Billy T James' death left 'huge gap in New Zealand culture'

Publish Date
Monday, 7 August 2017, 3:57PM
Photo / Instagram

Photo / Instagram

When Billy T James, the comedian with the cheeky chuckle and the yellow towel around his neck, first made it into the Herald the trademark "T" was yet to be added to his name.

That was in 1978 when the new cabaret act created by Billy T - who died on this day in 1991, aged 43 - was flourishing and he had been nominated for the Entertainer of the Year award.

By the time of his second appearance in the paper six months later, the T had arrived in print.

Max Cryer's 1980 description, in the Herald, of the entertainer's earlier career credits the singer Prince Tui Teka with proposing the name-rearrangement - from William James Te Wehi Taitoko, to Billy T James.

Magician Mick Peck, the Variety Artists Club's 2016 variety entertainer of the year, said Billy T's death had left "a huge gap in New Zealand culture ... Decades later there's still been no one like Billy T."

Cryer wrote that Tui Teka, who had like Billy T had been in the internationally successful band the Maori Volcanics, also urged him to go solo. He was in Surfers Paradise at the time.

"There, part of the amazing 'old-boy' network of Maori performers which is spread all over the world, rose to the surface, guided him and helped establish him."

From Cambridge, the town of his 1949 birth, Billy T moved at age 11 with his family to Whangarei. After school he studied at Elam art school in Auckland and served a five-year apprenticeship to become a commercial artist.

#Billytjames #sambo kiwi version of #rambo !!👊✌️🙏

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He returned to Whangarei to drive a truck until joining the Auckland band Radars and by the mid-1970s he had been asked to join the Volcanics.

A Herald obituary noted Billy T's time in the army before his truck-driving stint and that he was accepted into training as a traffic officer (at a time when policing traffic was not a police beat).

"The real-life Billy never made it into the traffic officer corp." But a "jodhpur-wearing cop" did become one of his best known characters.

The self-titled Billy T James Show hit television in 1981 and he was Entertainer of the Year within months.

Mick Peck called in at Taupiri in 2013 to pay tribute to Billy T and take some pictures.

"Growing up in New Zealand in the 1980s Billy was an absolute icon to me," says Peck.

"What really set him apart was his broad skill range. He had brilliant comedy timing, he was an incredible mimic and impersonator, a skilled musician, character actor and singer. Billy was a true variety artist in every sense of the word."

"I can still remember the day at school when news came through that he had died, it was a really strange day and for us and looking back was probably the first time we'd experienced an icon dying.

"Billy was different than overseas comedians or stars, he felt like part of us. Billy's charisma made him feel like a family friend."

This article was first published on nzherald.co.nz and is republished here with permission. 

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