Sam Neill’s life in TV.
Sam Neill’s life in TV.

Pop Cultureabout 6 hours ago

Sam Neill’s extraordinary life on our screens, in his own words

Sam Neill’s life in TV.
Sam Neill’s life in TV.

New Zealand actor Sam Neill has died at the age of 78. In 2024, he spoke with Alex Casey about his extraordinary life on our screens. 

Sam Neill, one of the best-known and most beloved New Zealand actors of all time, has died at the age of 78. “It is with immense sadness that the whānau of Sam Neill share the news of his passing on Monday 13th July, in Sydney Australia,” his family shared on his social media accounts on Monday night. “Sam was surrounded by family and passed with the dignity that has characterised his whole life. The loss was sudden and unexpected but blessed by the fact that Sam remained cancer free.

“They would like to express their deepest gratitude to the staff at St Vincent’s Private Hospital for their incredible care. More details will be shared later, but for now, on behalf of the family, we ask that you respect their privacy as they navigate this immeasurable loss.”

That sense of loss that will be felt by several generations of film and television fans across Aotearoa and the world this week. Over the last five decades, Neill established himself as one of our country’s most respected and versatile screen performers with an unmatched filmography. After his breakthrough role in Sleeping Dogs in 1977, Neill went on to appear in cult horror favourites like Possession, Dead Calm and Omen III in the 80s, before starring in mainstream blockbusters in the 90s like Jurassic Park, The Hunt for Red October and Event Horizon.

Sam Neill in Steven Spielberg’s Jurassic Park

Throughout his illustrious international career, Neill always returned home. In 1993 he starred in Jane Campion’s Oscar-winning film The Piano, before turning the lens inwards in Cinema of Unease: A Personal Journey by Sam Neill in 1995. In the 2000s he played the charming stranger known only as ‘The Man’ in Gaylene Preston’s Perfect Strangers, the mysterious Mr Jones in the Maurice Gee adaptation Under the Mountain, and the inimitable curmudgeon Hec in Taika Waititi’s Hunt for the Wilderpeople.

In 2024, while he was doing press for courtroom drama series The Twelve, I was lucky enough to get 20 minutes on Zoom with Neill for our My Life in TV series. He was extremely charming and cordial, even when asked about failing all four of his first year law papers at university. “I just didn’t have the brain or the application to pull it off,” he said. “If I’d become a barrister, my father would have considered that a real job. He liked what I did, but it wasn’t a real job as far as he was concerned… Now I can just be a pretend lawyer,” he chuckled.  

Here is everything else Neill had to say about his extraordinary life on our screens, and what he loved to watch on television himself.

Julian Dennison and Sam Neil in The Hunt for the Wilderpeople.
Julian Dennison and Sam Neill in The Hunt for the Wilderpeople (Image: Supplied)

My earliest TV memory is… We must have been about the last country in the world to actually get television. We had a great big TV set at the time which took up half the room, but had a very small screen, about the size of a computer screen. We all gathered around it watching black and white shows, and I very much clearly remember Dad swearing and fiddling with the aerials. It was often a very frustrating experience, but it was sort of amazing to have moving images in your own sitting room. Bonanza is probably the earliest thing I remember watching on TV.

My first onscreen role was… I think the first thing I did that I’d actually own up to would be a little docu-drama called Ashes made by Pacific Films. Barry Barclay wrote it, and I played a priest in it. That was the first time I thought, “oh, this is interesting, this is something that maybe I could do”. There was almost no work for actors on screen in New Zealand at that time, so it was something that I never considered would be possible. But events took over, and that’s what I ended up doing.

Sam Neill in Ashes, his first onscreen role

My earliest television crush was… Emma Peel in The Avengers. Like most of New Zealand, I was dreaming about her at night. I was living in Christchurch at the time, and I remember the whole of Christchurch would get up at the same time and go to the lav during the commercial break. So there would be this sort of tidal wave, and the sewage system in Christchurch always had a lot of problems during The Avengers. 

