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Fuataimi's costume (Samoan female dance costume) Auckland Girls Grammar

Object | Part of Pacific Cultures collection

item details

NameFuataimi's costume (Samoan female dance costume) Auckland Girls Grammar
ProductionLine Pulou; 2005; Auckland
Classificationhair ornaments, armlets, single headbands, necklaces, overskirts, outfits
Materialstapa, feather, thread, sennit, shell (plant material)
Materials Summarycoconut shell and coconut sennit
Registration NumberFE011922
Credit lineGift of Auckland Girls Grammar School, 2005

Overview

This costume is from the Auckland Girls' Grammar School Samoan group that performed at the ASB Auckland Secondary Schools Māori and Pacific Islands Cultural Festival, or Polyfest, in Auckland, mid-March 2005. The group presented five dances, this costume featuring in two of them, and came first overall in the Samoan all-girls' school category

Fuataimi
The costume was worn by the fuataimi (literally 'to measure time'), who guides both the dance and music, conducting the choir as it accompanies the dancers with singing or movement. The fuataimi also has solo roles. In the pese o le aso (song of the day), she becomes the speaker for the group, formally addressing important guests and the audience. In the taualuga, a solo dance, she entertains the audience before the dance begins.

Details
The costume consists of a tapa dress made from ngatu (Tongan tapa), a beaded pale (headpiece), a feather headpiece, a feather overskirt, and accessories - a taulima (armband) and ula lei (necklace) - made of coconut shell and coconut sennit. It was made by Mrs Line Pulou, the mother of the fuataimi.