- 1935
Born Taumarunui, New Zealand - 1984-90
Began and ran He Taonga i Tawhiti a film and television training course for Maori and Pacific Islanders - 1992
Jointly formed He Taonga Films with Ruth Kaupua Panapa, creating opportunities for course graduates and providing outlets for Maori drama writers; - 1999
Order of New Zealand Merit (ONZM) - 2000
Executive Producer of NZ Media Peace award winning feature The Feathers of Peace;
Produced the film Te Tangata Whai Rawa o Weniti, the Māori Merchant of Venice -the first full length feature film to be made in Māori. - 2002 Honorary performing arts degree from Unitec, Auckland;
Honorary degree from Massey University - 2003
New Zealand Film Awards - Lifetime Achievement Award - 2007
Arts Foundation Icon Award;
Died in April after a long illness
Biography
Don Selwyn - Actor, Director, Stage and ScreenNgāti Kuri and Te Aupouri
(1935-2007)
"It's not about you, it's about the kaupapa. If you keep the kaupapa, the philosophical position [of] the value in front, then you will never become more important than the value. The philosophy, the kaupapa is in front of us and we have to support it. We support the philosophy that is going to uplift our people."
Don Selwyn, from The Don, Mercury Lane, Greenstone Pictures, 2001
Don Selwyn had a longstanding and distinguished career in the New Zealand film, television and theatre industry. He championed Māori drama, performing in both Māori and English, and was a prime mover in establishing the presentation of Māori viewpoints and culture in mainstream New Zealand film and television.
Born in 1936, Don grew up in Taumarunui. Originally a rugby-playing English teacher, his acting career was initiated by a dare: he attended are hearsal of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream with a friend who was acting in the production and when the actor playing Oberon became ill, the director, Nola Millar, asked Don to take over the role. He made his theatrical debut in a pink tutu with butterfly wings, to the amusement of his rugby mates. He toured with the Nola Millar Shakespeare Company, playing Caesar, Antony, Othello and Shylock, as well as appearing in the musical Porgy and Bess, the acclaimed film Sleeping Dogs and numerous television series such as Mortimer's Patch, Marlin Bay, The Governor and Pukemanu.
Don was a founding member of the New Zealand Māori Theatre Trust. He envisioned that it would extend opportunities for Māori performers in Māori opera and theatre. From 1984 to 1990 he ran the film and television course He Taonga i Tawhiti (Gifts from Afar), providing Māori and Pacific Islands people with the technical skills to tell their own stories in film and television. In its six years of existence120 people went through the course. With producer Ruth Kaupua Panapa, Don formed He Taonga Films in 1992 to create job opportunities forcourse graduates and to provide outlets for Māori drama writers. Don produced and directed Māori language dramas including Māui Potiki and Tohunga and several Māori dramas in English, including Don't Walk With Your Nose in the Air (awarded Best Foreign Short Film at New York Film Festival 1992). Don was Executive Producer of the 2000 New Zealand Media Peace award winning feature The Feathers of Peace. Don produced the film Te Tangata Whai Rawa o Weniti, the Māori Merchant of Venice after directing Dr Pei Te Hurinui Jones's 1945 translation as a stage play in the 1990 Kōanga (Spring) Festival in Auckland. It was the first full length feature film to be made in Māori.
Don received many awards and recognitions during his lifetime including the Officer of the Order of New Zealand Merit (ONZM) 1999, an Honorary Doctorate of Literature from Massey University, an honorary performing arts degree from Unitec and Te Tohu Tiketike a Te Waka Toi, an award presented annually by Te Waka Toi for outstanding contribution to the development of Māori arts. Don was appointed Adjunct Professor to Te Whare Wananga O Awanuiarangi.
Don Selwyn was selected for an Arts Foundation Icon Award in February 2007. The Arts Foundation was grateful that Foundation Governor Gaylene Preston visited Don Selwyn and his family at North Shore Hospital a few weeks before his death with news that he had been selected. Shirley Selwyn announced the Award to Don and conveyed his acceptance to the Foundation.
Don Selwyn died in April 2007 in North Shore Hospital, Auckland, after a long illness
Our matua Don Selwyn is forever imprinted upon the hearts of all who knew him. He is emblazoned within the minds of many. He made his creative spirit soar despite the demons that come with understanding. He truly showed us a vision of the way that the dramatic arts could be: a proud amalgam of the very best of all performance traditions and tikanga. He brought nobility to his craft.
He carved a wide swathe through the bullshit that conspires against those who aspire to something greater than what is permitted. He was the most humble of modern Māori warriors. His triumphs before and behind the camera leave us a legacy matched by no other.
He was the embodiment of the dreams of forebears. He made real the essence of their deepest teachings. We looked to him for definition. He made sure we never forgot. Don was both doer and nurturer. He scaled the heights. He cared and he loved. He re-fashioned and passed on our manifest destiny.
Kua hinga te totara nui o te wao tapu.
Kua pakū noa tōna rongo, he rongo kino nei.
Haere rā e Don, e te whakaruruhau o te wā.
Moe mai rā.
Tainui Stephens, Freelance TV Producer, Director and Film Director










