The following lists events that happened during 1983 in New Zealand.
Quick Facts Decades:, See also: ...
Close
- Estimated population as of 31 December: 3,264,800.[1]
- Increase since 31 December 1982: 38,000 (1.18%).[1]
- Males per 100 females: 98.6.[1]
See 1983 in art, 1983 in literature
Music
Winners are shown first with nominees underneath.[7]
- ALBUM OF THE YEAR DD Smash – Live: Deep in the Heart of Taxes
- SINGLE OF THE YEAR DD Smash – "Outlook For Thursday"
- Monte Video – "Shoop Shoop Diddy Wop Cumma Cumma Wang Dang"
- Coconut Rough – "Sierra Leone"
- TOP MALE VOCALIST Dave Dobbyn (DD Smash)
- Malcolm McNeill
- Monte Video
- TOP FEMALE VOCALIST Suzanne Prentice
- TOP GROUP OF THE YEAR DD Smash
- MOST PROMISING MALE VOCALIST Andrew Mclennan (Coconut Rough)
- Dick Driver (Hip Singles)
- Gary Smith (The Body Electric)
- MOST PROMISING FEMALE VOCALIST Sonya Waters
- Rhonda Jones
- Bronwyn Jones (Precious)
- MOST PROMISING GROUP Coconut Rough
- Hip Singles
- The Body Electric
- BEST POLYNESIAN ALBUM The Radars – Chulu Chululu
- Patea Maori Club (featuring Dalvanius) – Poi E
- Kaiwhaiki Cultural Club – The Valley of Voices Vol 2
- BEST FILM SOUNDTRACK/ CAST RECORDING/ COMPILATION Sharon O'Neill – Smash Palace
- Schtung – The Scarecrow
- John Charles – Utu
- BEST MUSIC VIDEO Andrew Shaw – "Outlook For Thursday" (DD Smash)
- Greg Rood – Sierra Leone (Coconut Rough)
- Mark Ackerman, Craig Howard – "Shoop Shoop Diddy Wop Cumma Cumma Wang Dang" (Monte Video)
- ENGINEER OF THE YEAR Dave Marett – "Sierra Leone" (Coconut Rough)
- Graeme Myhre – Live: Deep in the Heart of Taxes (DD Smash)
- Paul Streekstra – "Outlook For Thursday" (DD Samsh)
- PRODUCER OF THE YEAR Dave Marett – "Sierra Leone" (Coconut Rough)
- Dave Dobbyn – "Outlook For Thursday" (DD Smash)
- Monte Video/ Bruce Lynch – "Shoop Shoop Diddy Wop Cumma Cumma Wang Dang" (Monte Video)
- MOST POPULAR SONG Patsy Riggir – "Beautiful Lady"
- MOST POPULAR ARTIST DD Smash
- OUTSTANDING CONTRIBUTION Murray Cammick
- BEST COVER DESIGN Simon & Suzy Clark – Daring Feats
- Matthew Aitken – The Tin Syndrome
- Van Heusen/ O'Neill-Joyce – Space Case Two
- CLASSICAL RECORD OF THE YEAR Louise Malloy – Louise
- Kiri Te Kanawa/ National Youth Choir of New Zealand – Royal Occasion
- Schools Polyphonics of Wellington – Tenebrae Responsorie 1585
- JAZZ RECORD OF THE YEAR Rodger Fox Big Band – Heavy Company
- COUNTRY RECORD OF THE YEAR Suzanne Prentice – When I Dream
- Patsy Riggir – Are You Lonely
- Brendan Duggan – Hands on the Wheel
See 1983 in music
Athletics
- Graham Macky wins his first national title in the men's marathon, clocking 2:21:22 in Mosgiel, while Val Lindsay does the same in the women's championship (3:11:35).
Cricket
- World Series Cup, New Zealand finished first in the preliminary stages of this annual triangular one-day competition in Australia, which in 1982/83 received unprecedented interest and record television audiences. England missed out on a finals berth, with Australia coming qualifying second.
