Fashion Quarterly

FRANKIE ADAMS

- – ZWA

“Kiwis really know how to tell an honest story. They’re usually very vulnerable, raw and heartwarmi­ng.”

“Kiwis really know how to tell an honest story,” reflects Frankie Adams on the uniqueness of New Zealand storytelli­ng. “They’re usually very vulnerable, raw and heart-warming in a way that only Kiwi charm can pull off.”

That easy-going charm is in full force with the 25-year-old actor, who has starred in the US sci-fi series The Expanse since 2016; its fourth season is set to screen later this year. Based on the novels by James SA Corey and set 200 years in the future, it sees Frankie play tough Martian gunnery sergeant Bobbie Draper – and has allowed her to keep her distinctiv­e Kiwi accent.

It’s also a character that reflects

Hollywood’s slowly evolving commitment to genuine diversity. Originally described in the books as a strong, muscular woman with Polynesian ancestry, casting Bobbie proved a challenge for the show’s writers and producers. IndieWire described it as the search for “the unfindable actress”, and executive producer Hawk Ostby admitted that the team “dreaded the task of going out into the world and finding this person”.

But find her they did in the charismati­c and tomboyish Samoan New Zealander, whose past credits included five years on Shortland

Street and a raw performanc­e in Samoan director Tusi Tamasese’s 2017 film One

Thousand Ropes.

Last year, in a profile on Kiwi rapper Coco Solid, the Guardian wrote about a “Polynesian pop culture takeover”, acknowledg­ing the global success of Taika Waititi and Parris Goebel, and fellow Shortland Street alums Beulah Koale and KJ Apa. Frankie’s positive about the increase in Polynesian representa­tion but believes that “overseas, we’re still greatly under-represente­d It’s so rare to see a Pasifika face on anything ‘Hollywood’. However, back home I see more and more Māori and Polynesian people on screens and behind the cameras, and it’s empowering. I hope to see more in future.”

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