The laughter stopped. The songs that once shook country halls and city theatres fell suddenly, brutally quiet. New Zealand woke to the news that Dame Jools Topp, the rebel heart of the Topp Twins, was gone after a relentless fight with breast cancer. Fans, friends, and family are left asking how you say goodbye to a woman who rewrote what it meant to be funny, fearless, gay, and unapologetically Kiwi. Tributes are flooding in, stories are surfacing, and a nation is realising just how much of its soul was tied to one farm girl from Huntly who refused to stay small. The truth about her final yea…
Dame Jools Topp’s death at 68 closes a chapter that shaped New Zealand’s cultural identity. With her twin sister Lynda, she turned busking and protest songs into a lifelong act of defiance and joy, fighting racism, sexism and homophobia with a guitar, a grin and a cast of ridiculous, beloved characters. Their Camp Leader and beer‑swilling Kens didn’t just make people howl with laughter; they quietly shifted what audiences accepted, who they embraced, and whose stories mattered.
Offstage, Jools was a warrior facing cancer with the same grit she brought to a picket line or a packed theatre. Friends like Neil Finn remember nights of shared songs and unstoppable laughter; fans remember feeling seen, safe and less alone. Her legacy lives in every queer kid who dares to be loud, every protest chorus, every Kiwi who learned that courage can wear gumboots and crack a joke.