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Date Te rā me te wā
02 Aug 2025
View all times
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Price Utu hoko
$19.00 - $26.00
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Location Te wāhi
The Civic -
More info He pārongo atu anō
Visit website
“I had two goals in COVID: to save people’s lives and keep everyone together. And I did one. But I didn’t manage to quite do the other.” In Jacinda Ardern’s reflections on her prime ministership of New Zealand from 2017 to 2023, the pressure to respond to the pandemic looms large.
Labour Party policy goals on climate change and child poverty reduction were disrupted by a string of unprecedented crises. The 2019 Christchurch mosque shootings were followed by the Whakaari / White Island eruption. And then COVID-19 arrived. The government’s “go hard, go early” strategy was to become deeply divisive. This was not a normal stint in office for Labour – nor was Ardern a typical leader. In their documentary, popular at Sundance, Lindsay Utz and Michelle Walshe frame her as a reluctant prime minister, who grappled with imposter syndrome and anxiety.
At 37, and pregnant, she took over as party leader only seven weeks before a general election, with no time to carefully design her image. But she was an international media sensation, her public embrace of motherhood and appeal to kindness in stark contrast to a rise in strongarm personas. Home videos recorded by Ardern’s partner Clarke Gayford, and audio from the Alexander Turnbull Library’s Political Diary Oral History project, offer exceptionally personal insight.
The darker turn New Zealand’s political landscape took in the lead-up to Ardern’s bombshell resignation is reckoned with, as American conspiracy movements gained sway through the gateway of social media, and anti-vax protesters occupied Parliament grounds. “World leaders have rarely been captured with as much intimacy…"
Getting there Te huarahi ki reira
By car, head to The Civic car park near Queen Street where you’ll find plenty of affordable paid parking. By train, head to Britomart Station and walk up Queen Street for around 10 minutes to reach The Civic. Alternatively, take a bus to the Queen Street or Wellesley Street bus stops, which are both within a short walking distance.
Local tip He tīwhiri mō te rohe
Head to Stark’s Café and Bar for a pre-show cocktail, beer or wine. It opens 90 minutes before any show or event at The Civic.