Ramon Te Wake (born 25 March 1976) is a documentarian, singer-songwriter and television presenter from New Zealand. She is transgender and her first presenting job was for Māori Television, where she was one of three people fronting Takatāpui, which is Maori Television's first ever lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) show.
Te Wake was born in Dargaville to Māori parents Ray and Tilly Te Wake. She grew up in Ascot Park, a suburb in Porirua. She moved to Wellington in the early 1990s, and then to Auckland shortly after.
She released her debut EP, The Arrival in 2002 and toured New Zealand in R&B / Funk band Pure Funk during 1995 and 1996. In June 2005 she received a grant of up to $15,000 to record a new CD from Te Waka Toi, the Màori arts board of Creative New Zealand. Her second album, Movement is Essential, came out in 2008. In 2008 Ramon started a DJ residency at Kiss bar called "Delicious Thursdays."
She is also a well known model and "the first transgender girl to appear in music video clips and a Coca Cola commercial."
Her first presenting job was for Māori Television, where she was one of three people fronting Takatāpui, which is Maori Television's first ever LGBT show. The show began in 2004 and still continues today. Ramon's storytelling was noted by Scoop Independent News as "strong, creative and visual." Ramon's most celebrated work from the program was the coverage of the 2011 death of activist Carmen Rupe. She had made a documentary of Rupe's life in 2006. In 2008 she was one of several actors selected to portray transsexual former MP Georgina Beyer in a feature-length film. In 2009 The Making of Ramon was a Takatāpui-produced documentary about Ramon which was aired as part of Triangle TV's Sunday Nights Out.
Te Wake also joined King Kapisi in presenting Pasifika 2005 festival, the biggest Polynesian festival in the world held in Auckland every year since 1992, it was televised on TV2.
In 2011 Te Wake directed a 25-minute video "Pacific Voices" for the NZ AIDS Foundation addressing issues and lives of Pacific LGBT people "such as identity, sexual health, bullying and family estrangement" the project "offers hope through mutual support and self-determination."
Famous quotes containing the word wake:
“I know if I wake up cold,
and go out into the clear spring night,
still dark and precise with stars,
I will feel the wind coming down hard
like his hand, in fever, on my forehead.”
—Stanley Plumly (b. 1939)