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Girl power at the Grammy’s

The music industry’s big night turned out to be a battle of the pop stars; Poker Face singer Lady Gaga, R&B diva Beyonce and Country sweetheart Taylor Swift. Between them they took home twelve awards, Beyonce winning a record six Grammys during the show.

Waving the Aussie flag high were country star Keith Urban and veteran rockers AC/DC who won their first every Grammy after four decades in the industry. Urban won Best Male Country Vocal Performance for Sweet Thing and AC/DC Best Hard Rock Performance for War Machine.

Beyonce in Stephanie Rolland

Taylor Swift in Kaufman Franco

Celine Dion

Heidi Klum in Emilio Pucci

Jennifer Lopez

Gayle King

Nicole Kidman in Prada

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Obesity rate in Aussie women is rising fast

Getty Images

Getty Images

When compared to the UK, USA and China, the levels of obesity in Australian women is rising faster than in other countries, Sydney’s Daily Telegraph reported.

Research published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that the top five percent of obese women in Australia at age 30 have an average BMI of 37.7. In America the top five percent of women at the same age have an average BMI of 42.5. Australian women are fast catching up to American obesity levels for the first time ever.

In pictures: Celeb weight loss journeys

In pictures: Million-dollar bodies

The World Health Organization states that those with a body mass index (BMI) figure of more than 34.9 are critically obese. BMI is calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by height in metres squared.

Experts believe that women gain weight gradually and do not notice their weight creeping up. Women have a tendency to gain extra weight once they turn 30 due to lifestyle changes, the Daily Telegraph reported.

Though health professionals have known that women have been putting on more weight than men over the past decade, the study has still alarmed them.

Experts are warning women not to become complacent with their increasing weight.

“What we have known is that for the past five years, people have been gaining weight and they are women aged between 25 and 35,” the University of Sydney’s Boden Professor of Human Nutrition, Professor Ian Caterson, told Sydney’s Daily Telegraph.

Your say: Does this study worry you? Are you concerned about your weight? How can we help each other to get healthy? Did you notice yourself gaining weight at a particular time? What words of encouragement would you like to give to those trying to lose weight? Share your thoughts with us below…

Join Australia’s Biggest Weight Loss Challenge now!

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Hugh Jackman: Leave my Deb alone!

Hugh Jackman

A nasty internet campaign against Hugh Jackman and Deborra-lee Furness has fans and famous friends alike leaping to their defence. Craig Bennett reports.

Fourteen years of wedded bliss and two children on, some cynics still refuse to believe Hugh Jackman and Deborra-lee Furness are the real deal.

Friends of the couple are furious about a vicious internet campaign, and bitchy blogger Perez Hilton in particular, who has been using his website to tell his four million readers Hugh should trade his wife for someone “younger”, “fresher” and “hotter” because she’s a “granny” and “frumpy”.

Deborra-lee, 54 and 13 years older than Hugh, is said to be deeply hurt by the mean spirited campaign, which has also outrageously suggested she is a “beard” for her younger husband Hugh, 41 – in other words, helping disguise his homosexuality.

Perez recently ran a spiteful attack under the headline: “This is Hugh Jackman’s Wife!” Across photos of Hugh kissing Mexican beauty Ana de la Reguera from a recently shot commercial, Perez scrawled “Not his wife” … then on a shot of Deborra-lee: “This is!”

Perez went on to imply that Hugh might contemplate a younger woman, and “frumpy Deborra-lee Furness must be wondering how the hell she got so damned lucky! We were wondering the same thing!”

That post brought an avalanche of criticism for the showbiz shock-blogger. There was massive support for Hugh and Deborra-lee from incensed readers, some of whom wrote that they were so angered by the attack they were logging off for good. As one so aptly put it: “Hugh is in LOVE with his wife!”

Close friends say the couple’s 14-year marriage is rock solid, and that Hugh and Deborra-lee are doting parents to their children, Oscar, 9, and four-year-old Ava.

Packed To The Rafters star Denise Roberts was there when Hugh and Deborra-lee met and fell in love on the set of the 1995 TV series Correlli, which she co-created.

It starred Deborra-lee as a prison psychologist and Hugh, in his breakthrough role, on the inside for armed robbery.

