1973 in New Zealand
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See also: 1972 in New Zealand, other events of 1973, 1974 in New Zealand, and the Timeline of New Zealand history.
Contents |
[edit] Summary
The section should contain a paragraph or two about the year.
See: 1973 and Timeline of New Zealand history plus data below.
[edit] Incumbents
[edit] Regal and Vice Regal
[edit] Government
The 37th New Zealand Parliament continued. Government was by a Labour majority of 55 seats to the National Party's 32 seats.
- Speaker of the House - Stanley Whitehead
- Prime Minister - Norman Kirk
- Deputy Prime Minister - Hugh Watt
- Minister of Finance - Bill Rowling
- Minister of Foreign Affairs - Norman Kirk
[edit] Opposition Leaders
[edit] Main centre leaders
- Mayor of Auckland - Dove-Myer Robinson
- Mayor of Hamilton - Mike Minogue
- Mayor of Wellington - Frank Kitts
- Mayor of Christchurch - Neville G. Pickering
- Mayor of Dunedin - James George Barnes
[edit] Events
See 1973 , 1973 in politics , 1973 in science , Category:1973 in Australia , 1973 in Australia , 1973 in music , 1973 timelines , History of New Zealand , Category:History of New Zealand , Military history of New Zealand , Timeline of environmental history of New Zealand , Timeline of New Zealand history
[edit] January
- 2 January: description
[edit] February
[edit] March
[edit] April
[edit] June
[edit] July
[edit] August
[edit] September
[edit] October
[edit] November
[edit] December
[edit] Arts and literature
- Graham Billing wins the Robert Burns Fellowship.
See 1973 in art, 1973 in literature, Category:1973 books
[edit] Music
[edit] New Zealand Music Awards
- ALBUM OF THE YEAR John Donoghue - Spirit Of Pelorus Jack
- RECORDING ARTIST / GROUP OF THE YEAR Shona Laing
- BEST SINGLE / SINGLE OF THE YEAR John Hanlon – Damn The Dam
- BEST NEW ARTIST Shona Laing
- BEST NZ RECORDED COMPOSITION Anna Leah - Love Bug
- PRODUCER OF THE YEAR Keith Southern - Join Together
- ENGINEER OF THE YEAR Peter Hitchcock - Only Time Could Let Us Know
- ARRANGER OF THE YEAR Mike Harvey – Damn The Dam
See: 1973 in music
[edit] Radio and Television
- Colour television broadcasts begin on October 31. The licence fee for a colour television is NZ$35.
- The wedding of Princess Anne to Mark Phillips on November 14 is broadcast live.
- In December, Fred Dagg makes his first appearance. [1]
- Feltex Television Awards:
- Natural History Programme: Bird of a Single Flight
- Best News, Current Affairs: Election Night '72
- Best Light Entertainment: Loxene Golden Disc 1972
- Best Drama and the Arts: Gone Up North and An Awful Silence
- Best Documentary: Deciding
- Allied Crafts: Loxene Golden Disc set and work on Pop Co.
See: 1973 in New Zealand television, 1973 in television, List of TVNZ television programming, Category:New Zealand television, Category:New Zealand television shows, Public broadcasting in New Zealand
[edit] Film
- Rangi's Catch
See: Category:1973 film awards, 1973 in film, List of New Zealand feature films, Cinema of New Zealand, Category:1973 films
[edit] Appointments and awards
See: New Zealand Order of Merit , Order of New Zealand
- Archbishop of New Zealand
- Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia , see appointments to Diocese
[edit] Sport
- See: 1973 in sports , Category:1973 in sports , Summer Olympic Games (See Category:New Zealand at the Olympics and Winter Olympic Games, Commonwealth Games (Check name).
- Rugby: Category:Rugby union in New Zealand , Super 14, Rugby Union World Cup, National Provincial Championship , Category:All Blacks , Bledisloe Cup , Tri Nations Series , Ranfurly Shield
- Cricket: Various Tours, New Zealand cricket team , Chappell-Hadlee Trophy , Cricket World Cup
- Gold: New Zealand Open , Check Category:New Zealand golfers in overseas tourniments.
- Horse racing: See Category:New Zealand horse races, list winners.
- Rugby league New Zealand Warriors , Bartercard Cup , New Zealand national rugby league team , Rugby League World Cup
- Netball: Silver Ferns , National Bank Cup , Netball World Championships
[edit] Soccer
- New Zealand National Soccer League won by Christchurch United
- Chatham Cup won by Mt. Wellington AFC
- New Zealand hosted and won the inaugural Oceania Cup tournament, beating Tahiti 2-0 in the final.
[edit] Births
- 1 April: Stephen Fleming, cricketer
- 8 April: Nicholas Tongue, freestyle swimmer
- 28 April: Andrew Mehrtens (in Durban, South Africa), Rugby Player
- 27 May: Tana Umaga, rugby player
- 23 July: Adrian Cashmore, rugby player
- 5 August: Justin Marshall, rugby player
- 1 September: Trent Bray, freestyle swimmer
- 14 November: Darren Smith, field hockey player
- 16 November: Brendan Laney, rugby player
- 29 December: Garth da Silva, boxer
[edit] Deaths
- 20 May: Charles Brasch, poet and literary editor
- 19 November: Cyril Allcott, cricketer