Kiwi actor on becoming a gladiator: 'Māori blood is like a superpower, eh?'

Rotorua's own Jordi Webber stars as the arrogant but loving Tarchon in the NZ-filmed series Spartacus: House of Ashur.

Saturday Morning
6 min read
Jordi Webber, a blue-eyed man with dark, curly hair, wears Roman armou and sits against a brown wall.
Caption:Jordi Webber (Ngāti Toa, Te Āti Awa, Ngāti Raukawa, Te Arawa, Ngāti Maniapoto) as Tarchon in Spartacus: House of Ashur.Photo credit:James Dimmock

When it came to wielding weapons in the new Spartacus series, Māori performers had an advantage, says actor and musician Jordi Webber.

"We are gifted in the sense that our tupuna were warriors, you know? We're so grounded, and our fluidity when we move is just innate.

"Even though it's not a taiaha or a patu [we're using], there's just something that sinks in, and you feel like you know how to use it, and if you don't, you quickly adapt. Swords, spears, all of that just came really naturally," he tells RNZ's Saturday Morning.

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After filming the mega-church drama Prosper, Webber was living in his van and travelling around Australia when he found out he'd been cast in the American seriesSpartacus: House of Ashur.

The 31-year-old sold the van and spent a month exploring Italy before his gladiator training began.

As "quite a spiritual person", Webber says he could feel the rich history in the air at Rome's Colosseum, but visiting the archaeological site of Pompeii gave him even more goosebumps.

"[Pompeii] is incredible, and some of it's still so untouched and intact… you're standing in the sand, you look all around you, and you can feel the mana in there, you can feel the spirits, the history, the blood and everything. I was like, 'Whoa…'"

A man in woman in gladiator costumes face each other as they cross swords.

Jordi Webber and Canadian actor Tenika Davis in Spartacus: House of Ashur.

James Dimmock

Ten years after the original Spartacus was shot in Auckland, Spartacus: House of Ashur was filmed in South Auckland.

In Aotearoa, shoots are usually small and chill, Webber says, and this was the first time shooting he'd really felt like he was "in the movies" filming something at home.

Physically, the role of Tarchon was definitely the most challenging he has taken on so far.

A month of training before filming involved daily sword practice and CrossFit, he says. During the eight-month shoot, he did 500 push-ups per day in between takes.

The script for Spartacus: House of Ashuris was written in old-style language and is "very sweary", Webber says, especially for a guy who grew up in the LDS Mormon church.

"Every time one of those words came out of my mouth, I was just thinking, 'Oh, there's another bar of soap waiting for me at home.'

"There's that little part of me that [thinks] 'Speak kindly to others and use your language and speak good words'."

"That part of Jordi inside me was going, 'Oh, don't say that. Why are you saying that?' But I just had to go, hey, it's just the character. That's all good."

Jordi Webber, wearing a gladiator costume, leans against a wall with his legs open.

Jordi Webber in Spartacus: House of Ashur.

James Dimmock

Before getting his role in Spartacus: House of Ashur, Webber had seen only "snippets" of the original Spartacus series, because it came out when he was in high school - "I couldn't really just cruise on home and watch that with my parents."

Now he's a fan.

"It's quite in your face, but once you get past all the words and the exposed tinana [bodies], the actual stories are really strong and the characters and the sneakiness. It's rich storytelling."

Webber, who is also a musician, says he always carries with him the awhi [love] and warmth he's been gifted by his whānau, and loves to extend that to the people he meets.

His new song 'Live or Die' is both a love letter to the world and a celebration of travelling, which is an important part of his life.

"I've just learned so much on my journeys out in the world that I was just like, I want to write something that I can always listen to and remember the places that I've been, but that can also just encourage other people."

Back in 2012, which Webber calls his Yes Man year, after seeing the Jim Carrey film in which Carrey takes up a challenge to say yes to everything in life for an entire year, he said yes to enrolling at Unitec.

But after hearing a radio ad on the edge about auditions for a boy band, he said yes to that, too.

"I was like, oh, that's not really what I want to do, but it's a Yes Man opportunity. I've got to say yes. I've got to say yes."

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A couple of months later, Webber was touring the country with the boy band Titanium, whose debut single 'Come on Home' went to number one on the New Zealand singles chart.

While grateful for the opportunity, he says that in his heart he knew,w but I've always kind of known I want to be an actor. When the band had an we're going to move to the US, he knew that for him it wasn't the right move.

"My puku was just saying, 'nah, man, this is your time to really follow your acting. This is the moment. There's also, in life, a lot of power in saying no."

The first two episodes of Spartacus: House of Ashur drop on ThreeNow on Saturday 6 December, with a new episode dropping every week after that.

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