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Say what you like about Dannii — the girl’s a survivor

Years ago, when I was a cub reporter chasing celebrities for Sydney’s Daily Telegraph newspaper, I had an A-list diary clash. Perennial superstar Joan Collins was in town, promoting a book or a perfume or something like that.

Also visiting Sydney on a promotional tour was Andrew Shue (or Andrew Who? as he has now become known) – the then star of the then all-conquering Aaron Spelling drama, Melrose Place (because, yes, I am that old).

In pictures: Dannii Minogue

With my intrepid newsman’s hat firmly on, I trundled off to interview Andrew Shue. As he bobbed around the harbour on the back of a boat chartered for the purpose of showing him Sydney Harbour while journalists took turns to speak to him, it was all he could do to acknowledge my presence. In response to what I am certain must have been incredibly probing questions, Shue offered up a few guttural grunts and the distinct impression that he would rather be anywhere else in the world. Immediately after the interview, I rushed across town to the Sheraton-On-The-Park for my scheduled audience with Ms. Collins. After decades in the industry, after chalking up more movies and TV series than I had had earth-shattering celebrity scoops, she had, to my mind, earned the right to be a diva.

Stepping into her hotel suite, I worried that I was about to be haughtily dismissed as unworthy of her time. And yet she couldn’t have been more expansive, more generous or more accommodating. She posed happily for my photographer, making sure he had every shot he wanted, she willingly took her cues from my every loaded question and happily served up the quotes she knew I was looking for. Here was a lady who clearly knew how to play the game. After years in showbiz, she understood what was expected of her. She knew that celebrity could be fleeting – that longevity in her chosen profession depended on how well she played the fame game. She was old school.

I was reminded of Joan Collins a couple of weeks ago when I sat down with Dannii Minogue for one of this month’s featured profiles in the Weekly. You can’t help but like Dannii. She’s disarmingly warm and impressively unaffected. For someone who became a household name at the age of seven, she’s done remarkably well to carve out the career she now enjoys. Say what you like about Dannii Minogue (and plenty of people have), you can’t deny that she’s a survivor. In an industry renowned for its fickleness, she’s still standing after more than thirty years in the spotlight. And despite living in a rarefied showbiz realm, she’s still remarkably grounded. When she talks of family – as she did extensively in our interview – it’s with genuine affection.

Over the course of the day we spent together, Dannii spoke about former relationships in her life and how and why they didn’t flourish. She told about how she had all but given up on finding love when English footballer, Kris Smith crashed into her life. Now pushing forty and about to become a mum for the first time, and with her career undergoing a renaissance thanks to the Australia’s Got Talent/X Factor TV franchises, the stars seem to have finally aligned for our Dannii. Which is no small thing for the girl who has been, until now, Australia’s most famous sister. And yes, she talked about sibling rivalry – specifically, what it has been like to live in Kylie’s shadow. The overall impression I took away from my Dannii encounter was that here was a woman who had finally found her mojo.

Watching her pose later for photographer David Gubert’s stunning series of portraits and seeing her absentmindedly stroke her belly as the camera flashed around her, I felt like I was looking at a young woman who is finally comfortable in her (currently expanding) skin. I hope I have managed to capture some of that in the article.

Your say: What do you think of Dannii? Who would you like to see featured in The Weekly? Share with us below.

Read more of Bryce’s exclusive chat with Dannii in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly. Out now with Susan Boyle on the cover. Follow Bryce on Twitter.

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Queen of the Cross

Photography by Tim Bauer. Styling by Maia Liakos.

Photography by Tim Bauer. Styling by Maia Liakos.

Her late husband dominated Sydney’s underworld for years, his infamy now immortalised in the TV drama Underbelly. Here, Georgina Freeman tells us of her enduring love for the man she describes as more George Clooney than Chopper Read.

There have been many kings of Kings Cross, but if there is a queen, it is Georgina Freeman. As the widow of crime boss George Freeman, confidante to powerbroker John Ibrahim and mother of an up-and-coming nightclub baron, Georgina has been a willing muse to three generations of Kings Cross royalty. “It’s not for the faint-hearted,” she says. “You never know what lies ahead, but it never stays bad for long – there is always something else to take you flying.”