The NZ TV ad I can’t stop thinking about is… I think the cheesier the better, really. But the one that I’ve never been able to get out of my head is the early Chesdale Cheese ad. It’s an old-fashioned cartoon, with these two blokes in gumboots singing “we are the blokes from down on the farm, we really know our cheese.” And it ended with this extraordinary couplet: “it’s ched-dar, made bet-ter. That’s a really bad rhyme and shouldn’t be encouraged. 

My TV guilty pleasure is… This really is guilty. There was a while where I just could not watch the news any more. Everything was so depressing and alarming, Ukraine and Gaza and the looming elections in the US and so on, and so I’d have to watch something really, really stupid. I got hooked – not for long – but I did get hooked on Married at First Sight Australia. I am so embarrassed to say, but it’s just excruciating and hilarious. Everything about it is toe-curling, but that is what is so great about it. Utterly toe-curling and you get so caught up in it. It’s ridiculous. 

Sam Neill in Peaky Blinders

My favourite television show of all time is… That’s easy: Babylon Berlin. It’s an extremely ambitious show set at the end of the Weimar Republic, just before the rise of the Nazis. And it follows two main characters – a detective who has PTSD from the first war and a drug addiction, and a young woman who is a wannabe detective also a part time sex worker. Every level of society is explored and it has such great storylines. Those first two seasons of Babylon Berlin were the greatest thing I’ve ever seen on television. 

My favourite character I’ve ever played on TV is… I don’t have favourites, that’s policy. But the television character that I’ve got the most positive feedback from is Inspector Campbell from Peaky Blinders. He was a lot of fun to play, a very multi-layered, complex character.

My favourite TV project I’ve ever worked on is… The one I’m the most proud of was the Captain Cook series I did around the Pacific from Alaska down to Antarctica. It was a great privilege to visit those places and be with all those people and to follow that story. We also had very important rules that we set for ourselves – the main one being that I wanted to know the story from both sides of the beach, so to speak. So when a ship turns up, what were the indigenous people thinking, and what were Cook and his crew thinking? I think the series stands up well because of that. 

Sam Neill making Captain Cook’s Pacific

The TV project I wish I had been involved in is… I’d probably land myself in Berlin in 1929 in Babylon Berlin. What wonderful actors and what an incredibly interesting time in world history that was. They’d have to make a role up for a New Zealander who’s got lost, of course. 

My controversial TV opinion is… I think that those in charge really need to look at what their responsibilities are. Now that newspapers are in decline and we’re living in an age where the truth is increasingly under attack, it really is the responsibility of people who run television stations to bring us the news and in-depth current affairs. We need really good information. It’s more critical today than it’s ever been, and I think there’s a lot of dereliction and the people in charge have got to do better.

The TV show I will never watch is… I’m in Vancouver at the moment and I’ve turned on Fox a few times here, just out of morbid curiosity, and I will never turn it on again. The stuff they talk about and the misinformation is incredible. It defies belief that it’s allowed to continue. When Joe Biden gave his blessing to Kamala I was watching Fox, and they started talking about how they hadn’t heard from Biden for 24 hours and needed proof of life, kind of propagating the idea that there’d been some kind of coup and Joe Biden was dead. It was crazy, crazy shit. Yeah, I definitely don’t need to watch any more of that rubbish.

The last thing I watched on television was… Not only was it the last thing, but it’s also one of the best things, and you can find it on Netflix. It’s called Island of the Sea Wolves. I love a good nature documentary, and this is as good as any I’ve ever seen. It was absolutely fantastic, it follows these animals through a year cycle on Vancouver Island. A couple of seagulls bringing up a chick, an otter mum with her little baby, and these wolves that get separated. All these amazing stories that are so involving and moving, I cannot tell you how much I enjoyed it. Much more wholesome than Married at First Sight, that’s for sure.