Mīria George was the first Cook Islands artist to receive the Fulbright-Creative New Zealand Pacific Writer's Residency at the University of Hawai'i.
[8] The work of Mīria George has toured New Zealand and internationally, including Canada, Hawai'i, Australia and the United Kingdom.
[11] The political interrogation of the erosion of Māori rights, dignity, and humanity in a Pākehā-dominated New Zealand was forefront of George's best known plays called and what remains.
It is regularly taught in schools, and is part of a movement in Māori theatre wider than marae-based traditional stories.
The journey from Areora, Atiu, Cook Islands to 76 Sunset Road, Rotorua is beautifully re-told through the somewhat innocent eyes of the twins Lucia and Luka... they give consistently magnificent performances, both in an out of the spotlight".