Billy T Award
The Billy T Award is New Zealand’s most prestigious comedy award recognising New Zealand comedians with outstanding potential. It has been presented annually since its inception in 1997 when Cal Wilson and Ewen Gilmour shared the award. The Billy T was shared between two comedians up until 2001 when it became a solo award. [1]
The awards are an initiative of the New Zealand Comedy Trust to ‘foster and encourage outstanding New Zealand talent.'[2]
Billy T James
The Billy T Awards were named in honour of one of New Zealand's greatest comedians, the late Billy T James. The winner receives ‘the yellow towel’ in tribute to the towel warn by James in some of his most famous sketches.[3]
Judging
The winner is selected from five nominees preforming during the New Zealand International Comedy Festival. Five judges select a winner based on their proven comedic ability, talent, dedication and potential.[4]
Billy T Award Winners and Nominees
1997 – Cal Wilson/Ewen Gilmour
Mike King, Brendhan Lovegrove, Radar and Raybon Kan
1998 – Brendhan Lovegrove/Radar (Andrew Lumsden)/Sugar and Spice (Jonathan Brugh and Jason Hoyte)
Sugar and Spice, Radar, Phillip Patston, Brendhan Lovegrove and Jaq Tweedie
1999 – Philip Patston/The Humourbeasts (Jemaine Clement and Taika Cohen)
Philip Patston, Paul Ego, Irene Pink, Jon Stubbs, and The Humourbeasts
2000 – Mike Loder/ Paul Ego
Jan Maree, Mike Loder, Irene Pink, Paul Ego and Benjamin Crellin
2001 – Jan Maree
Jan Maree, Jeremy Elwood, Rhys Darby, Jon Stubbs and Benjamin Crellin
Rhys Darby, Tarun Mohanbhai, Benjamin Crellin, Dai Henwood and GARY (Brett O'Gorman, Jamie Bowen and Mick Andrews)
Penny Ashton, Justine Smith, Sully O'Sullivan, GARY and Benjamin Crellin
Cohen Holloway, Ezequiel Balmori, Jamie Bowen, Penny Ashton and Ben Hurley
Cori Gonzalez-Macuer, Darren Jardine, James Nokise, Jo Randerson and Sam Wills
2006 – Cori Gonzalez-Macuer
Cori Gonzalez-Macuer, James Nokise, Jerome Chandrahasen, Cameron Blair and Gish (Justin Hansen)
2007 – Mrs Peacock (Jarrod Baker and Dave Smith)
Alex Hawley, Jamie Bowen, Grant Lobban and Mrs Peacock
Controversy
2003 – Mike Loader (winner 2000) wrote letters to nominees Penny Ashton and Sully O’Sullivan advising them they had won the award and asking them to keep the news to them selves. Justine Smith won the award. Loader was blacklisted from the 2004 festival.[5]
2005 – Philip Patston (winner 1999) who is gay and disabled, volunteered to give up his award. The comment was made as a parody of the National Party’s appointment of MP Wayne Mapp as its ‘political correctness eradicator’. Patston criticized Mapp and Party leader, Don Brash. Sarcastically, he claimed we should eradicate the gay and the disabled. He went on to say that he had chosen to be disabled and that all episodes of Shortland Street featuring him should be destroyed.[6]
Trivia
- Cori Gonzalez-Macuer (2006) and Dai Henwood (2002) are the youngest recipients of the award at 24.
- Every nominated duo has gone on to win the award.
- Benjamin Crellin holds the record for most nominations at four (2000- 2003)
External Links
- [New Zealand International Comedy Festival]
References
- ^ NZ On Air, Press Release: ‘New Zealand Laughs On Air’ 23/4/02.
- ^ NZ International Comedy festival, Press Release: ‘2007 Billy T Nominees’ 16/1/2007
- ^ NZ On Air, Press Release: ‘New Zealand Laughs On Air’ 23/4/02.
- ^ NZ International Comedy festival, Press Release: ‘2007 Billy T Nominees’ 16/1/2007
- ^ Richardson, Amie, ‘Prank-pulling comedian finds the joke’s on him,’ (Sunday Star Times: 1/6/03)
- ^ Scoop.co.nz, press release: ‘Eradicate me: gay and disabled comedian,’ 30/10/05.