The story saw their characters fall in love, and Denise says the same thing was happening, simultaneously, in real life.

“There was incredible chemistry on-screen and off, there were instant sparks. I have never seen two people more in love. I can’t believe anyone would want to contaminate their beautiful relationship with snide remarks.”

Hugh has previously said he knew he’d marry Deborra-lee soon after meeting her on the Correlli set.

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Olivia’s despair: Please save my daughter

Olivia Newton John

Olivia Newton-John’s daughter Chloe sparks deep concern with her wild behaviour and public meltdowns.

There are fresh fears for Chloe Lattanzi, the wild child daughter of tragedy-plagued singer Olivia Newton-John, after she publicly revealed deep misgivings about her future in a tormented, drunken confession.

The aspiring singer was photographed recently collapsed outside a Miami strip club, then became the subject of a frantic police search after disappearing following a drunken night out.

Last week she raised eyebrows at a Los Angeles petrol station when, dressed in a skimpy outfit, she posed provocatively on her car as she filled the tank, and was later snapped kissing a woman.

A day later, a disoriented and stumbling Chloe had to be helped from a boozy art exhibition opening at a ritzy Melrose Place gallery.

Sparking the most concern, however, is a video she posted on the internet. Looking wan and with a cigarette in her hand, Chloe pours out her heart in a rant that indicates her emotional turmoil is threatening to overwhelm her.

“I don’t think about the future too much, and that’s a good thing,” she slurs amid a montage of drinking and partying scenes.

When challenged by a friend about what she does for a living, Chloe – who has yet to release her long-promised debut album – is defiant. “I write and make music,” she pouts. “I create, that’s what I do.”

Now a heartbroken Olivia, 61, is begging advice from friends on what can be done to save her daughter from her worst impulses.

How did it go so terribly wrong for this troubled young woman who, as the child of singing superstar Olivia and her ex-husband, US actor and dancer Matt Lattanzi, was born into love, wealth and so much promise?

One family friend, who first met Chloe as a 14-year-old, recalls her as a healthy girl blessed with her father’s Italian looks, who dreamt of being an actress.

“She was the girl who had everything, and that’s the tragedy – almost all of it is gone from the Chloe I know today. It’s been so sad to witness the fading of that unique sense of humour, that sparkling personality, even her natural beauty – it’s all gradually seeped away or been discarded with every last scrap of her self-esteem.”

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Bec’s broken heart

Bec Hewitt

The Hewitts’ hectic home and away lifestyle has Bec pining for a return to Australia with their children, and a career of her own. Katherine Chatfield reports.

As Bec Hewitt watched husband Lleyton play at the Australian Open last week, she veered between wide smiles of joy and moments of sullen reflection.

The pretty blonde clapped vigorously each time Lleyton won a point, but in quieter moments she appeared to be lost in her own thoughts, at one point burying her head in her hands.

But it wasn’t Lleyton crashing out of the tournament in the fourth round to a near-faultless Roger Federer that upset the young mum. The bubbly former Home And Away star couldn’t get out of her mind that soon her precious time down under would be up – and once again she would have to return to the transient life of the tennis circuit.

Brought up in Sydney’s western suburbs surrounded by close family, the 26-year-old can’t shake off her desire to return to the environment she grew up in. She is said to be craving the simplicity of Australian life.

Instead of living out of a suitcase while she supports Lleyton on tour and looks after their children, Mia, 4, and Cruz, 1, she’s desperate to create a stable environment where she and her family can enjoy a quiet, settled existence.

But sadly for Bec, life on the road is what she signed up for when she married her tennis star husband four-and-a-half years ago.

“They are mostly on the road during the year,” one tennis insider, who has trained with Lleyton, tells Woman’s Day. “The tennis circuit is Bec’s real home until Lleyton retires. Anything else is secondary to that.

“She sometimes gets teary in other countries when the family has been travelling for ages.

I can understand she’s torn about leaving Australia again. For a tennis player and his family this is the best time of year to be here.”

Despite owning homes in Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne, the Hewitts have barely spent any time in Australia in the past year. To keep up with Lleyton’s tennis commitments, they have travelled to at least 10 countries in that time. For tax reasons, they cannot spend more than six months and one day here each year.

