NZ Life & Leisure

MARY & JESUS IN CENTRAL OTAGO Mary Phillips delighted legions during a career as a producer of children’s television programmes. Now she enchants many more from her home in the Gibbston Valley

After three decades in the fast-paced world of producing children’s television in Auckland, Mary Phillips is now flourishin­g in a quiet valley in Central Otago

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THE FIRST THING VISITORS see when they knock on Mary Phillips’ Central Otago door is Jesus. “People get a fright to see him there — especially at night when they come down the drive, and he is all lit up in the hallway.” Mary’s Jesus is life-sized, made of plaster and arrived at her home after a cramped three-hour road trip. “My brother Kevin found the ‘Open Heart’ Jesus in a Dunedin auction room. When he told me about it, I said, ‘Yes, I would like Jesus’. So, we put him in the back of my car and drove him to Gibbston. He was a bit damaged, but my artist friend Peter Cleverley made new fingers and did touch-ups to make him whole again.”

This anecdote — and the eye twinkle that goes with it — is very, well, Mary. It conveys the impish delight that has made her a leading light in New Zealand children’s television for the past three decades. Her congenital exuberance found its first expression in kindergart­en teaching — not a self-determined path (“Mum and Dad told me that’s what I was doing”) but one she adored, nonetheles­s.

“As the youngest of five children growing up in Gore, I think I drove all my family and teachers mad with observatio­ns, questions and creative problem-solving, which was considered ‘not normal’. Kindergart­en teaching was the perfect way to be creative, have fun and extend young minds. The children taught me so much about how to live life. It was the best job.”

The television industry soon spotted Mary’s kid-simpatico ways. In 1992, when the producer of TV3’s pre-school show You and Me (presented by Suzy Cato and produced in an old movie theatre in Dunedin) was casting for input from creative kindergart­en teachers, Mary was invited to have a go at writing for television. She overachiev­ed from the get-go: “We had a week to do the first five scripts, and I wrote mine in two days. I had enough for five weeks of scripts, apparently. I became a director on the show soon after that and then a producer.”

‘I think I drove all my family and teachers mad with observatio­ns, questions and creative problem-solving, which was considered “not normal”’

This new career in “edutainmen­t” (educationa­l entertainm­ent) was another excellent outlet for her creative pep. After more than 2000 episodes of You and Me, Mary moved to Auckland to direct and produce a science show for primary school kids called Suzy’s World (also fronted by Cato). “It was very popular with parents looking for extra educationa­l content, and kids loved it because it was an investigat­ion into everyday things that they could engage with. And Suzy’s such an empathetic and powerful presenter.”

When Suzy’s World ended in 2002, Mary set up her own independen­t television company, Pickled Possum Production­s, and produced the hugely popular youth show, Sticky TV. One of this country’s longest-running kids’ shows, it lasted 16 years and brought the likes of Kanoa Lloyd, Sam Wallace and Walter Neilands to the country’s screens. Sticky’s success was the very thing that eventually hastened Mary’s return south: a relentless filming schedule paired with the frenetic pace of Auckland left her feeling pooped.

“Sticky TV was 48 weeks a year — it was tough. When I think back now, all I did in Auckland was go to work, go to the gym, go home. At one stage, we were on every weekday, we sometimes made Saturday shows and we’d have an omnibus on a Sunday. It was full-on — full-on. I just got tired of the ordinary things that took four times as long as normal to do, like driving. I’m grateful for the successes that Auckland gave me — but the pace was crazy.”

At the end of 2017, Mary swapped her Queen Street apartment in Auckland for an isolated perch in the vineyard hotspot of Gibbston. She’d purchased five hectares of land several years earlier and initially put it to use as a Sticky TV filming location: “We wanted to show children life skills such as growing vegetables, cooking, tenting, and hiking. We’d all fly south, camp up here and do lots of outdoorsy stuff — it was great.”

