"Hello Richard, hello Jay," Janet Marks calls to her students as they tumble into the PHAB hall on a quiet Takapuna side street. It's the first day back for her drama class after the school holidays, so there are catch-ups on what everyone did on their break, and explanations of why the Herald is here to watch.
Christina, in the sunniest yellow T-shirt and the sunniest smile to match, responds with hoots and hugs. She prods her friend Erin to tell Ms Marks about singing into a microphone. Richard gets up to demonstrate his moonwalk. As she works her way around the group of 10 men and women, ranging in age from their 20s to 50s or so, Ms Marks is constantly drawing out the quiet ones, reassuring, admiring photos of new babies or new purchases with excited aunties.
The oddly named PHAB - Physically Disabled and Able Bodied - is a charity that creates a social world for people with disabilities, with weekly clubs, and a bunch of stuff that fits under "life skills". Ms Marks came on at the beginning of the year to run the drama classes in Takapuna and Manurewa.
"We were originally set up to fill a gap. If you have a learning disability, you leave school and you don't have a job, what can you do? Not very much, apparently," Ms Marks explains. "Our number one aim is for people to enjoy themselves. But people become more expressive, they become more able to communicate. They have the fun of making something, and everybody contributes."