In an attempt to provide some sort of base for their children, they bought a house in the Bahamas last February, but have been there so infrequently they haven’t had time to settle in.

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New love for Susie Maroney

Susie Marony

The swimming champ is happily engaged after years of heartache. Jonica Bray reports.

Walking hand-in-hand and sharing a very public kiss with her mystery man, marathon swimmer Susie Maroney can’t hide her joy at having finally found love again.

Susie and her new man have been spotted out and about in Cronulla, in Sydney’s south, over recent months, making no secret of the fact they’re head over heels in love.

And last week Susie’s joy was complete, when she was spotted sporting a shiny new engagement ring.

Susie’s new love appears to be a dead ringer for her ex-husband, banker Robert Daniels, from whom she split just weeks before their daughter Paris was born in June, 2008.

“I saw them just a couple of days ago – they were kissing and hugging each other, just standing on the street,” confirms a local real estate agent. “I had to do a double take because he looked just like the other guy she used to be with.”

One of her neighbours in the beachside suburb confirms that Susie is smitten and has been devoting much of her time to her new boyfriend.

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Brad and Ange: Inside their final days

Brad and Ange

Acclaimed celebrity biographer Ian Halperin accurately charted Brad and Angelina’s troubles in his best-selling book about the pair long before break-up reports hit world headlines last week. Here he exclusively writes for Woman’s Day about the troubled couple’s disintegrating relationship, and Ange’s ugly exit plan.

While Brangelina fans are mourning the news that a split seems imminent between the Hollywood golden couple, people in the stars’ inner circle tell me the break-up has been long in the making. One of Brad Pitt’s closest friends said hours after the news broke last week that Pitt is deeply traumatised about the future of the couple’s six children – much more than losing the imagined future he had with Jolie.

“Brad’s certainly showing more signs of relief than acting as a person who just had his heart broken,” the friend, a longtime Hollywood industry veteran, told me.

Many Brangie insiders point to Angie’s filming Salt in New York as the key turning point in the couple’s relationship. With their first-two-year honeymoon seemingly over, the couple were rarely spotted together in New York during summer 2009. There was a point when they weren’t together for over 45 days.

Rumours of a split consumed the couple back then. Other vexing issues soon awaited them, including rumours of Jolie being addicted to the designer drug crystal meth, commonly used by Hollywood actresses who want to lose weight rapidly.

Although Jolie constantly stated her drug days were long behind her, those close to the former user were worried she had fallen back into her old atrocious habits. Many people, including her close friends, were blindsided by Jolie’s sudden weight loss. When she showed up on the set of Salt she had lost over 20 pounds (9 kilos), looking like she had not eaten a meal in weeks.

It all hit a crescendo when she collapsed on the set of the film, spurring rumours she was doing drugs as a result of her relationship with Pitt hitting a rocky patch. “That episode was something the couple has never rebounded from,” said Kristen Young, an LA business entrepreneur who has known them for three years.

“After that incident I don’t think Brad has ever trusted Angelina again. He seems to always fear she’s going to lose herself and go completely out of control. I don’t think there’s any trust left between them any more.

“It’s so sad, because they have such amazing children. But I don’t think either of them realised how stressful having six kids can be, especially if there’s adopted kids from war-torn countries involved. It’s a huge adjustment for the kids, and the parents have to be there every step of the way to help them through it.

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Octomums amazing claim: “I got my body back without surgery!”

Octomum

As her octuplets celebrate their first birthday, their famous mum has a present for herself – a fantastic new body. Francesca Moisin talks to Nadya Suleman.

She’s got the perfect breasts and washboard tummy of a pin-up model, but mum-of-14 Nadya “Octomum” Suleman says the secret behind her fabulous new body is ab crunches in the dead of night – not surgery.

Just 12 months after the birth of her eight IVF babies, Nadya has whittled her frame back to 60 kilos. At the height of her pregnancy, she tipped the scales at just over 135 kilos.

With the demands of her massive family, Nadya says she’s forced to squeeze in gruelling three-hour workouts after midnight, trekking to the gym as early as 2am while her octuplets – Isaiah, Jonah, Nariyah, Maliyah, Noah, Makai, Jeremiah and Josiah – are asleep.

