The Wānaka App
The Wānaka App
It's Your Place
Trades ServicesHealth BeautyLove WānakaChristmasJobsWin StuffListenGames PuzzlesWaoWellbeing
The Wānaka App

Film showcases ‘spoke’n’word’ rail trail tour

The Wānaka App

02 November 2022, 4:00 PM

Film showcases ‘spoke’n’word’ rail trail tourThe poets went on an “emissions-free” tour.

In late 2020 three poets embarked on a “spoke’n’word tour” of the Otago Central Rail Trail.


Liz Breslin, Annabel Wilson and Laura Williamson packed amps, mics and notebooks into trailers and e-biked the length of the Rail Trail to perform at historic halls in five locations along the way: Clyde, Ophir, Oturehua, Ranfurly and Middlemarch. 



Rail:Lines was a poetry tour like no other, the three poets say. 


It was emissions-free, muddy, rowdy, and backdropped by otherworldly landscapes, and it’s the subject of a new documentary screening this month in Wānaka, Queenstown and Dunedin.


A stopover at Ophir.


Laura, who is based in Wānaka and edits the print magazine 1964: mountain culture / aotearoa, said the tour was about taking words out into the rural corners of Otago, many of which have inspired writers in the past. 


“Literature and landscape have been shaped by each other in our region, and this is one of the things we wanted to celebrate,” she said.



It was also about showcasing the potential of using bikes, instead of cars or vans, to take a show on the road. 


"We wanted to model using e-bikes to travel between venues. It can be done, especially with more and more tracks like the Otago Central Rail Trail opening up across the country. 


“Our fuel costs were zero, our carbon footprint negligible and riding bikes is super fun. Plus, lots of people came to our shows. It’s not every day a trio of cycling poets shows up in your town.”


The three women teamed up with Wānaka’s The Film Crew to make Rail:Lines The: Film, a 25-minute documentary about the tour, which will screen in Wānaka next Friday.



“We wanted a wider platform to promote the viability of touring an emissions-free arts project, highlight the strength of the poetry community in our region and add to the scant number of women’s poetry stories documented on film," Laura said.


She noted that among the 55 titles tagged to ‘poetry’ on the NZOnScreen online archive, only four female poets are represented.


There will be a live performance along with each film screening.

 

The film will screen in Dunedin on Thursday November 10, Wānaka on Friday November 11 ("rail:lines the:film"), and Queenstown on Sunday November 13. 

 

PHOTOS: Supplied