Sunday News

Tale of redemption

When Norm Hewitt (All Black) and Manu Bennett (Hollywood actor) were at school together, they weren’t best mates. But it’s never too late to say sorry, writes Shaun Bamber.

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Shortland The Hobbit, And I was prepared to walk across into that moment.’’

By now you might be wondering, so why does Bennett owe Hewitt so much? The man himself explains.

‘‘I said to Norm when he apologised to me, ‘You know what, you shouldn’t apologise to me – I should thank you for all the material you gave me to work with in my career! I’ve shaped characters out of my memories of you’.

‘‘Throughout my life and my career the one name that always bounced back into my head was Norm Hewitt,’’ explains Bennett.

‘‘When I played Crixus intimidati­ng Spartacus, I thought about Norm intimidati­ng me, standing over the top of me.

‘‘When I played Azog the Orc – you know, giant, powerful, power that just controls by presence alone – I thought of Norm. And funnily enough when I was going down to do the last day of filming as Azog in The Hobbit, that’s when I met Norm.’’

Despite battling his own demons, Hewitt wasn’t entirely unaware that he had become the unexpected inspiratio­n for many of Bennett’s acting roles either.

‘‘It was the articles that Manu started being interviewe­d for,’’ he remembers. ‘‘He started utilising that experience, and it would come out in an article, and people would say hey, you need to read this.

‘‘And I’d read the article and it started provoking me to go, what could I do? Because Manu’s talking about it openly. So when do we get to the point that we can come together? That was part of that catalyst of going, what would I do one day if we ever crossed paths?’’ Hewitt says.

‘‘And that’s what that experience at the Koru lounge in Auckland was – and on the last day of Manu filming Azog and going down to The Hobbit. You PHOTOS: PETER MEECHAM/FAIRFAX NZ couldn’t script that stuff, right?’’

This meeting of two men who last knew each other as children – as bully and victim – was also the catalyst for Making Good Men, a documentar­y in which the pair share their story of how they came to be where they are today.

Each had childhoods that were, in their own way, harrowing. Hewitt’s father – who appears in the doco – would regularly bash his son, while Bennett suffered the heartbreak­ing tragedy of losing both his mother and his brother within weeks of each other.

It was the car accident that killed Bennett’s mother – he was in the car with her, and still bears the scars – which ultimately led to his enrolment at Te Aute College and what would be a life-changing confrontat­ion with the young Hewitt.

‘‘I arrived at Te Aute College because unfortunat­ely my mother and brother were both killed in car accidents,’’ Bennett says. ‘‘They were buried two weeks apart, in Hastings, and then my grandparen­ts said, ‘You’re not going home with your dad [to Australia]. You’re going to Te Aute’.

‘‘So I was kind of like just a piece of beaten-up meat already in a way, and unfortunat­ely I was also a very fast athlete – I say unfortunat­ely, because the school principal put me in the First XV, and that kind of sparked off a few repercussi­ons with the Te Aute boys . . .’’ Bennett says.

Hewitt was already establishe­d at Te Aute, but the boarding school hadn’t exactly been kind to him either – in fact he had been sexually abused by an older student at the age of 13.

‘‘Then Manu turned up – he was fast, he was athletic, he was built, he was from a different world. I didn’t know anything about Manu except that he was there and then he was put in the First XV. And what I saw was, ‘Who’s this guy?’ He hasn’t done the hard yards, he hasn’t been a third former, he hasn’t walked through this hard journey of life.

‘‘After that it was about, ‘OK, here’s the level’. But to test that, I went into an uncontroll­able rage. And wanting to break, but getting lost in that absolute moment of rage, where I become my father.

‘‘And the rage that I was consumed with was the same as my father standing over me, and me thinking I’m going to die. It’s amazing how you harbour that. And then what happens in a moment,’’ Hewitt says.

‘‘I think what we’ve ended up with here is not really about us at all,’’ says Bennett of Making Good Men.

‘‘It’s about two things – it’s about victims and bullying. And that’s something that I think affects anybody, from schools to workplaces to families. But nobody talks about it, nobody has dialogue.’’

‘‘We need to stop telling our men to say to our boys, don’t cry, don’t be girls, harden up you pussy – all that kind of stuff,’’ adds Hewitt.

‘‘That language I heard when I was growing up, how do we change it so our boys can feel that they can find their heart and their presence and still be great at what they do?

‘‘Whether it’s as an All Black or an actor, whether it’s playing roles that are strong or being the All Black captain that requires certain traits that enable us to say – that’s a good man.’’

9.30pm, Monday, July 25, Prime.

 ??  ?? Former All Black Norm Hewitt and actor Manu Bennett have put their difference­s behind them.
Former All Black Norm Hewitt and actor Manu Bennett have put their difference­s behind them.
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 ??  ?? Bennett and Hewitt’s reconcilia­tion was also the catalyst for the documentar­y Making Good Men.
Bennett and Hewitt’s reconcilia­tion was also the catalyst for the documentar­y Making Good Men.

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