REQUIEM FOR YEAR 13 [2025 NZ INTL COMEDY FEST]

In RIP High School, Liv Parker takes you on a wild, theatrical journey through the highs and lows of an all-girls high school experience, from horny junior dances to the curse of female friendships. With her unique storytelling and dark humour, Parker reveals the good, bad, and downright horrifying moments of those formative years. 

Liv Parker’s Requiem for Year 13 is a spirited and heartfelt farewell to the chaos, contradictions, and rites of passage that defined the secondary school experience for many New Zealanders. Building on the success of her award-winning debut, Parker returns with a performance that melds personal storytelling, exaggerated theatrics, and musical interludes to take the audience on a chaotic journey through the corridors of a girls-only high school between 2009 and 2013.

While the show is not without its limitations in reach, it offers an undeniably authentic portrayal of adolescent life — one rooted in a specific time and place, but delivered with such emotional intensity that it resonates far beyond its primary demographic.

At its core, Requiem for Year 13 is just what the title suggests — a commemoration of something that has passed. The term "requiem" usually refers to a solemn act of remembrance, often in the form of music for the dead. In Parker’s hands, however, it becomes something far more energetic, more unruly, and occasionally more uncomfortable. This is a show that doesn’t quietly mourn the past; it drags it up by the hair, throws it under a fluorescent classroom light, and pokes at it with a biro.

Parker strides on stage dressed in a school uniform — a clever visual tool that immediately places the audience back into a world of assemblies, ID photos, and shared deodorant sticks. Despite being well into adulthood, she disappears into the role with unsettling ease. The return to teenage mannerisms is so convincing that, for a moment, you’d be forgiven for thinking she had never left.

She embodies the version of herself that once roamed school hallways: eager to fit in, deeply impressionable, and frequently confused. That portrayal alone is a testament to her abilities as both a performer and a storyteller.


The narrative loosely follows the experiences of a student navigating life at a single-sex secondary school. Parker draws from her own years between 2009 and 2013 — a very specific window of time that defines much of the humour, slang, and aesthetic choices in the show.

The stories range from the comical to the slightly disturbing, including tales of desperate attempts to appear mature at junior school dances, cringeworthy school camp incidents, over-the-top Stage Challenge performances, and the ever-present whisper network of teenage rumours. She exposes the absurdity of it all with brilliant comedic timing, peppered with references that land squarely with those who were teenagers during the early 2010s — such as the infamous galaxy leggings, black onyx OPI nail polish, and Thin Lizzy's 5-in-1 compact.

But it’s not just the references that ring true. It’s the emotional tone. The yearning to be accepted, the confusion around friendship hierarchies, and the magnetic pull of students who seemed just slightly older, slightly cooler — Parker nails these moments with laser precision.

Her sketches, songs, and monologues reflect the way teens often learn — not from classrooms, but from each other. She reminds us how adolescence is often defined by what we don’t yet know, and the frantic, sometimes reckless ways we try to fill those knowledge gaps without getting caught out.

That said, the show's specificity can work against it at times. Much of the material will land squarely with those who shared Parker’s school setting — a single-sex girls’ school — or who lived their formative years during the same 2009–2013 period. For others, particularly those who attended co-ed schools or came of age in earlier or later decades, there are moments where the show may feel like it’s speaking a different language.


Parker makes some effort to widen the net, referencing more universally understood teenage experiences such as school balls, awkward puberty moments, and the unspoken social rules of youth. But the script leans heavily on insider references, which may leave older Millennials or those unfamiliar with the context slightly distanced. There’s richness in the details, but also a degree of exclusion for those who didn’t live through the same cultural landscape.

Still, even where the references might miss their mark, the emotional truths remain clear. The show captures a universally recognisable teenage energy — frantic, confused, and craving connection.

Where Requiem for Year 13 sets itself apart is in its refusal to romanticise the past. Unlike the typical nostalgic rewrites of youth that many adults engage in, Parker approaches her school years with a tone that is far more raw and reflective. There’s no soft lighting or warm filter here — instead, Parker dives headfirst into the discomfort, awkwardness, and petty cruelty that defined so many high school dynamics.

Rather than seeking closure, she seems to revel in the messiness of it all. The show becomes not just a look back, but a kind of coming-to-terms with the complexities of adolescence as Parker finds herself entering her 30s, surrounded by peers who are buying houses and starting families.

It’s a smart move. By blending reflections on adulthood with this vivid school-based performance, Parker highlights the lingering impact that those years still hold over us. Even as the world moves on, parts of us are still stuck in Year 13 — in classrooms, on buses, waiting for our name to be called out at assembly.


Requiem for Year 13 is a messy, funny, deeply personal hour of theatre that successfully captures the spirit of high school in a way that’s both affectionate and critical. Liv Parker’s performance is magnetic — equal parts goofy, heartfelt, and biting — and her commitment to the character makes for an engaging watch, even for those outside her immediate demographic.

Yes, the show does limit itself by staying so firmly rooted in a narrow cultural and temporal frame. But for those who lived through those same years, or close to them, the show will likely evoke a wave of memories — some warm, some cringeworthy, and all too familiar.

It may not be a universal experience, but within its chosen lane, Requiem for Year 13 drives home with style, humour, and a healthy amount of teenage angst. For a particular audience, it’s not just entertainment — it’s recognition, validation, and a fitting requiem for the years that shaped us most.
 
Requiem for Year 13 runs from 13 May - 17 May 2025 at Auckland's Basement Theatre, Studio. 

Tickets can be purchased here

Presented as part of the NZ International Comedy Festival with Best Foods Mayo, from 2 – 24 May 2025