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Hero image for Ray Henwood: the voice...

Ray Henwood: the voice...

Interview – 2012

Ray Henwood, ONZM  — father of comedian Dai —  arrived in New Zealand from Wales, just in time for the birth of professional theatre downunder. Best known to TV viewers for five seasons playing Hugh on hit comedy Gliding On, his screen roles included villains (The Legend of William Tell) and surgeons (Shortland Street). Onstage he played Stalin, Einstein and Richard Burton, and starred in early plays at Wellington theatres Downstage and Circa.

Ray Henwood died in August 2019. In this ScreenTalk interview conducted in 2012, he talked about:

  • Falling in love with New Zealand after arriving here on a gap year in the 1960s, to work as a teacher
  • How his long Kiwi acting career began after impressing theatre legend Nola Millar as Henry V, at a British Drama League festival
  • How in the days before the birth of the drama school, Kiwi actors often trained overseas, and never returned
  • Balancing a famous Moro bar commercial with his job as a forensic toxicologist
  • The breakthrough success of Roger Hall play Glide Time
  • His annoyance at the first television adaptation of Glide Time, from 1978
  • Warm memories of acting in Gliding On with a live audience at Avalon’s Studio 8 — and how few times things went wrong on set
  • Surviving a runaway horse while playing second villain to actor Andrew Robertt, on the set of The Legend of William Tell
  • Being proud Dad to comedian Dai Henwood
This video was first uploaded on 11 July 2012, and is available under this Creative Commons licence. This licence is limited to use of ScreenTalk interview footage only and does not apply to any video content and photographs from films, television, music videos, web series and commercials used in the interview.
Interview - Ian Pryor. Camera and Editing - Alex Backhouse
On Town and Around one night they had a clip of me talking with the traffic police as they were then known, explaining all the difficulties and the advantages of using the breathalyser  . . .   first ad after that was the Moro ad, and I found myself in the director's office the following morning. 
– Ray Henwood on juggling his job as a forensic toxicologist with acting in a Moro bar commercial