The New Zealand Herald

The irreplacea­ble Billy T

Nationally loved entertaine­r who died 26 years ago today left a gap that has never been filled

- Martin Johnston

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” was there.

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 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 like Billy T had been in the internatio­nally successful band the Maori Volcanics, 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 birth in 1949, Billy T moved at age 11 with his family to Whangarei. He studied at Elam art school in Auckland and served a five-year apprentice­ship as a commercial artist.

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 for training as a traffic officer (not then a police

I have been called a racist, but I don’t think I am. If they listen to what I do, the character always comes out on top. Billy T James

beat).

“The real-life Billy never made it into the traffic officer corps.” 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.

“As he gathered accolades,” the obituary continued, “Billy T James also gathered criticism for alleged racist jokes. His Maori characters were seen by some as demeaning. He was accused of using his Maori background to poke fun where others could not.

“The entertaine­r rejected the barbs. ‘I have been called a racist, but I don’t think I am. If they listen to what I do, the character always comes out on top.’ His skits were, he said, ‘ethnic portrayals.’”

In 1985, the Herald tested this by seeking the views of six wellknown Maori, including District Court judge Mick Brown and Hato Petera College headmaster Toby Curtis.

Brown said: “. . . I can understand the sensitivit­y about the Half-gallon Jar type of humour, which is possibly a negative stereotype which is undesirabl­e . . . One of the sad things about many of those who are terribly indignant is that they lose their sense of humour.”

Curtis said: “I think if he’s just performing for a Maori audience it’s fine. But I think a lot of people, particular­ly nonMaoris, don’t understand the nuances and the intentions of his humour and they could readily misinterpr­et what he is on about.”

Billy T’s death — from heart failure after a transplant in 1989 and an earlier quadruple heartarter­y bypass — precipitat­ed a family feud over the funeral.

His body was taken from his family home in Muriwai to lie at the Waahi and Turangawae­wae marae in Waikato. After the tangi, he was buried at Taupiri Mountain as he had wanted, but the funeral he had asked for in Auckland was cancelled and a memorial service held later.

His grave was marked with a white wooden cross until 2000, when a stone likeness of him in a red “Top Gun” cap was placed at one end and, within weeks, a flower-like sculpture at the other.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand