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Extraordinary true love stories set
during the Second World War.
There’s something about
the way old woman talk about their lives that tells
it like it was with no apologies.
This is certainly true for the subjects of WAR STORIES – Our
Mothers Never Told Us.
| Byron
wrote: |
‘Love
is of man’s life a thing apart,
T’is a woman’s whole existence’. |
Photographed
against black velvet, lit by Alun Bollinger, One of
New Zealand’s
top cinematographers, these women tell bitter sweet tales of grief, laughter,
love and loneliness.
New Zealand had a small population – just
over 1.5 million people in 1939. Over the war years,
thousands upon thousands of young men left to fight a
war
which was raging in places hardly any of them
had heard of. Most of the women, young and old, stayed
behind only to find their lives turned upside down.
What had once been acceptable behaviour was often now
out of the question. More
importantly the opposite was also true. Many secrets were kept as the social
order flipped
and left exposed the private fears and prejudices of people.
“Loose
tongues cost lives”
“ Keep it under your hat” |
In a country where not a
shot was fired, wartime slogans in a strange way seem
to mirror the private reality for many women who felt obliged to send
the boys off to the front “
happy” and to entertain American servicemen on leave from the
Pacific.
Many of them were bringing up small
children of their own, and suffering from the double
standard of time which created an enormous
rift between
public and
personal realities.
Then the boys came home and nothing
was the same. The experience had changed them and the
women too. How
things were, was not how
they were
meant to
be. An entire generation of New Zealanders, in a desperate bid
to recreate ”normal”,
seem to have kept an enormous secret.
Since the 1950’s the
silence in some ways has been deafening.
Now in their late 70’s
and 80’s, against a backdrop of stills,
montages and archive moving picture, surrounded by music they
all danced to so splendidly,
these women are ready to tell.
“ A rich universal experience”
- Kevin
Thomas, L.A.TIMES
“
Extraordinarily powerful…the stories shine with honesty
and candour.”
- John
Parker
“
The candid words of these seven women have the capacity
to move an audience to laughter or to tears…moving,
compassionate and truthful.”
- North
and South Magazine
“
Tales that lead us with such plain assurance to the
storyteller’s heartfelt
truth make spellbound children of us all.”
- Bill
Gosden

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