“Four days a week I wake up at 2am, eat, drink coffee and go to the gym,” says the 34-year-old.“There I work out with a trainer for approximately three hours, focusing on a different part of my body each day.

“People are like, ‘Oh, you must have had some surgery,’” Nadya says. “No way, I would feel like I cheated … I wanted to prove to myself that I can do it on my own, naturally.”

Streamlined and super-fit, Nadya’s new lithe physique is quite the contrast to her pregnancy, when she struggled to get out of bed and could barely walk without feeling she might topple over.

“So many people take the easy way out and say, ‘Oh, let me go get this surgery now.’ They just don’t get it,” she says. “It takes incredible self-discipline and self-control to go exercise in the middle of the night when you’re supposed to be sleeping like everybody else.”

Along with her extraordinary weight loss, magically gone are the stretch marks and deep skin discoloration that came with her multiple pregnancy. But besides admitting to having a breast reduction in the past due to back strain, she insists her body is all natural.

“What you look like is beautiful enough, so don’t alter it,” she says. “And I won’t, because I don’t believe in mutilating oneself unless you have to, for medical purposes. With all the stretching from the babies, I got a very large bellybutton. But even though I hate it, I’m not going to change it.”

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What’s weighing us down?

Magda Szubanski

Magda Szubanski

An astounding 77 per cent of Australian women think they are overweight – so we are launching Australia’s Greatest Weight Loss Challenge.

The standard greeting to a friend was once, “Hi, how are you?” Now, the universal cry of welcome is “Wow … are you on a diet?” coupled with a furtive glance.

We are a nation obsessed with our figures – many of us are deeply unhappy with our weight, some dangerously so. It’s not a big leap to assume most of our friends are on some sort of diet.

The Weekly’s All Woman Talk survey questioned 3000 women about body image and found 59 per cent were actively trying to shed kilos at the time of the survey and an astounding 77 per cent of us consider ourselves overweight.

Some have gone to extremes to achieve the body perfect – almost a quarter admit to taking diet pills and laxatives, 12 per cent have smoked cigarettes instead of eating and more chilling is that 11 per cent told the survey they had vomited after a meal.

Join AUSTRALIA’S GREATEST WEIGHT LOSS CHALLENGE at www.greatestweightlosschallenge.com.au.

Of those women trying to lose weight, 53 per cent have been trying to drop a dress size or more for over a year and 14 per cent admit that they have been trying to lose weight “all my life”. “There are a lot of people who don’t like the way they look and want things to be different, but there is a lack of motivation to persist with lifestyle change,” says The Weekly’s Medical Practitioner, Professor Kerryn Phelps.

When we don’t succeed – just 8 per cent reported they had achieved and maintained their goal weight – we blame ourselves, with 58 per cent citing lack of willpower for their failure to lose weight. “The one thing people don’t do consistently is eat less and exercise more,” says Professor Phelps. “They try it for a while, but then, for whatever reason, it goes off the rails.”

No one understands these statistics better than Amy Smith, the CEO of Jenny Craig Australia, which helps more than 70,000 people a year to slim down.

“I was deeply in love with my husband and when he left, I was devastated. I lost my beauty and I lost my man,” Amy says, candidly. “I was a single mum and I was lucky to get my make-up and knickers on, let alone devise a diet and exercise plan. With kids and the business, somehow I lost me. I had given up,” recalls the 43-year-old mother of two, echoing the 26 per cent of respondents who revealed that “being too busy” caused their weight loss efforts to fail. “My kids were five and six, so I couldn’t fool myself it was baby weight anymore. I thought I should do the program, seeing I am the boss,” she adds, laughing.

She successfully shed her goal of 10kg and kept it off. “The real transformation?” says Amy, smiling. “It’s on the inside.”

It all adds up

53% More than half of respondents who are trying to lose weight currently have been trying for more than a year.

23% Almost a quarter have been trying to lose weight for more than six years. Almost one in five women have tried more than three different diets or methods.

34% say they want to drop a dress size – or several – because they are unhappy with how they look. Thirty per cent say they want to feel fitter and 18 per cent believe shedding kilos will make them feel “better in myself”. Just 4 per cent say their doctor advised them to lose weight.