It is 30 years since Georgina stepped into a world where money was plentiful, police were corrupt and men mysteriously disappeared. It was a world in which danger went hand in hand with glamour. By day, her husband and his associates fixed races, ran protection rackets and dispatched their rivals. By night, they wore tuxedos, gave their wives diamonds and drank French champagne. Her husband was, she remembers, “more like George Clooney out of Ocean’s Eleven than Chopper [Read]”.

In her first major interview since his death 20 years ago – and as the television series Underbelly brings these characters to life again – Georgina, 52, tells The Weekly about her enduring love for Freeman, her hopes for their children and why John Ibrahim is “gorgeous”.

George Freeman was 44, divorced and at the height of his notoriety when he met 22-year-old actress Georgina McLoughlin at a fundraising picnic in 1979. With fellow criminals Lenny McPherson and Stan Smith, he had dominated Sydney’s underworld for decades, sharing profits, scheming against rivals and watching each other’s backs.

“If you were going to have a shot at one, the other two would get you,”says Clive Small, a former deputy NSW police commissioner and the author of Smack Express: How Organised Crime Got Hooked On Drugs. “That was the point at which we would say organised crime entered the modern era.”

McPherson ran protection rackets, Smith provided the muscle and Freeman specialised in SP bookmaking, illegal casinos and race rigging. Authorities marvelled at his luck on the track – his racing tips were right between 98 and 99 per cent of the time.

George, a ladies man, was immediately drawn to the youthful Georgina, who knew of his reputation from newspapers. “I knew that he was a bad boy,” she says. “I knew he was … maybe a crime boss? I’d heard he was a bit of a playboy.” Their introduction was brief, but left an impression on them both. “I knew that once he looked at me and I looked at him, there was something,” she says.

George knew Georgina had a fiancé, Stephen McDonald, the former heart-throb actor from the television series Number 96. George had a girlfriend, too. That did not stop him from pursuing her and one invitation to a Neil Sedaka concert turned into two years of clandestine meetings. Georgina still lived with Stephen, but couldn’t resist George’s charisma – she met him for dinners, films and trysts in hotels. She was dazzled by his sophistication.

“It was exciting,” she says. “I loved his intelligence. I loved his sense of humour. I loved his style. I guess I loved the bad boy thing. He was generous to a fault.”

Having an affair was a “risqué, fun thing to do”, she says. “Then I would go home to my sweet, good-looking Stephen and our dog and cat.” She did not give much thought to George’s line of business.

One day, lying on a bed at the Boulevard Hotel in Sydney, George proposed and Georgina accepted. They told everyone at the Golden Slipper Ball that night. However, Georgina still had the little problem of her engagement to Stephen. George gave her two weeks to leave Stephen or their wedding was off.

For those two weeks, engaged to two men at the same time, she picked fights with Stephen and tried to push him away, but couldn’t face telling him. Eventually, she waited until he went out, packed her bags and arrived at George’s house in a taxi, just minutes before the midnight deadline. Stephen didn’t know why she left until he saw Georgina’s wedding to George Freeman on television. He was shattered.

Your say: What do you think about George Freeman? Have you been watching the Underbelly series? Share with us below.

Read more of our exclusive chat with Georgina Freeman in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly. Out now with Susan Boyle on the cover.

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Susan Boyle: fame, fortune and now she wants a bloke

From self-proclaimed “wee Scottish wifey” to global singing sensation, Susan Boyle has won fame, fortune and the adoration of millions. All she wants now is a man. In our exclusive interview, she tells her Cinderella story.

What made you apply to go on Britain’s Got Talent?

Well, I’d watched the show like everyone. And I had promised my mum just before she died that I would do something with my life.

What was going through your head when you were filling in the form?

They asked what you’d done in the past and what kind of act you had, and if you had a stage name! I thought, well, my own name will do, won’t it? I didn’t know whether I needed a stage name or not.

