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Towards the Summit

16 September 2014 | 5:11 pm | Stephanie Liew

This performance uses spoken-word storytelling, folk songs and illustrations to explore Antarctic exploration

We tell the tale of [Robert Falcon] Scott’s doomed expedition to the pole in 1910–1913, and [Ernest] Shackleton’s extraordinary feat of survival when his ship the Endurance was crushed by the ice of the Weddell sea a couple of years later,” says Sam Prebble, writer and member of Auckland-based alt. folk band Bond Street Bridge, who are presenting the show.

Awarded ‘Best Music’ at its premier in the 2013 NZ Fringe Festival, the show has played more than a hundred times in various venues. Part of its success is doubtless due to its uniqueness; as a band first, Bond Street Bridge tell the story as if it were a folk song. “There’s no acting, but there’s a lot of drama. We’re also using a lot of heritage material – the original photos that Captain Scott and Ernest Shackleton’s teams took 100 years ago are incorporated into our multimedia show, and I used the diaries and letters as a direct basis for many of the songs. This means that the audience sees the heritage material re-interpreted and presented in a new way, which a lot of people find very moving.”

The idea for the show came to Prebble when he stumbled on a book of photographs from Scott’s latest expedition. Being the child of two mountaineers, and having grown up with stories of survival and courage in the wilderness, “The incredible stories of survival and Edwardian pluck are so moving, and the way many of these explorers wrote in their diaries and letters is so lyrical, it felt inevitable that I would draw inspiration from the material.”

Prebble felt the pressure to do justice to the legacy of the explorers. It all worked out, to say the least.

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