Rima Te Wiata
Heather Rima Te Wiata MNZM (born 11 October 1963) is a British-born New Zealand actress, comedian, singer, and voice artist of Ngāti Raukawa descent, renowned for her versatile performances across stage, film, television, and voice work in New Zealand and Australia.[1][2] Born in London to the renowned Māori opera singer Inia Te Wiata and actress Beryl Te Wiata, she relocated to Auckland at age eight following her father's death in 1971.[3][4] After graduating from Toi Whakaari: New Zealand Drama School in 1983, Te Wiata began her professional career in Australia, debuting on screen in 1986 as Janice Reid in the soap opera Sons and Daughters, appearing in over 200 episodes.[3] Her breakthrough in New Zealand cinema came with supporting roles in horror-comedy Housebound (2014), for which she received two international horror awards, and as Aunty Bella in Taika Waititi's acclaimed adventure Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016).[3] She earned the Best Supporting Actress award at the 2017 New Zealand Film Awards for the latter.[3] On television, Te Wiata portrayed Sharon Armstrong in the crime drama The Tender Trap (2022), winning Best Actress at the 2022 New Zealand Television Awards, and played the key role of Sheriam Bayanar in four episodes of season 2 of Amazon Prime's The Wheel of Time (2023).[3][5] In 2024, she appeared as the Matron in the film We Were Dangerous, earning a nomination for Best Supporting Actress at the 2025 New Zealand Screen Awards.[3][6] In recognition of her contributions to film and television, Te Wiata was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM) in the 2017 New Year's Honours.[7] A mezzo-soprano singer, she has also released a self-titled jazz album and toured with musical theatre productions, while maintaining an active stage presence in works like Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead.[3][2]Early life and education
Family background and birth
Rima Te Wiata was born Heather Rima Te Wiata on October 11, 1963, in London, England.[8][9] Her parents were Inia Te Wiata, a prominent Māori bass-baritone opera singer, actor, and carver of Ngāti Raukawa descent, and Beryl Te Wiata (née McMillan), a New Zealand actress, singer, author, and scriptwriter.[3][10][11] As the only child born to Inia and Beryl, Te Wiata grew up in a household deeply rooted in the performing arts, where both parents pursued successful careers in opera, theater, and music.[12] Her father's extensive international opera engagements, including leading roles in Europe and Britain, immersed her in artistic environments from an early age and highlighted the family's commitment to creative expression.[10][3] Te Wiata's Māori heritage traces directly through her father to the Ngāti Raukawa iwi, with Inia Te Wiata playing a pivotal role as a cultural ambassador by promoting Māori performing arts and traditions on international stages during his career.[10][3] This lineage provided a foundational connection to indigenous New Zealand culture amid her British birthplace and the family's global nomadic lifestyle.[10]Upbringing and influences
Rima Te Wiata was born in London in 1963 as the only child of renowned Māori bass-baritone opera singer Inia Te Wiata and actress Beryl Te Wiata (née McMillan). Her upbringing was marked by a nomadic lifestyle shaped by her father's international opera tours, involving frequent travels across Europe and other regions as her mother and she accompanied him. The family spent significant time in London, where Te Wiata attended a strict Christian state school, navigating adjustments to diverse cultural environments and educational settings. Following her father's death in 1971, the family returned to New Zealand, settling in Auckland when Te Wiata was eight years old.[3][10][13] From a young age, Te Wiata was immersed in the performing arts through her parents' professions, gaining early exposure to opera and theatrical rehearsals during family travels and home life in London. This environment fostered her initial artistic inspirations, as she observed the demands and creativity of professional performances firsthand.[12][3] As an only child in a high-profile family, Te Wiata faced unique challenges, including the emotional weight of public attention on her parents and the frequent disruptions of relocating between countries and schools. These experiences required constant adaptation to new cultures, languages, and social dynamics, contributing to a sense of resilience amid instability.[12][14][13] In later years, Te Wiata reflected on the profound family bonds forged during her childhood, particularly in the context of her mother's battle with dementia, which culminated in Beryl Te Wiata's passing in 2017 at age 92. She has described this as a gradual and heartbreaking loss that underscored the depth of their connection, shaped by the supportive yet peripatetic early years.[12][11]Formal training