44% lose weight and then regain most or all of it. Fifty-eight per cent say lack of discipline and willpower have sabotaged their dieting efforts. And 26 per cent blame a busy lifestyle and no time to exercise.

42% Almost half had been on an elimination diet (cutting out either carbohydrates or dairy foods).

Join AUSTRALIA’S GREATEST WEIGHT LOSS CHALLENGE at www.greatestweightlosschallenge.com.au.

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The Leanne Edelsten story

Photography by Peter Brew-Bevan. Styling by Maia Liakos

Photography by Peter Brew-Bevan. Styling by Maia Liakos

Was Leanne Edelsten just a pretty trophy bride who soaked up “millionaire medico” Dr Geoffrey Edelsten’s money and fame, but left him when the going got tough? Michael Sheather reveals a very different story.

There are two Leanne Edelstens. One is a beautiful 21-year-old woman draped across the bonnet of a bright pink European sports car, her face framed by a cascade of blonde hair, a designer skirt ending precipitously where her thighs begin.

Yet that Leanne Edelsten – once the wife of Sydney’s so-called “millionaire medico”, the controversial medical entrepreneur Dr Geoffrey Edelsten – today exists only in newspaper photographs and distant memory, though it remains an unrelenting image that has haunted Leanne through most of her adult life.

The other Leanne Edelsten is much older and wiser, someone who no longer courts the dubious affirmation of rampant publicity. She is a woman of experience and maturity who, at 46, has transformed her life, going to university and carving out a rewarding career as an intensive care nurse in one of Sydney’s busiest and most respected hospitals, and is today the dedicated mother of two beautiful teenage girls.

This Leanne Edelsten is a woman tempered in fire, strong and determined, who has learned the painful lesson that her destiny should be shaped only by her own hand. She is a woman whose life reads like the script of some incredible movie and includes a terrifying stalker, who left her traumatised and fearing for her life, a prominent politician who offered to make her then husband’s many legal problems disappear in return for an ongoing sexual relationship, and a husband who, she alleges, forged her signature on loan documents and left her with crippling debt before she stepped in to take over his crumbling medical empire and repay the money, ultimately walking away with nothing.

This Leanne Edelsten is no longer willing to allow the many misconceptions about her to perpetuate. This Leanne Edelsten wants to be heard.

“I want people to know what really did happen all those years ago,” she says. “I have sat back for the past 25 years and been told repeatedly by people that I ran away with Geoffrey’s money or that I ran out on him when the money ran out.

“This is one piece of history that I want to correct – for myself, for my children, my family, for my friends who all know the truth. There was a reason I left him. He betrayed me and left me with debts of hundreds of thousands of dollars. I have lived with misconceptions about me for decades and, now, I want people to know the truth.”

Leanne has never spoken about the end of her marriage to Dr Geoffrey Edelsten, the man who once famously bought her a helicopter, a mink-lined Italian-made De Tomaso Pantera sports car and a footy team, the Sydney Swans. It is perhaps the biggest secret of her colourful and high-flying past.

She and Geoffrey have spoken only a few times since their divorce became final in 1988. Struck off the NSW medical register in the same year, he served 12 months in Goulburn jail after being convicted, in July 1990, of soliciting a hit man to assault a man he believed was stalking Leanne and for perverting the course of justice.

He began a new life in Melbourne, where on November 29 last year (coincidentally Leanne’s birthday) he married again, to another much younger woman, American Brynne Gordon, who, at 26, is 40 years his junior.

Leanne also has a new life. After her divorce, she remarried and had two daughters. That marriage ended in 2004 and Leanne is now bringing up her daughters on her own, working as a nurse in the intensive care ward of Sydney’s St Vincent’s Hospital.

Your say: What do you think of Leanne Edelsten’s story? Do you think she was a trophy bride? Or a woman wronged? Share your thoughts below…

Read more of Leanne’s story

The doctor’s wife

In 1980s Sydney, a city in which flamboyance could be a finely tuned art form, Geoffrey stood out as the playboy king of conspicuous consumption.