In pictures: Susan Boyle

In pictures: Reality TV to superstardom

Take us to the audition day.

Well, I will never forget that day. A lot of people dream about being on TV, about making records, about entertaining people. But to be honest, I never thought for a minute that I would get this far. The audition was at The Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre [Glasgow], but I kept on taking the wrong bus. I must have changed buses about six times to get to the place and I could see the place all the time. I got there hours early and sat in the holding room watching everybody do their audition. Everybody kept saying to me, “Are you sure you should be at this audition?” I saw dance groups come and go, men with spoons, dogs. Eventually, it was my turn, I got three yeses. By the time I’d finished my audition, I’d missed my last bus home, so one of the runners got me a taxi home. I was on a real high. It was like Celtic [football team] winning the cup.

Do you understand why your story has connected with so many people?

I don’t know, really. It’s an unusual story. I was often left behind at school because of one thing or another. I was a slow learner. I’m a wee bit slower at picking things up than other people are. So you get left behind in a system that just wants to rush on, you know? That was what I felt was happening to me. And this feels like a very enjoyable way of making up for it. I don’t think the resources were at school back then. Teachers have more specialised training now. There was discipline for the sake of discipline back then and you are looking at someone who would get the belt every day. “Shut up, Susan!” Whack! I should be careful about what I say because I have a sister, Mary, who’s a fantastic singer and a teacher, but like I say, it’s all very different now. I think teachers are taught to understand children with learning disabilities a lot better.

How do you feel about the reaction around the world?

I didn’t know what YouTube was until I was in the record offices and saw the clip and the number of hits, and thought, “Oh, my God”. I’m still trying to come to terms with it. The fans have been amazing and the mail I have received, phenomenal. I have been sent beautiful gifts, including a vintage dress that had been in a family for generations. It’s incredible that someone would want me to have something so precious. I’ve even had offers of dates!

Related video 60 Minutes: It’s a fairytale for the You Tube generation. Susan Boyle, the dowdy Scottish spinster, really did become an overnight sensation.

What do you think it was about you that people became so fascinated by?

Put it this way … a woman who went on with mad hair, bushy eyebrows and the frock I was wearing had to be noticed. It was a good choice at the time, I though.

What’s the dream now, Susan? Would you like a boyfriend?

Och, there’s no time for that now! I’m far too busy! What a laugh. No, there was a TV company that wanted to set me up with a man. Apparently he was a nice man, but I’ve got my living to do now. I don’t mind being friendly, but no marriage plans as yet!

Your say: What do you think about Susan Boyle? Do you own her album? Share with us below.

Read more of our exclusive chat with Susan Boyle in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly. Out now with Susan Boyle on the cover.

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Fidelity French style

After a decade living in Paris, The Weekly’s newest writer, Bryce Corbett, has seen it all. So, when glamorous First Lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy became embroiled in an affair scandal, he knew exactly how the French would react.

Eyebrows all over the world were raised in March when scuttlebutt started leaking out of Paris that French President Nicolas Sarkozy and his elegant première dame wife, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, were cheating on each other. People everywhere reacted with shock at the rumours. Everywhere, that is, except France.

While the rest of the world whipped itself into a frenzy of righteous indignation, the French responded with an almighty Gallic shrug. As moral arbiters, political commentators and gossip mongers from other God-fearing nations weighed in on the unseemliness of a head of state and his wife sleeping around, the French were left wondering what all the fuss was about.

In pictures: famous break-ups

Cheating hearts: are women the new men?

If the gossip is to be believed, France’s president has been “’aving it off” with his Secretary of State for Ecology, Chantal Jouanno, while his pop-princess wife has supposedly been getting cosy with her songwriting collaborator, Benjamin Biolay.

The tattle was initially sparked by a few wayward “tweets” by an online journalist, then spread like wildfire throughout Paris, finally catching up with the president during a press conference at 10 Downing Street, in London, where he was forced to take a break from expounding on matters of state to dismiss it as a baseless rumour.