After completing secondary school at Epsom Girls' Grammar School in Auckland, Te Wiata initially considered a career in dentistry, working briefly as a dental assistant influenced by a family friend who was a dentist.[3] However, her passion for performance, sparked by early stage experiences including a role at the Mercury Theatre at age 17, led her to pivot toward acting. As she later reflected, "As soon as I completed the part, I knew acting was what I wanted to do forever."[3] Te Wiata pursued formal training in the performing arts, beginning with two years at the Mercury Theatre in Auckland before enrolling at the New Zealand Drama School (now Toi Whakaari: New Zealand Drama School) in Wellington.[3] She graduated in 1983, having honed foundational skills essential for her multifaceted career.[3] This period formalized her innate vocal abilities, inherited from her parents—her father, the renowned Māori bass-baritone Inia Te Wiata, and her mother, actress Beryl Te Wiata—through structured voice and performance techniques.[3] Following graduation, Te Wiata immediately applied her training in professional settings, embarking on a six-month national tour singing and acting in a production of Footrot Flats.[3] This early opportunity underscored her versatility, blending the dramatic and musical elements developed during her education.Acting career
Early stage and television work
Te Wiata began her professional stage career at the age of 17, making her debut as one of the students in a production of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie at Auckland's Mercury Theatre in 1980.[3] She trained there for two years as a trainee actor and stage manager before graduating from Toi Whakaari: New Zealand Drama School in Wellington in 1983.[3] Following her formal training, she embarked on a six-month national tour in 1983–1984, performing as a singer and actor in the musical adaptation of Footrot Flats, which helped establish her versatility in New Zealand theatre.[3] Her transition to television came after a brief stint in Australia, where she appeared in the soap opera Sons and Daughters from 1986 to 1988. Returning to New Zealand, Te Wiata secured her breakthrough TV role in 1989 as Constable Jacko, a regular character in the police drama Shark in the Park, which aired until 1991 and marked her entry into domestic screen work.[3] She also featured in early TV comedies such as Porters in 1987 and The Billy T James Show, balancing these opportunities with ongoing stage commitments in a competitive, resource-limited industry where actors often juggled multiple roles to sustain careers.[3][15] During the 1990s, Te Wiata built her reputation through local stage productions and television sketches, particularly her comedic impersonations on satirical shows like Issues (1990) and More Issues (1991–1992), where she portrayed figures such as politician Helen Clark and broadcaster Judy Bailey.[3] These performances earned her the Viewers’ Choice Most Popular Female on TV Award for two consecutive years, highlighting her skill in character work amid the challenges of New Zealand's small entertainment sector, including production stresses that led her to briefly leave Issues after five episodes due to concerns over extended runtime and limited resources.[3] Her early work in this era underscored the demands of navigating a modest industry, where emerging TV formats required actors to adapt quickly between live theatre and scripted sketches.[3]Film breakthrough and key roles
