Polyfest pioneer Tupou Manapori: ‘Don’t forget your roots’

Mama Tupou at the official launch of ASB Polyfest 2020, celebrating 45 years of Polyfest.

A pioneer of ASB Polyfest, 80-year-old Tupou Manapori has been to every event since it began 50 years ago. ‘Mama Tupou’ is still an integral part of the ACC-supported Polyfest and will run the Cook Islands stage this year.


I can still remember the first Polyfest. The year was 1976 and it started in humble fashion. 

I was working at Hillary College at the time as a teacher. Just four schools – Hillary College (now Sir Edmund Hillary College), Mangere College, Aorere College and Seddon College (now Western Springs) – attended and performed. It cost 50 cents to attend. 

We started small because we felt the importance of the event was for our children, the New Zealand-born Pasifika youth, to know about their culture, their identity and their language. 

That was the purpose: to give our Pasifika and Māori youth an event they could build their identity around. That remains our purpose of Polyfest today. 

We’ve come a long way since those days. 

In 2025, we’re anticipating close to 75 schools and 280 groups will perform. More than 10,000 Pasifika youth will take to the stage and around 100,000 people will attend with 200 stallholders. 

Polyfest is now heralded as the biggest secondary school cultural dance festival in the world. 
 
Everyone who has played a part in building this event should be proud of that. 

Te Wharekura o Ngā Maungarongo me TKKM o Te Kōtuku perform on the Māori stage at Polyfest in 2024.

Polyfest has helped our youth showcase their cultural languages, dances and learn leadership. It's important we don't forget our roots.
- Tupou Manapori

ACC will be among the 200 stallholders. Alongside NZ Rugby League, they will be talking to our youth about preventing and managing concussion in sport. 

It’s important work and I encourage our rangatahi to engage with the supporters of our event. 

I’m a proud Cook Islander and the 50th anniversary will be a special walk down memory lane. 

I can’t wait to connect with all the people who’ve made it special over the years, and to keep building for our future.

The theme or kaupapa for the 2025 event is fitting. It is ‘Legacy – a treasure handed down’ (He oha nō tua, he taonga tuku iho!). 

I’ve seen my children and grandchildren grow up at this event. Polyfest has been a defining festival for shaping our next generation of Polynesian and Māori people. 

It’s helped our youth of tomorrow to showcase their cultural languages, their dances and learn about leadership skills. 

They were taught leadership, passion and pride in their culture, which helped in every aspect of their lives.

It’s very important that Pacific and Māori people don’t forget our roots, where we come from. 

The Auckland Girls Grammar Niuean group perform at Polyfest in 2024.

ASB Polyfest

Auckland Secondary Schools Māori and Pacific Islands Cultural Festival

2-5 April, celebrating 50 Years

Manukau Sports Bowl, Auckland

Six stages: Māori, Samoa, Tonga, Niue, Cook Islands, Diversity

ACC is supporting Polyfest to raise awareness and build understanding around services that improve access and health outcomes for Pacific people and Māori.

Pacific people have lower ACC claim rates, around six per cent of all claims relative to their population size of nine per cent.

For more information, please visit the ASB Polyfest website.

ASB Polyfest 2025 Celebrating 50 years