Although a carefully staged bout of public canoodling during a subsequent trip to New York poured cold water on the claims, the collective indifference of the French people to the rumoured affair only served to highlight the difference in attitude between us and our Gallic cousins. While we tend to tremble in its presence, terrified at the threat infidelity poses to the social fabric, the French seem to accept it as an inevitable part of the messy business of living. And when it is perpetrated by their politicians, well, that’s just part of the job description.

This is a country, after all, in which Culture Minister Frédéric Mitterrand’s admission of sex holidays in Thailand ruffled barely a feather, where the late President François Mitterrand had a secret second family and his successor, Jacques Chirac, was so renowned for his extra-marital liaisons, he earned the nickname The Three-Minute Man for the efficiency with which he conducted them.

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As a former resident of Paris, recently returned home, I know from 10 years living among them that the French are relatively relaxed when it comes to the prickly issue of sleeping around. The 19th-century French author Alexandre Dumas pretty much set the tone when he observed, “The bonds of wedlock are so heavy that it takes two to carry them, sometimes three”.

Certainly, rumours of the Sarkozys’ straying have come as no great surprise to the average French citizen. First Lady Carla is as well-known in France for her contempt for monogamy as she is for her preference for kitten heels. “Monogamy bores me terribly,” she famously told Madame Figaro magazine before her marriage to the president. “I am monogamous from time to time, but I prefer polygamy.”

And you only have to glance at her dance card to see that she means it. Her string of famous former lovers includes Mick Jagger, Eric Clapton and Donald Trump. While living with the French publishing magnate, Jean-Paul Enthoven, Carla ran off with his son, the philosopher Raphaël Enthoven, and bore him a child.

Your say: What do you think about this? Do you think the French opinion on fidelity is far removed from our own? What is your take on fidelity? Share with us below.

Read more of this story in the May issue ofThe Australian Women’s Weekly. Out now with Susan Boyle on the cover.

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The world’s most famous tom boy

With million-dollar baby Shiloh Jolie-Pitt making headlines for her tomboy chic, we ask the experts whether her choice of dress-ups is a normal passing phase or cause for concern.

Months before she was even born, photographs of Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt were making headlines. US gossip magazine The National Enquirer claimed a grainy image on its front page was an ultrasound image of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s five-month-old foetus, while New York magazine mocked up a shot of the Hollywood couple with a computer-generated baby to illustrate a story on how much the print rights to such pictures might raise. As it happened, when the world’s most photogenically evolved child finally arrived in May 2006, her first pictures fetched a reported $8.1million.

In pictures: The evolution of Angelina Jolie

Fast forward four years and photos of Shiloh are again making headlines – for a different reason. The youngster’s long blonde locks have been cropped boy-short and she is rarely pictured in anything other than boys’ clothes. One day she may be dressed in a tie and pork pie hat, the next in a pirate’s costume, the next as Robin Hood.

“Does Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie’s daughter secretly want to be a boy?” shrieked one US commentator, while another theorised that the politically conscious couple was using their daughter to make a point on gender. “That could lead to self-esteem issues and role and gender confusion later on,” she warned.

Yet is Shiloh’s sartorial style – already dubbed “tomboy chic” by the tabloids – really cause for concern?

According to child psychologists, it is common for young children to experiment with cross-gender behaviour as a way of understanding their own gender identity. Little girls may like to play with guns, while young boys may pretend to be pregnant or enjoy dressing up in their mother’s clothes.

“That doesn’t mean they will grow up to become cross-dressers,” says Professor Louise Newman, of Monash University’s Centre for Developmental Psychiatry and Psychology. “As a child, you should be able to play around. It’s usually perfectly normal.”

There are rare instances, however, when parents may need to seek advice on whether their children’s behaviour falls outside the boundaries of normal play-acting. “Problems can arise if the child expresses distress or is not happy with their body or the things that they are expected to do as a boy or a girl,” Professor Newman says. “Or if the child runs into difficulty socially because he or she is not accepted by peers, or if the family is struggling to deal with what the child is expressing.”