Te Wiata's breakthrough in cinema came with her role as Miriam Bucknell in the 2014 horror-comedy Housebound, directed by Gerard Johnstone, where she portrayed the eccentric, well-meaning mother of the protagonist during a haunted house arrest scenario.[16] Her performance garnered critical acclaim in the horror genre for its blend of physical comedy and emotional depth, earning her the Best Supporting Actress award at the 2014 Fright Meter Awards and a nomination for the same category at the 2015 Fangoria Chainsaw Awards.[17] This role marked a significant shift from her earlier stage and television work, establishing her as a versatile screen presence in New Zealand's independent film scene. Building on this momentum, Te Wiata delivered a standout performance as Aunt Bella in Taika Waititi's 2016 adventure-comedy Hunt for the Wilderpeople, playing the warm, nurturing foster aunt to the young protagonist Ricky Baker.[18] The film, which became one of New Zealand's highest-grossing features and received widespread international distribution, highlighted her ability to infuse heartfelt drama with subtle humor, contributing to the story's themes of family and cultural identity. For this portrayal, she won the Best Supporting Actress award at the 2017 Rialto Channel New Zealand Film Awards, solidifying her rising profile and drawing global attention to her talent.[19] In the years following, Te Wiata expanded her comedic range with supporting roles in films like Pork Pie (2016), where she played the quirky Mrs. D in Matt Murphy's road-trip comedy remake, and The Breaker Upperers (2018), as Shona, the meddlesome mother in Madeleine Sami and Jackie van Beek's dark humor breakup service satire. These appearances showcased her skill in delivering sharp, relatable character work within ensemble casts, often drawing on everyday New Zealand life for authenticity. Through these key roles from 2014 to 2018, Te Wiata demonstrated remarkable versatility, seamlessly transitioning between horror, heartfelt drama, and irreverent comedy while embodying strong Māori perspectives that enriched New Zealand cinema's portrayal of diverse family dynamics and cultural nuances.[3] Her contributions helped elevate indigenous voices in mainstream films, influencing a new wave of inclusive storytelling in the industry.Recent television and international projects
In the late 2010s and early 2020s, Rima Te Wiata transitioned toward more dramatic roles in film and television, including her portrayal of Janice in the 2020 New Zealand comedy-drama film This Town, which showcased her versatility in blending humor with investigative tension.[20] She continued this evolution with her lead role as Sharon Armstrong in the 2022 television drama The Tender Trap, a true-story-based crime drama for which she won Best Actress at the 2022 New Zealand Television Awards.[3] Te Wiata's entry into international streaming came in 2023, when she played the authoritative Aes Sedai Sheriam Bayanar across four episodes of season 2 of Amazon Prime Video's fantasy epic The Wheel of Time, produced in New Zealand and marking her debut in a major U.S.-led production. In 2024, she took on the role of Jules Varma in the New Zealand series Madam, a contemporary drama centered on an ethical brothel and the empowerment of women in a rural community.[21] These projects reflect Te Wiata's expanding career trajectory into global markets, where her work as a Māori actress has advanced the visibility of Indigenous women in drama and fantasy genres, building on earlier acclaim from films like Hunt for the Wilderpeople.[22][3]Music and other contributions
Singing and musical performances
Rima Te Wiata inherited a strong musical legacy from her father, the renowned Māori opera singer Inia Te Wiata, whose international career as a bass-baritone influenced her early exposure to performance arts. This familial environment fostered her vocal development.[10] In 1992, Te Wiata released her self-titled debut album, a collection of jazz and swing standards produced by Sony Music New Zealand, featuring 12 tracks including covers like "Sweet and Low Down" and "Angel Eyes." The album showcased her versatile voice in big band arrangements, drawing on classic influences while highlighting her smooth phrasing and emotional depth, and it marked her transition from familial opera contexts to solo recording artistry. Distributed on CD in 1993, it received positive reception for bridging jazz traditions with her personal interpretive style.[23][24] Te Wiata has performed extensively with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra (NZSO), including a national tour of 11 concerts in the early 2000s that featured large outdoor venues and blended classical orchestration with popular and jazz-infused repertoire. In 2001, she narrated Stravinsky's The Soldier's Tale in an NZSO production alongside actors Taika Waititi and Jemaine Clement, incorporating spoken elements with musical underscoring. A notable collaboration came in 2010 with composer Gareth Farr, where she premiered an extended NZSO-commissioned work setting Shakespeare's sonnets to music, emphasizing lyrical vocal lines that evoked both classical formality and personal introspection.