included belonging and inclusiveness. He was excited to see how a new audience would react to his work. As a fan of fantasy novels and comedy, he had wanted to have a go at writing a play, Mr Cook said. "I thought I better put my money where my mouth is and put this together." The show was loosely inspired by Terry Pratchett's novel Guards! Guards!.

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