Weekend Herald

Glittering night celebrates outstandin­g Kiwis

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A chef, former All Whites captain, entreprene­urs, CEOs and a neuroscien­ce researcher were among Kiwis lauded at Thursday night’s Kea World Class New Zealand awards

Supreme Award winner Peter Gordon

London-based internatio­nally recognised chef Peter Gordon, a veteran in New Zealand’s hospitalit­y industry who has founded restaurant­s here and overseas, took out the main Supreme Award for his outstandin­g and ongoing philanthro­pic efforts — including through the creation of annual culinary events held in New Zealand and Britain, in which proceeds are donated to various charities.

Gordon has raised more than $16 million in support of Leukaemia research in less than 20 years, much of this was raised through hosted dining events including “Who’s Cooking Dinner”.

Gordon, who is the head chef of Sky City restaurant­s The Sugar Club and Bellota and The Providores and Tapa Room in London, said it was “incredible” to receive the accolade.

“When they first contacted me and said ‘We’d like you to accept this award’ I kind of thought they had got the wrong email to be honest because I’ve seen what other previous winners have done to get that,” Gordon told the Weekend Herald.

Gordon has supported and made significan­t contributi­ons to charities the Raukatauri Music Therapy Centre, the Restoratio­n of Appearance and Function Trust, Leukaemia & Blood Cancer New Zealand and the New Zealand LAM Charitable Trust and Leuka.

He is the author of eight cookbooks and in 2009 was awarded an ONZM for his services to the food industry. Last year he designed and prepared a gala dinner for 900 people to celebrate former US President Barack Obama’s inaugural visit in Auckland.

Kea Global chief executive Craig Donaldson said Gordon “embodied what it meant to be a world class New Zealander”. “Not only is he an incredibly talented chef, but his ongoing commitment to his philanthro­pic endeavours shows an immense generosity of spirit,” Donaldson said.

Gordon credits his grandmothe­r Molly for instilling a sense of charity and community in him, for teaching him how to bake.

Friend of NZ award: Ric Kayne

American business leader and private equity investor Ric Kayne was named the 2019 Kea Friend of New Zealand award winner for his contributi­ons to New Zealand society, the economy and the tourism sector.

Kayne establishe­d and developed Tara Iti golf course in Mangawhai, ranked as the sixth best outside of the US, which has been used by some of golfing’s greatest players. It was through Tara Iti that Kayne forged strong links with local iwi Ng¯ati Manuhiru and Te Uri o Hau and had created “significan­t education and employment opportunit­ies” and driven tourism growth in the region, Kea Award judges said.

Judges said Kayne had contribute­d greatly to the growth of Auckland, Northland and greater New Zealand.

“I’m blessed to be able to contribute. We’re very proud of what’s been developed at Tara Iti, and the Award is truly heartwarmi­ng as evidence that our efforts have been appreciate­d,” Kayne said.

Kea Award: Tim Brown

Former All Whites captain turned businessma­n Tim Brown co-founded woollen shoe company All Birds with Joey Zwillinger in 2016. Fast forward four years the company has sold more than a million pairs of shoes and is one of the fastest-growing shoe companies in world.

Brown has been credited as the creative vision behind Allbirds, which earlier this year put itself on a journey to become carbon-neutral. The company wants to revolution­ise the global footwear industry, which churns out an estimated 25 billion pairs of shoes each year.

Brown was vice-captain of New Zealand’s national football team competing in the Fifa World Cup before retiring from sport in 2010.

Kea Award: Fady Mishriki

Entreprene­ur Fady Mishriki is the founder and former chief executive of technology company PowerbyPro­xi, which was acquired by Apple in 2017. Mishriki immigrated to New Zealand in 1998 and during his final years of school he met Kunal Bhargava. They would later work together on PowerbyPro­xi. While completing his studies at the University of Auckland he was infected by the entreprene­urial bug and founded PowerbyPro­xi, which develops wireless power products, in 2007. Under Mishriki’s leadership PowerbyPro­xi became the world’s largest wireless power firm globally by revenue with over 500 patents to its name. Today, Mishriki is managing director of Apple’s Auckland technology centre.

Kea Award: Elizabeth Iorns

Dr Elizabeth Iorns is a globally recognised scientist and entreprene­ur who is co-founder and president of Silicon Valley start-up Science Exchange, a marketplac­e for outsourced scientific research and developmen­t which links scientists with a network of scientific research institutio­ns around the world.

Elizabeth and co-founder Dan Knox launched the platform in 2011 with the goal of making the impact of scientific discovery available to organisati­ons. The company has been credited for transformi­ng the global scientific research industry through greater connectivi­ty and transparen­cy.

Kea Award: Kirsten Nevill-Manning

Nevill-Manning is a globallyre­cognised human resources profession­al with a passion for recruiting and building successful teams and business leaders.

She was previously director of internatio­nal human resources at tech giant Facebook, tasked with supporting the company’s global expansion and recruitmen­t of thousands of employees.

Nevill-Manning has also worked at Google leading the internatio­nal expansion teams into New Zealand, Europe, the Middle East and Asia, and is vice-president of people operations, IT and facilities at New York-based online educationa­l marketplac­e Teachers Pay Teachers.

Kea Award: Christophe­r Shaw

Shaw is a professor of Neurology and Neurogenet­ics at King’s College London. His clinical training was conducted in New Zealand.

In 1995, Shaw attended King’s College London and King’s College Hospital where he trained in Neurogenet­ics, and his clinical and research interest became focused on amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemp­oral dementia (FTD).

Under Christophe­r’s stewardshi­p, the King’s College Department of Basic and Clinical Neuroscien­ce has grown from 10 to 40 Principal Investigat­ors, and hosts a major centre for the UK Dementia Research Institute. He led an initiative to build a new Neuroscien­ce research facility by making the strategic case for colocation, leading the design brief and raising £70m required to build, equip and staff the 10,000sq m Maurice Wohl Clinical Neuroscien­ce Institute where he is a director.

Kea Award: Rachel Taulelei

Rachel Taulelei is chief executive of Kono NZ, a M¯aori-owned New Zealand food and beverage company employing more than 450 staff and which farms more than 1000ha of land and sea.

The Nelson-based company exports product to 25 countries through its brands Tohu, Kono and Aronui wines, Tutu¯ cider, Kono mussels, Kiwa oysters, and Annies fruit bars.

Taulelei is founder of sustainabl­e seafood company Yellow Brick Road, formerly NZ Trade Commission­er in Los Angeles and an advocate for New Zealand’s primary industry spending more than 20 years promoting Aotearoa.

Taulelei received the Sir Peter Blake Leadership Award and is a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to food and hospitalit­y. In 2018, Rachel was named Ma¯ori Woman Business Leader at the University of Auckland Aotearoa Ma¯ori Business Leaders Awards, and sits on the Prime Minister’s Business Advisory Council.

Her governance experience includes Moana NZ, Wellington Regional Stadium Trust, New Zealand Wine Growers, Aquacultur­e New Zealand, the Young Enterprise Trust, and Sir Peter Blake Trust.

 ??  ?? Tim Brown Rachel Taulelei Dr Elizabeth Iorns Peter Gordon Ric Kaye Kirsten Nevill-Manning Fady Mishriki Christophe­r Shaw Herald graphic
Tim Brown Rachel Taulelei Dr Elizabeth Iorns Peter Gordon Ric Kaye Kirsten Nevill-Manning Fady Mishriki Christophe­r Shaw Herald graphic

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