logo
Michael Murphy Joins Make-A-Wish Aotearoa In Waiting Room

Michael Murphy Joins Make-A-Wish Aotearoa In Waiting Room

Scoop15-05-2025
Press Release – Make A Wish NZ
The just released song has already had more than 16,000 plays on Spotify and MAW has gained nearly 10,000 new followers on the platform too. With all streaming proceeds directly supporting wishes, this gift will continue to generously generate …
• Michael Murphy creates song for critically ill Kiwi kids after being touched by campaign
• The Waiting Room highlights tremendous demand facing Make-A-Wish charity
• Murphy's song includes voices of children impacted by Make-A-Wish – including his son
Make-A-Wish NZ's latest fundraising campaign – The Waiting Room – has produced more than just much needed funds for critically ill Kiwi kids ' wishes.
It's also spawned a wonderful new song from much-loved Kiwi popstar of NZ Idol fame, Michael Murphy.
The Waiting Room premise is that 'although dozens of critically ill Kiwi kids spend way more time in hospital waiting rooms than they should have to, we have the chance to make sure their wishes don't have to wait.'
When Murphy was asked if he would appear in the campaign collateral as a popstar (see above), representing a popular children's wish of 'singing on a stage', he said I can do better than that: 'How about I create a song to go with it?'
Murphy enlisted the help of friend, writing partner and Written By Wolves bandmate Davie Wong to write the song. Then a week later, and coincidentally right on cue for NZ Music Month, Murphy's 'The Waiting Room' song (click to listen) was available to stream – kindly gifted to Make-A-Wish, and released under their name.
But Murphy also had a greater personal motivation and connection for doing what he did. The child solo in the song is sung by Michael's nine-year-old son, Archie. Cont'd…/
Archie's best friend Freddie (who is also in the child's choir in the song) is a recent Make-A-Wish (MAW) recipient and currently in remission after being diagnosed with leukaemia.
Murphy explains the connection even more poignantly:
'Quite often it's not only the sick child and their whānau who begin a roller-coaster journey after a diagnosis. The young friends of the sick child also have to be chaperoned on a journey of explanation and awareness by their own families about what's happening to their mates. In this case it was my family's journey through our son's friendship with Freddie.'
Fortunately, Freddie is continuing to live his best life. The wish that Freddie was granted has been immortalised in the lyrics of Murphy's new song: ' I wanna ride with my best friend in a monster truck.'
And less than a year later, Freddie and his best mate who tagged along for that ride, Archie, are singing about their magic Make-A-Wish experience in a song created and performed by Archie's dad. Cool huh.
The just released song has already had more than 16,000 plays on Spotify – and MAW has gained nearly 10,000 new followers on the platform too. With all streaming proceeds directly supporting wishes, this gift will continue to generously generate funds of its own for MAW for years to come.
Make-A-Wish New Zealand CEO Anne Fitisemanu says the song is full of imagination and is a creative bonus for the campaign. 'Make-A-Wish New Zealand has never done anything like this before. Thank you so much to Michael and Davie for your mahi, and for making our charity a music artist!'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Fold: NZ on Air funds reality TV now?
The Fold: NZ on Air funds reality TV now?

The Spinoff

time20 hours ago

  • The Spinoff

The Fold: NZ on Air funds reality TV now?

Glen Kyne joins Duncan Greive to discuss the shock revelation that NZ on Air will support Celebrity Treasure Island and The Traitors NZ's return to our screens. Glen Kyne joins Duncan Greive on The Fold to discuss the shock revelation that NZ on Air will support Celebrity Treasure Island and The Traitors NZ's return to our screens. They assess the potential moral hazard, the function those shows perform for networks, and the more profound challenges lurking down the road. Follow The Fold on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Cassie Henderson's audition for The Voice Australia 2025 stuns all four judges
Cassie Henderson's audition for The Voice Australia 2025 stuns all four judges

NZ Herald

time2 days ago

  • NZ Herald

Cassie Henderson's audition for The Voice Australia 2025 stuns all four judges

She made a great first impression on the show but Henderson is no stranger to Kiwi audiences, coming to local prominence in 2013 when she competed in X Factor New Zealand aged 14 and placing fifth. Asked about the role music plays in her life, Henderson told the panel: 'I love to entertain, I love to perform for people, but music is the thing that I do when I'm by myself and I feel safe and alone in my bedroom. 'I had a few setbacks and I kinda stopped singing for a long time and I kinda realised one day that there is nothing else that I want to do in this world and in my lifetime.' In the interaction, Henderson hinted it was her experience on X Factor that presented those setbacks. 'There was a point there where I had online commentary about my voice, and just about me, and I think I just took it to heart because I was quite young at the time. I was 14.' Henderson said getting to choose from all four of the show's mentors felt like a dream. 'I really can't believe I'm standing here making this decision.' Ultimately, Henderson elected to be the first contestant on this season coached by former Spice Girl Melanie C, who told Henderson: 'You are born to do this. You just own that stage and it is so natural to you.' Henderson took a hiatus from music after appearing on X Factor, but returned to pursue her passion full-time in 2023. She released a single, Seconds to Midnight, in August 2024 and it remained at number one on the RadioScope NZ Airplay Charts for 15 weeks. In June, she took home the award for Best Pop Artist at the 2025 Aotearoa Music Awards. Last year she told the Herald a move offshore was the next logical step. 'I think, as a musician, I'm too comfy here. I'm not getting pushed out of my comfort zone consistently enough,.' she said. 'It's a big, wide, crazy world, and I'm pretty keen to go explore it. And I can't wait to then come back to New Zealand, and be proud to come home.'

Stranger Things' Dacre Montgomery stars in ghost film shot in New Zealand
Stranger Things' Dacre Montgomery stars in ghost film shot in New Zealand

NZ Herald

time5 days ago

  • NZ Herald

Stranger Things' Dacre Montgomery stars in ghost film shot in New Zealand

The device is unusual in film, but common in theatre. Montgomery said he and Krieps 'perceived the movie to be less of a supernatural tale, and more of a film where two people create their antagoniser in themselves to deal with their grief and trauma'. The Australian actor is best known for playing villain Billy Hargrove in the second and third seasons of Netflix's Stranger Things. He recently confirmed to Screen Rant he will not be appearing in the show's highly anticipated fifth season. Montgomery said the film was an exciting challenge after his years on the hit show. Dacre Montgomery played the sibling of Sadie Sink's character on Stranger Things. Photos / Netflix 'For me, the brilliant thing about this movie is it's so much closer to myself than the character I play in Stranger Things.' Montgomery said playing Jack has helped him figure out who he is. Half of his family is from New Zealand, so production provided opportunities to reconnect. 'I'd never played a character with my accent before, so even that in of itself was quite revealing and made me feel quite vulnerable.' The flick was filmed in the Canterbury region, an area with sentimental value to van Grinsven. The director's parents were ABBA impersonators, which he said informed his 'nursery rhyme' approach to the Kiwi landscape. 'We went up and down New Zealand in the back of a tour van growing up, so for me, my kind of memories of the South Island are very childlike, wide-eyed, sort of fantastical memories.' Went Up The Hill is playing at cinemas across New Zealand for the Whānau Mārama: New Zealand International Film Festival. Both van Grinsven and Montgomery will be attending a screening at Lumière Cinemas tonight, with a chance to question the actor and director after the showing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store