Actor Miriama Smith [Te Arawa] made her acting debut in cop show Shark in the Park. At 20 she graduated to Shortland Street, playing nurse Awhina Broughton. Since then, Smith has appeared in a raft of TV shows, including Mercy Peak, Serial Killers and Filthy Rich. She played lawyer Donna Hall in tele-feature Stolen, won an award for Siege, and competed on Dancing with the Stars.
In this ScreenTalk interviewe, Smith talks about:
- Playing a "naughty friend" on an episode of Shark in the Park
- How Shortland Street provided a fantastic opportunity to hone her acting
- Feeling pressured to represent Māori with her character Awhina
- Loving the larger-than-life production of Xena: Warrior Princess
- Being "wowed" by actor Lucy Lawless on the show
- Realising she could make a career out of acting, while working on Mercy Peak
- Facing up to the pressures of Dancing with the Stars with cracked ribs
- Undergoing a physical and mental transformation for her role in Stolen
- Finding empathy for her character in Siege
This video
was first uploaded on 19 June 2012, and
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Interview, Camera and Editing – Andrew Whiteside
My character, when she came on, it was the first time that a marae had been on Shortland Street . . . sometimes the storylines were very convenient to her being Māori, and I kind of felt that was a lot of pressure for a 21-year-old to suddenly walk under Lionel's house and find wood and it was tapu — and she could sense it and no one else could.
– Miriama Smith on feeling the pressure of representing Māori, with her character on Shortland Street