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Some parents believe that young children should be able to express themselves freely – an approach that seems to have been adopted by Brad and Angelina. He laughingly told an interviewer recently that Shiloh would only answer to the name of John because of her love for Wendy’s older brother John in the story of Peter Pan. “We’ve got to call her John,” he said, noting that when he tried to call Shiloh by her real name, she would interrupt him with, “John, I’m John”. “So I’ll say, ‘John would you like some orange juice?’ and she goes, ‘No!’ ”

“There are some adults for whom this is very confronting,” says psychologist Michael Carr-Gregg. “Men, particularly, think, ‘God, I have a gay son’. Most mums are relatively chilled about it.”

Your say: What do you think about this? Do you think there is anything wrong with a child dressing up as the opposite sex? Share with us below.

Read more of this story in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly. Out now with Susan Boyle on the cover.

For health, beauty, celeb gossip and more, visit:

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Spotlight on Dannii Minogue

A funny thing happened to Dannii Minogue on the way to 40. She found her way into our affections. After more than 30 years of singing and dancing her heart out for our entertainment pleasure and 30 years spent living in her big sister’s shadow, Australia’s most famous sister is stepping into the spotlight.

On the career front, things have never looked brighter. Starring roles in one of Australia and the UK’s most popular TV formats have seen Dannii make a triumphant return to our living rooms.

“It feels like the stars have finally aligned,” Dannii told us. “I don’t know what’s going on, but it all seems to be happening. Read more of our interview with Dannii.

Making her mark on showbiz on *Young Talent Time*

Making her mark on showbiz on Young Talent Time

Dannii in 1991

Blonde bombshell Dannii on stage in England

With husband Julian McMahon. The pair divorced after 2 years of marriage

After time off our screens she returned in 2003 with *Neon Nights*

After time off our screens she returned in 2003 with Neon Nights

At a music awards night in 2004 in France

Performing at a night club in London

Dannii launches *The Hits & Beyond* in 2006

Dannii launches The Hits & Beyond in 2006

In Sydney in 2006

Who wore it better? With Magda Szubanski at the 2006 AFI Awards

Kylie and Dannii at the premiere of *White Diamonds*

Kylie and Dannii at the premiere of White Diamonds

In Hollywood with Perez Hilton

Slime time: Dannii gets slimed at the 2008 Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards

She still calls Australia home: presenting at the 2008 Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards

Kylie and Dannii at Sound Relief in Melbourne 2009

The X Factor: Dannii with fellow judges Simon Cowell and Cheryl Cole

The happy couple: Dannii and partner Kris Smith

Glamorous on the red carpet in London.

Dannii gave birth to a baby boy Ethan Edward Smith on July 5th

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Matthew Newton in rehab

Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities star Matthew Newton has been admitted to a rehabilitation facility in Melbourne.

The son of television’s golden couple, Bert Newton and Patti Newton, was admitted this month to the private hospital facility which specialises in drug and alcohol related abuse, the Herald Sun reported.

The 33-year-old actor was praised for his portrayal of Terry Clark, head of the “Mr Asia” drug syndicate, in the second series of Underbelly and recently worked on feature film Face to Face alongside Sigrid Thornton and Vince Colosimo.

The actor hit headlines in November of last year after his hotel room at the Vibe Hotel in Sydney’s Rushcutters Bay was found trashed.

Matthew Newton at the 2009 GQ men of the year awards.

Matthew with rumoured fiancee Rachael Taylor

Matthew with his parents Bert and Patti Newton and sister Lauren

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Achieving good health is easier than you think!

Achieving good health is easier than you think!

What’s the latest health craze which lowers blood pressure, stress and boosts the immune system? It’s as simple as a good laugh!

Researchers from the Loma Linda University in California have discovered that laughing is like internal jogging and can have the same effect on our body as moderate exercise the UK’s Daily Telegraph reported.

The study, which required volunteers to watch 20 minutes of comedies and stand-up routines, found a dramatic drop in stress hormones, blood pressure and cholesterol following their laughter session.

