Billy T. James
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Billy T. James (b. William James Taitoko, 1948;
d. August
7, 1991) was
a well known and much-loved entertainer and comedian from New
Zealand. He was famous for his black singlet, yellow towel around the neck
and a characteristic chuckle that he claimed was inspired by Maori children.
Billy T. James - Te News 7
Never a man to take himself seriously, he once said: 'I'm half-Maori and
half-Scottish:
one half of me wants to get pissed [drunk] and the other half doesn't want
to pay for it.' When some militant Maori started chanting, 'Kill a white be
a hero!' he retorted, 'What about a half-caste like me? What do I do, stab
myself?' According to his daughter Lyn, on one occasion when someone arrived
at his farm with a loaded shotgun, he treated it as if it were a game.
In the 1970s,
James joined the musical showband, the Maori
Volcanics, and toured internationally. While in Australia,
he began his solo career and later returned to his native New Zealand. He changed
his name due to pronunciation difficulties he apparently confronted in Australia: "...
something the Aussies could pronounce."
In the 1980s,
James became a household name through variety show Radio Times and
his self-titled The
Billy T. James Show in 1984.
His film career blossomed around this time, too, with a notable role in Ian
Mune's Came
a Hot Friday (The Tainuia Kid - a Maori who believes
he is a Mexican bandito).
In 1985, New Zealanders
named him 'Entertainer of the Decade'.
On Television
New Zealand, he lampooned the US show Entertainment
This Week as 'Entertainment That's Weak'. His other spoofs that are
well known amongst New Zealanders of his generation included Turangi
Vice(where the Vice Squad cracked down on illegal trout
fishing), Chocky IV (an eating competition held in a boxing ring)
and a memorable version of American cop show CHiPs.
In all these, he appeared with his collaborator Peter
Rowley. Tony
Holden directed the most memorable episodes in 1984.
As an all-round entertainer, James was a talented singer and had a knack for
drawing, which both emerged in his shows. His show was not renewed on TVNZ
after the 1985 C6 season, which appeared more expensive with location
filming, and abandoned his cabaret-style segments.
He dubbed voices in the feature cartoon Footrot
Flats: the Dog's Tale, in 1987.
Two books of comic
strips that he wrote, Billy T. James' Real Hard-Case Book (volumes
1 and 2), appeared in the late 1980s.
He wrote and starred in a short-lived sitcom (created
with studio exec Tom Parkinson of Isambard Productions), also called The
Billy T. James Show, on then-fledgling New
Zealand network TV3 in 1989 C90.
He starred opposite Ilona
Rodgers and Mark
Hadlow.
His poor health saw him go in for major heart surgery, after which he returned
in a TV special, Billy T. James: Alive and Gigging, with special guest Sir
Howard Morrison, to whom he was related.
James sadly died of a heart attack in 1991, with some controversy over where
he was to be buried. His legacy lives on in events such as the Billy T. Awards
where aspiring comedians compete to win the yellow towel.
Maori
Television revived some of his work in its first few weeks in 2004.
Reviews / Comments for Billy T. James
Rating Averages