Once Sticky ended, Mary could finally start planning her dream house — one that would hunker down into the Central Otago landscape while securing views of the area’s top-shelf geographic­al offerings. Her attention-seeking neighbours are the Nevis Bluff, Crown Range and The Remarkable­s. Queenstown architect Stacey Farrell answered Mary’s call with Maison Noir (the Black House), a home of quiet minimalism that doesn’t seek to upstage the terrain and caters for all that necessary landscape ogling. The form of the house cleverly mimics the region’s geological behaviour, too. Stacey found much inspiratio­n for this in Gibbston’s rock and stone. She says: “Like tectonic plates, schist shifts and moves and plates of stone slide against each other — we echoed this with the form of Mary’s roof.”

In its expansive location, this small black house has proved to be the ideal post-Queen Street decompress­ion chamber. Mary now works from a desk in the corner of her bedroom that looks down the “Valley of Vines”. Her water cooler chat mostly involves quibbling with cat Daisy, a british blue, about who gets command of the keyboard, and her exercise breaks often involve the bluechip cycle track at the end of her road (the Gibbston River Wine Trail, if you please). “I feel so much healthier these days because I have more time for yoga, pilates and bike rides.”

Her days are far roomier with no manic Sticky TV gallop with which to contend. “I have time for things that I enjoy — like charity work. I love giving back. And when you do things for the community, you meet some interestin­g, good people.” Mary is a trustee of Turn Up The Music, a local charitable trust that seeks to improve the lives of children in the Wakatipu Basin via music. “It’s an important time for the warmth of music to calm the district. The trust’s philosophy ‘music changes lives’ is more vital than ever. Alongside our music school, we hire out instrument­s and award scholarshi­ps and grants for those who can’t afford it. It gives kids an opportunit­y to learn, perform and engage with music.”

Mary has also had the time to rekindle neglected dreams. She recently launched a business that fulfils a lifelong wish to work with flowers. Her new business venture is called the Rosy Glow Project: hands-on workshops for those wanting to stretch their creative muscle and find a bit of uplift. While most sessions revolve around floral work, some stray into other areas, such as candle-making and how to make the best cup of tea. After decades of adding bounce and sparkle to the lives of children, Mary figured grown-ups also could do with some perking-up.

She didn’t have to look far for a suitable Rosy Glow venue: Maison Noir has the perfect “uplift” credential­s. At an altitude of 550 metres, it has an abundance of good mountain air and an interior that hosts an eclectic mix of modern art, elegant furnishing­s, funky ceramics, and Catholic collectabl­es. Of the latter, Mary says: “Once a Catholic, always a Catholic. I love the iconograph­y and find the rituals comforting.”

Mary’s moggy Daisy has tried to cull some of Maison Noir’s Madonnas. She broke two that compromise­d the route to her favourite sleeping spot — inside the cavity of the grand piano. But, as she hasn’t yet had a swipe at any other religious icons, it’s too early to tell if she’s atheistic or just plain clumsy. Surely, she’s cowed by the commanding life-size statue in the hallway? Mary: “She’s not interested in Jesus one little bit.”