“Pamela [Leanne’s modelling agent] called me in and told me that there was this guy producing a coffee table book about Sydney identities and their car collections,” says Leanne. “Geoffrey was one of them. Pam said go out there on Sunday and do some shots with the cars. It’s all paid for, but watch this guy, he’s a real playboy. Call your father when you get there and call him when you leave.”

It was scheduled for July 29, 1983. Leanne was 19 and had been modelling for about a year. The job involved several facets. Geoffrey wanted to interview her to see if she was suitable. He wanted her to drive his Ferrari as part of a planned promotional video and be photographed with him and the cars for the book. The only thing was that Leanne couldn’t drive a manual car.

“The only experience I had was at school, when I took a friend’s Mini for a drive in the Todd River at Alice Springs when it was dry,” recalls Leanne. “I had no idea how to drive a sports car. But I figured, how hard can it be? A friend gave me a lesson the day before and off I went.”

It proved a disaster. Geoffrey asked Leanne to drive his Ferrari while he sat in the passenger’s seat. “I need to see if you can handle the car,” he explained. “Can you drive a manual?” “Oh, yeah,” said Leanne.

“I literally turned the ignition and kangaroo-hopped the car up the drive,” she says. “I managed to get out the gate, but it stalled on a hill in the next block and he just killed himself laughing. He looked at me and said, ‘You don’t drive, do you?’, as I sat there trying to hill-start a Ferrari. I said, ‘No’, and he said, ‘Well, I’m impressed that you came anyway. It shows interest and commitment to the job’. That’s how we met.”

It quickly became apparent to Leanne that Geoffrey was attracted to her. “It was intense, right from the word go,” she says. “We finished the interview and it seemed to go well. As I started to get ready to leave, he asked if I would like to go to dinner with him that evening. I didn’t quite know what to say. I said I have to ring my father and Dad spoke to him, and he promised to drive me home.”

That evening, Geoffrey took Leanne to dinner at the Regent Hotel in central Sydney. It was a business dinner with a man named Bob Pritchard, at the time Geoffrey’s business manager. Leanne was privy to a discussion about buying the Sydney Swans AFL team.

“They were talking about whether it was possible and whether it would all work, what they would have to do to make it fly,” recalls Leanne. “It was the first time they’d talked about the Swans.

“After that, Geoffrey drove me home. He was very polite and a complete gentleman, very respectful. He walked me to the door and said, ‘Good evening, it was lovely to meet you’. And he left and I didn’t really think any more about it.”

Yet, next morning, a delivery man knocked on the door of Leanne’s family home. He was embarrassed because he was carrying a 183cm pink teddy bear with a stethoscope around its neck. “He was red-faced and kept muttering, ‘I am a fully grown man and I had to drive all the way here with a pink bear in the passenger’s seat because it’s too big to fit in the back. Look, can you just sign’,” says Leanne. “It was hilarious.”

The next week, he asked her out on their first date and took her to the San Francisco Grill in Sydney’s Kings Cross. “He asked me to marry him that night,” she says. “And I wasn’t in love with him. I think I liked him. I said, ‘You make me laugh, you’re a really nice man, but I don’t want to marry you.’ He just looked back and said, ‘I’m a very patient man and I always get what I want. I’ll wait.’ He was very self-assured.”

During the next few months, Geoffrey tried to win her affections. “He wooed me and spent every waking minute he could with me,” she says. “For my 20th birthday, he booked a surprise party at the Hilton Hotel and he organised the [Royal] Australian Navy Band to play Happy Birthday for me when I walked through the foyer,” says Leanne. “He told me that he’d seen Paul Newman do that for Joanne Woodward, while he was living in Los Angeles.”

Not long after, Geoffrey again asked her to marry him. “He sat me down and he was clearly upset. He said that he was really in love with me. He told me that he knew that I had said I wouldn’t marry him, but asked me to reconsider. He started to cry and told me that he was Jewish and if that was a problem, then I should tell him because he wanted to marry me. I realised that I had fallen in love with him and that I did adore him, and later, even when I divorced him, I was still in love with him.”

Your say: What do you think of Leanne Edelsten’s story? Do you think she was a trophy bride? Or a woman wronged? Share your thoughts below…

To read the rest of Leanne’s remarkable story, pick up the February issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly out now with Lisa Wilkinson on the cover.

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