[3][23][25][26] Her work in musical theatre has further highlighted her singing, with starring roles that demand vocal prowess alongside dramatic delivery. In productions like Cabaret as Sally Bowles and H.M.S. Pinafore as Little Buttercup, she delivered songs central to the narrative, such as "Refrain, Audacious Tar," earning acclaim for her commanding stage presence and tonal richness. Additionally, in voice work for animated series like Kiri and Lou, Te Wiata provided vocals for characters in singalong segments, including tracks on albums such as Kiri and Lou Singalongsongs, where her performances incorporated playful melodies fused with jazz and classical undertones. As of 2025, she featured on the EP No-One Sweeps the Trees (feat. Rima Te Wiata) by Kiri & Lou. These contributions distinguish her musical output as a fusion of inherited operatic roots, jazz improvisation, and culturally resonant expression.[5][3][27][28]Comedy, voice work, and impressions
Te Wiata gained prominence in New Zealand comedy through her work on sketch-based television shows in the late 1980s and early 1990s, where she specialized in satirical impressions of public figures.[3] Her breakthrough came on Laughinz (1989), a topical sketch comedy series featuring prominent Kiwi performers, followed by Issues and More Issues (1990–1991), which highlighted her talent for parodying politicians and media personalities.[29][30] Notably, her recurring impression of newsreader Judy Bailey on More Issues—depicting her as prim and unflappable—became a cultural touchstone, earning Te Wiata the Viewers’ Choice Most Popular Female on TV Award for two consecutive years and drawing positive reactions from Bailey herself.[31] She also parodied a chain-smoking version of future Prime Minister Helen Clark on the same series, adding to her reputation for sharp, observational humor in New Zealand productions.[3] In stage comedy, Te Wiata contributed to revue-style performances, blending satire with musical elements. She directed the Blue Baths Comedy Cabaret It's a Quack Up! (2015) in Rotorua, a whimsical summer revue that showcased her multifaceted skills in comedic timing and ensemble work.[32][33] While primarily known for scripted sketches rather than solo stand-up, her early stage experience informed her improvisational flair in satirical roles. As of 2025, she was involved in a new comedy programme featuring emerging talents.[34][35] Te Wiata's voice work extends her comedic versatility into animation and narrative audio, often employing accents to enhance character depth. As a professional voice artist, she specializes in Australian and British accents, which she has utilized in various projects.[5] From 2018 to 2023, she provided recurring voice work as Pania in the animated children's series Kiri and Lou, bringing humor to the show's quirky, everyday scenarios.[5][3] Earlier, in the stage production of Little Shop of Horrors, she voiced the singing plant Audrey II, infusing the role with comedic menace through vocal performance.[3] Her impressionistic style carried over to Australian television on Full Frontal, where she mimicked celebrities like Whitney Houston and Michael Jackson, further demonstrating her range in voice parody.[31]Filmography and selected works
Film credits
Te Wiata's film career began in the late 1980s with supporting roles in New Zealand cinema.[36]- 1988: Send a Gorilla – Role: Lisa; Director: Melanie Read. In this feminist comedy, she portrayed a key supporting character navigating workplace dynamics.[37]
- 1993: Alex – Role: Swimming commentator; Director: Michael Lake. A minor but notable cameo in this sports drama about a young athlete's journey.
- 1993: Cops and Robbers – Role: Cop; Director: Murray Reace. A comedic crime film involving a bumbling robber and police.)
- 1995: Hinekaro Goes On a Picnic and Blows Up Another Obelisk (short film) – Role: Apprentice; Director: Not specified. She appeared in this experimental short exploring cultural themes through absurd humor.
- 1998: Via Satellite – Role: Jen; Director: Anthony McCarten. Te Wiata played a central figure in this dark comedy about a dysfunctional family reunion.
- 2005: 50 Ways of Saying Fabulous – Role: Aunt Evey; Director: Stuart Main. As the supportive aunt, she contributed to the coming-of-age story of a young boy's rural life.
