New Zealand Listener

Living in the past

I’m standing on the grass in front of the Napier Soundshell wearing an antique 1920s dress and hat, chatting to a young woman dressed in full 20s Egyptian-revival style. From headdress to hem, she’s a tribute to Tutankhamun. She looks fabulous.

A couple in shorts approach wearing cruise-ship lanyards. “Excuse me,” the man says with an Aussie twang, “can you tell us what’s going on here?”

What’s going on is the Art Deco Festival Napier. It’s Hawke’s Bay’s annual celebration of all things deco: architecture, fashion, cars, planes, music and more. When you’re in the middle of it – vintage cars lined up, Tiger Moths overhead, jazz blaring and every second person dressed in period style – it’s hard to believe anyone wouldn’t cotton on to the theme. It’s immersive. The cruisers have somehow missed the memo.

The festival has had a bad run in recent years: cancelled in 2021 because of the pandemic and severely limited in 2022 as Covid restrictions meant no public outdoor events could be held. In 2023, Cyclone Gabrielle struck on the festival eve and it was cancelled again as the region dealt with the disaster and its aftermath.

It’s been a difficult year for Hawke’s Bay, to say the least, and the locals now seem primed to party.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener7 min read
Tuesday April 30
Hamish McLaren has already been the subject of a podcast by the Australian newspaper called Who the Hell Is Hamish? and now his exploits are the subject of this doco that features some of the many people McLaren (real name Hamish Watson) targeted ove
New Zealand Listener7 min read
Fast Track To Destruction
What exactly is meant by red and green tape (Politics, April 20)? A favourite term used by our prime minister in his commentary on our democratic processes. Red tape in the past referred to the binding around administrative files. Perhaps the referen
New Zealand Listener3 min readCrime & Violence
Branching Out
Alexander Hamilton described the courts as the least dangerous branch of government. They had neither soldiers nor money to enforce their decrees. Like all public institutions, the courts rely for their continued acceptance and legitimacy on the trus

Related