It also found that like exercise, laughter can stimulate appetite and may also help those with diabetes and heart disease.

These findings are especially welcomed by the elderly who are less mobile and unable to undertake any strenuous activity.

Dr Lee Berk, who led the study, said that a person’s emotions certainly had an effect on their body.

He pointed to the biblical wisdom found in Proverbs 17:22, which states “A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones.”

Fourteen volunteers were asked to watch either a stressful 20-minute clip of the war film Saving Private Ryan or an extract from a comedy or stand- up routine.

Blood tests taken afterwards found a reduction in stress hormones and an increase in immune-boosting T cells for those who watched the comedy.

Dr Berk, who has been studying the effects of laughter for two decades, conducted a study during the 1990s which found that laughter also increases the number of natural killer cells in cancer patients. Natural killer cells are the body’s way of fighting tumours, the UK’s Daily Telegraph reported.

The research was announced at the annual Experimental Biology conference in California yesterday.

Your say: How does laughter make you feel?

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Georgie Parker’s $99 Logies frock!

Georgie Parker's $99 Logies frock!

She’s broken records for Logie wins, but Georgie Parker tells Wendy Squires she won’t break the bank buying a dress to wear on the night.

When Georgie Parker attended her first Logies back in 1990, winning Most Popular New Talent for her role in A Country Practice, she not only shopped for and bought her own frock, she also did her own make-up.

Fast forward 20 years – two Gold Logies, five Silver and 11 nominations later – and little has changed for down-to-earth Georgie in terms of her low-fuss approach to TV’s night of nights.

“It doesn’t have to be an enormously strenuous and stressful process to get a great dress,” the 45-year-old Play School host explains as she previews the gown she’ll wear to this year’s ceremony on Sunday night – a stunning off-the-rack purple chiffon Katies dress that costs just $99.95.

“I’m a real advocate of not spending lots of money on dresses,” adds Georgie, a Katies ambassador.

“There’s a great misconception that women have to spend a fortune to feel good. Exclusivity limits choice for a lot of women – how they want to look, what they want to wear and who they can wear. So, I love the inclusive quality of affordable fashion.”

The other thing Georgie loves is comfort, always choosing a dress she “can move in”.

For the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale April 26.

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Pauline Hanson’s travel nightmare

Pauline Hanson's travel nightmare

Just days into her exciting new life, Pauline Hanson tells Glen Williams about her embarrassing travel saga, and her fears for the Australian flag.

She wanted to see the world, but Pauline Hanson’s time in jail is proving a stumbling block. The fiery redhead got as far as New Zealand, only to be halted by an immigration officer at the airport.

Despite Pauline’s criminal conviction being completely quashed, red-tape has seen the former One Nation leader tarred with the same brush as a convicted criminal.

“I don’t like it,” she says, using one of her trademark phrases. “I need to have this cleared up. I am not a criminal.”

Pauline was on her way to join two friends and a guide for a three-day hike through the South Island’s spectacular Hump Ridge Track, when she was stopped at New Zealand’s immigration.

“They have a card that asks if you’ve had a criminal conviction of more than 12 months, so of course I had to tick yes. It didn’t ask whether the conviction had been quashed. I was then asked what I had been in prison for.

“I explained I was Australia’s first political prisoner,” she laughs. “The poor man called for his supervisor, who called me over to the side.”

Pauline, 55, says her ordeal was carried out in front of other Australian travellers. “I felt terribly embarrassed. I basically felt like a criminal. I was taken to another room and asked to ‘please explain’ about my time in jail.

“Immigration said they had no record of my conviction and asked me if I had ticked the same box when I last visited New Zealand

in 2004. I honestly couldn’t remember if I had or not.

But you’re damned if you do, damned if you don’t. Had I not ticked the box this time, and they had a record of my conviction, then I would have been put straight back on the plane and that would have caused me more problems.”

Thankfully Pauline was permitted to enter the country, and despite her ordeal, says she had the most amazing time on the trek.

For the story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale April 26, 2010.

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