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Hole puts the Antarctic ozone layer on stage
Publisher |
Radio New Zealand
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Publication Date |
Sep 20, 2020
Episode Duration |
00:12:27
The discovery of the growing hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica provided plenty of worrying headlines in the 1980s. But in a rare example of international co-operation, action was successfully taken to reduce it. In the second of a series of plays set in Antarctica, Hole, playwright - and former RNZ presenter - Lynda Chanwai-Earle brings together three very different characters onto the ice in 1985 - a New Zealand scientist, a Navy SEAL from American Samoa and a Greenpeace activist. Hole is still in development, and like its predecessor, Heat, it uses green-powered energy like solar power so it can be presented off-grid. Lynn Freeman talks with Lynda and the director of Hole Professor David O'Donnell. The play has its development season at Wellington's Circa Theatre starting on the 22nd of September.

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