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 ?? ?? Standing at her front door, Mary Phillips obscures the statue of Jesus (pictured left) that, to her delight, startles many an unsuspecti­ng guest.
Standing at her front door, Mary Phillips obscures the statue of Jesus (pictured left) that, to her delight, startles many an unsuspecti­ng guest.
 ?? ?? THIS PAGE: Mary considered only one hue for Maison Noir’s exterior: “Black has always been my favourite colour,” she says. “When I was a kindergart­en teacher, the other teachers would complain about the kids painting with black all the time. But I loved it.” Mary thinks the home’s dark cladding, along with its minimalism, adds a Japanese vibe to the architectu­ral mix: “I went to Japan a couple of years ago and admired everything about it. There’s form and function in everything the Japanese do. Their architectu­re is just beautiful.” OPPOSITE: Michael Parekōwhai’s floral photograph­ic work Passchenda­ele (2001) memorializ­es lost New Zealand (Māori) Pioneer Battalion lives.
THIS PAGE: Mary considered only one hue for Maison Noir’s exterior: “Black has always been my favourite colour,” she says. “When I was a kindergart­en teacher, the other teachers would complain about the kids painting with black all the time. But I loved it.” Mary thinks the home’s dark cladding, along with its minimalism, adds a Japanese vibe to the architectu­ral mix: “I went to Japan a couple of years ago and admired everything about it. There’s form and function in everything the Japanese do. Their architectu­re is just beautiful.” OPPOSITE: Michael Parekōwhai’s floral photograph­ic work Passchenda­ele (2001) memorializ­es lost New Zealand (Māori) Pioneer Battalion lives.
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 ?? ?? THIS PAGE: Mary bought Michael Parekōwhai’s imposing photograph Neil Keller (2000) before local rabbits savaged her plants. OPPOSITE: “Once a Catholic, always a Catholic,” says Mary. “I love the iconograph­y and find the rituals comforting. I even had the house blessed by Father Mark from Dunedin. He knew I had my own Jesus and wanted to come and have a look. He brought Sister Pauline (who’s in her 90s) with him, and when he got in the car to leave, he couldn’t find her. She was on her knees praying by the statue, saying, ‘Oh, it’s my favourite — Jesus with the Open Heart.’
THIS PAGE: Mary bought Michael Parekōwhai’s imposing photograph Neil Keller (2000) before local rabbits savaged her plants. OPPOSITE: “Once a Catholic, always a Catholic,” says Mary. “I love the iconograph­y and find the rituals comforting. I even had the house blessed by Father Mark from Dunedin. He knew I had my own Jesus and wanted to come and have a look. He brought Sister Pauline (who’s in her 90s) with him, and when he got in the car to leave, he couldn’t find her. She was on her knees praying by the statue, saying, ‘Oh, it’s my favourite — Jesus with the Open Heart.’
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 ?? ?? THESE PAGES: Mary loves a good dinner party, so a decent kitchen and space for a 12-seat table were high on her architectu­ral wishlist. Her grand piano (opposite) doubles as a coveted snooze spot: “I love playing it, but it’s where the cat sleeps. She gets inside and curls up on the cosy bits — especially if I’ve given her too many pats.”
THESE PAGES: Mary loves a good dinner party, so a decent kitchen and space for a 12-seat table were high on her architectu­ral wishlist. Her grand piano (opposite) doubles as a coveted snooze spot: “I love playing it, but it’s where the cat sleeps. She gets inside and curls up on the cosy bits — especially if I’ve given her too many pats.”
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 ?? ?? THIS PAGE: Mary in her potting shed. “I’ve tried a few times to make a flower meadow, but Gibbston’s climate and the rabbits put a stop to that growing. I love flowers but live in an impossible place to grow them.” OPPOSITE: She was adamant about incorporat­ing breeze blocks somewhere in her home as they reminded her of the Gore Baths she used to visit as a child. (Given the force of the Gibbston wind, architect Stacey Farrell thought breeze blocks were an excellentl­y “ironical element”.)
THIS PAGE: Mary in her potting shed. “I’ve tried a few times to make a flower meadow, but Gibbston’s climate and the rabbits put a stop to that growing. I love flowers but live in an impossible place to grow them.” OPPOSITE: She was adamant about incorporat­ing breeze blocks somewhere in her home as they reminded her of the Gore Baths she used to visit as a child. (Given the force of the Gibbston wind, architect Stacey Farrell thought breeze blocks were an excellentl­y “ironical element”.)
 ?? ?? Unlined walls function as a utilitaria­n backdrop to Mary’s decidedly non-utilitaria­n collection of art, treasures and sumptuous furnishing­s.
Unlined walls function as a utilitaria­n backdrop to Mary’s decidedly non-utilitaria­n collection of art, treasures and sumptuous furnishing­s.
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