- 2014: Housebound – Role: Miriam Bucknell; Director: Gerard Johnstone. Te Wiata delivered a memorable performance as the quirky mother in this horror-comedy about house arrest.[38]
- 2016: Hunt for the Wilderpeople – Role: Aunt Bella; Director: Taika Waititi. She portrayed the warm foster mother in this adventure comedy about a boy and his uncle on the run.[39]
- 2017: Pork Pie – Role: Mrs D; Director: Matt Murphy. In this road movie remake, she appeared as a roadside encounter character adding local flavor.
- 2018: The Breaker Upperers – Role: Shona (Jen's mother); Directors: Jackie van Beek and Madeleine Sami. Te Wiata played the over-the-top mother in this satirical take on breakup services.[40]
- 2020: This Town – Role: Janice; Director: David White. She featured as a community member in this dark comedy about small-town secrets and a murder trial.[20]
- 2024: We Were Dangerous – Role: The Matron; Director: Josephine Stewart-Te Whiu. Te Wiata embodied the authoritative figure in this historical drama about girls at a reform institution.[41]
Television credits
Rima Te Wiata's television career spans several decades, featuring regular roles, guest appearances, and voice work in series, miniseries, and specials primarily produced in New Zealand, with some international projects. Her credits are presented below in chronological order, including character names, episode counts where available, and series formats.- Sons and Daughters (1986–1987, soap opera): Role as Janice Reid, appearing in 204 episodes of the Australian series.
- Shark in the Park (1989–1991, TV series): Regular role as Jacko, appearing in 13 episodes across two seasons of the New Zealand police drama.[42]
- More Issues (1991–1992, comedy sketch series): Various characters in this sketch comedy show, including impressions and satirical roles.[36]
- Full Frontal (1993–1994, comedy sketch series): Various characters in 40 episodes of the Australian series.[43]
- Overnight (1995, TV series): Role as Mel in this New Zealand drama series.[36]
- Showcase (1996–1998, talent competition series): Appeared as a judge across multiple episodes and seasons of the New Zealand talent show.[36]
- Motormania (1998, TV series): Presenter in at least two episodes of this automotive-themed program.[36]
- Strassman (2000, TV special): Guest appearance in the New Zealand broadcast of the ventriloquist comedy special.[36]
- Shortland Street (2007, soap opera): Recurring role as Liz Arthur, the estranged mother of TK Samuels, in multiple episodes.[3]
- Bliss (2011, telefeature/miniseries): Role as Miss Watson in this biographical drama about Katherine Mansfield.[44]
- Tatau (2014–2015, miniseries): Guest role as Budgie's Mum in six episodes of the New Zealand-UK co-produced mystery series.[44]
- The Brokenwood Mysteries (2014–present, crime drama series): Recurring guest role as Dilys Cochrane, appearing in at least nine episodes, including season 10 in 2024.[45]
- Terry Teo (2016, miniseries): Guest role as Aunty Hinetu in one episode of the family adventure series.[44]
- The Barefoot Bandits (2016–2017, adventure series): Voice role as Mamma Moa (TV Mum) in multiple episodes of the children's animated/live-action hybrid.[44]
- Westside (2018, TV series): Role as Iris in series IV of the South Pacific Pictures drama.[5]
- Golden Boy (2018–2020, comedy series): Regular role as Carol, appearing in eight episodes as one of the protagonists' mothers.[46]
- Kiri and Lou (2019–present, animated children's series): Voice role as Marzipan in numerous episodes, including over 80 across multiple seasons.[8]
- The Tender Trap (2021, telefeature): Lead role as Sharon Armstrong in this New Zealand crime drama.[5]
- My Life Is Murder (2022, crime drama series): Guest role as Spencer in one episode of season 3.[8]
- The Wheel of Time (2023, fantasy series): Role as Sheriam Bayanar in four episodes of season 2, an Amazon Prime Video production.[5]
- Madam (2024, comedy-drama series): Role as Jules Varma in this TVNZ and XYZ Films co-production.[5]
- A Remarkable Place to Die (2024, TV movie): Role as Janice in this Miss Phryne Fisher mystery telefeature.[5]