New Zealand's star allrounder, Richard Hadlee, tore a hamstring on the eve of the lucrative and much anticipated finals series with Australia and was forced out of the side. A demoralised New Zealand were then well beaten by the rejuvenated Australians, 2–0. Lance Cairns hit his memorable 6 sixes in front of 71, 000 in the second final at the MCG.
Glenn Turner made his long-awaited international comeback in this series after six years of self-imposed exile from the New Zealand team due to a financial disagreement with the NZCC.
In February, New Zealand whitewashed England 3–0 in the Rothmans Cup one-day series in Christchurch, Wellington and Auckland, witnessed by sell-out crowds. Sri Lanka was then convincingly beaten in both the test and one-day series at home to cap off a memorable summer of cricket.
In July history was made when the Geoff Howarth-led side won their first test match against England in England, with a five wicket victory in the second test at Headingley in Leeds. However, they lost the four match series 1–3. Prior to this series, New Zealand played in the 1983 World Cup. In a tough group with both England and Pakistan, New Zealand narrowly missed out on a semi-final place at the World Cup for the first time, after being successful in the two prior tournaments in 1975 and 1979. Glenn Turner retired from international cricket after New Zealand's exit.
Horse racing
Thoroughbred racing
Kiwi wins a memorable 1983 Melbourne Cup at Flemington in a last-to-first finish in the home straight.
Shooting
- Ballinger Belt – Rex Chilcott (Clevedon)[13]
- 18 January: George Bridgewater, rower
- 19 January: Glen Moss, association football player
- 24 January: Wyatt Crockett, rugby union player
- 27 January: Dene Halatau, rugby league player
- 8 February James Ryan, (rugby player) Cory Jane, rugby union player
- 13 February: Bradley Shaw, field hockey player
- 1 March: James Mortimer, (athlete) hurdler
- 2 March: Dan Wootton, journalist and broadcaster
- 13 March: Carl Bates, politician
- 16 March: Melody Cooper, field hockey player
- 1 April: Tamati Ellison, rugby union player
- 1 April: Lance Hohaia, rugby league player
- 7 April: Allan Pearce, association football player
- 15 April: Anna Scarlett, netballer
- 25 April: Nick Willis, athlete
- 30 April: David Faiumu, rugby league player
- 5 May: Ben Atiga, rugby union player
- 22 May: Jeremy Christie, association football player
- 6 June: Joe Rokocoko, rugby union player
- 10 June: Gavin Williams, rugby union player
- 17 June: James Dolphin, athlete
- 29 June: Jimmy Gopperth, rugby union player
- 6 July: Brent Fisher, association football player
- 10 August: Rebecca Scown, rower
- 19 August: Tania Nolan, actress
- 28 August: Luke McAlister, rugby union player
- 7 September: Piri Weepu, rugby union player
- 8 September: Toni Street, television presenter and sports commentator
- 15 September: Richard Sherlock, cricketer
- 28 September: John Schwalger, rugby union player
- 17 October: Michelle Ang, actor
- 18 October: Jonny Reid, motor racing driver
- 8 November: Chris Rankin, actor
- 29 November: Jeremy Mayall, composer
- 2 December: Michael Wesley-Smith, actor
- 15 December: Brooke Fraser, singer-songwriter
- 20 December: Aaradhna, hip-hop artist
- 7 January: Eliza Amy Hodgson, botanist
- 15 June: Sir William Liley, pioneering surgeon.
- 23 July (in Sydney): Tex Morton, musician.
- 6 August 1983: Patrick Murray, priest, editor, ecumenicist.(born 1931)
- 12 August: Giff Vivian, cricketer.
- 26 October: Edward Blaiklock, academic.
- 29 November: Sir William Stevenson, industrialist and philanthropist.
- 8 December: Sir Keith Holyoake, former Prime Minister.
- 19 December: Lancelot Eric Richdale, ornithologist.
Statistics New Zealand: New Zealand Official Yearbook, 1990. ISSN 0078-0170 page 52
"Awards 1983". Listing. NZ Music Awards. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
Media related to 1983 in New Zealand at Wikimedia Commons