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Michael Johns: My wife’s my idol

By Jenny Brown

Pictures: David Hahn

The Aussie American Idol star and the love of his life talk about Michael’s wild ride to stardom.

It’s been a long way to the top for Aussie rocker Michael Johns. Today the musician counts Dolly Parton, Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore among his fans.

But Perth-born Michael chased US success for years, sleeping in his car, singing in bars, signing with minor record labels that imploded before his albums were released. Considered a favourite to win this year’s American Idol, he failed. But then he got a huge surprise. His early elimination from the show created national outrage — and suddenly, with an audience of 35 million, the 29-year-old Aussie was famous beyond his wildest dreams.

In a frank and funny interview, LA-based Michael gives the lowdown on celebrity, what it’s like to become a sex symbol and the effect it’s having on his marriage to American interior designer, Stacey Vuduris.

**How are you coping with success?

Stacey** I think Michael deserves it after so long. When he was eliminated we were sad, but the next day people were in an uproar about it, and that made us feel really good. But it is weird now he’s recognised, people just stare and stare.

**I believe the US Secretary of State is a fan?

Michael** Oh man, I got invited to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, and Martha Stewart and Pamela Anderson were there with all these politicians. Someone said Condoleezza Rice wanted to meet me. Sure enough, we had our photo taken and ended up having a conversation. She said she was bummed that I got voted off Idol.

**Condoleezza’s a musician as well, isn’t she?

Michael** Yes, I asked if she wanted to do a song together — maybe something like Great Balls Of Fire — but she said she was more into Mozart. I said, “Come on Condi, there’s a little bit of rock ‘n’ roll in all of us!”

For more of this interview, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on sale May 19).

Your say:

Have your say below.

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Andre Rieu’s waltz Down Under

By Monique Butterworth

Pictures: Marc Stimson

The Dutch maestro has Australia under his spell.

André Rieu, the 58-year-old Dutch violinist and conductor dubbed “The Modern King of Waltz”, sold more DVDs and CDs than any other musician in Australia in 2007. His CD, Waltzing Matilda, a tribute to Australia, went platinum and recently reached number one on the ARIA charts — knocking Madonna off the top spot!

In Australia to promote his A Romantic Vienna Night tour, André talks exclusively to Woman’s Day about his incredible popularity, why he enjoys bringing a sense of humour to the classics, and his upcoming musical extravaganza.

You play a 200-year-old Stradivarius violin. Who else has it belonged to? How long have you owned it?

I don’t know exactly. You have Stradivarius that have a long history and you can tell everything about it. This one was a very long time in South America and nobody knew what it was. You know there are still a lot of Stradivarius out there that nobody knows about, so it is very exciting. People write me letters telling me they have a Stradivarius, and I am always interested, but I ask them to send me photos and a certificate of authenticity. Then, if they do, I will take the time to look at it. I’ve had this one now for three years.

Is there always a bodyguard with it?

Yes, there is always somebody with it. I do not want to forget it in a cab!

Do you have a back-up violin?

Of course. In my case I have two violins.

You have been playing the violin since you were five. Can you explain what you love most about it?

The violin is the instrument that for me is the most near to my body. When I have it here, it really vibrates when I play and it looks like a lady.

You and your wife planned to open a pizzeria — how different would your life have been if you’d done that?

I had been playing violin since I was five years old and my wife was studying. We both had rather severe educations. My father was a conductor and he was also a conductor at home. There was a time that we thought we didn’t want to do that any more and we wanted to open a pizzeria. We organised everything. We had the building. We made the menu. And we decided the most expensive pizza would be Pizza Paganini (Niccolo Paganini, an Italian violinist and composer born in Genoa in 1782, is considered by many the greatest violinist of all time), because I would play something. And then I thought, “If I have to play Paganini, I would have to practise!” So I grabbed my violin and started to study again.

Would your conductor father be proud of your career?

Now? I hope so. It was rather difficult. He was an opera fan, so he was always in the pit conducting operas. I don’t want to be in the pit, I want to be on stage.

What’s next for you?

After Melbourne we fly to Canada and start in Montreal, and then we have a two-week tour in America. We then go to Holland to tape some specials for television, one of the concerts will be in my home town, and then we’re ready to come back to Australia.

For more of this interview, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on sale May 19).

Your say:

Are you under André’s spell? Have your say below.

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Helen Hunt’s big-screen baby

By Josephine Agostino

Helen Hunt still isn’t sure what women want. But at 44, the Oscar-winning actress knows she has all she needs. She and her partner of seven years, screenwriter Matthew Carnahan, have happily made a life for themselves away from the spotlight of Hollywood, with their daughter Makena’lei and Matthew’s son Emmett.

Major movie roles alongside Mel Gibson and Jack Nicholson, and million-dollar-an-episode pay cheques for sitcom Mad About You meant Helen could focus on her family — until her next “baby” came along — the film she’s written, directed and starred in, Then She Found Me.

What do you love to do with your daughter?

Well, she’s never seen any TV in her life, so that leaves lots of time for other things. She and her father garden, we go to the park, we bake bread, that kind of thing. She goes to a school that encourages that, so her friends won’t be seeing me on a late-night TV talk show or anything.

Do you have a TV in your home?

Her father and I watch a bit of TV before we go to bed, but we don’t have it on when the kids are around.

You were a child actor from the age of nine. How did you avoid going off the rails?

I was lucky enough not to be in any successful show or movie back then. I did a lot of little things like an after-school activity. I had a normal life. I can’t think of many people who have huge success as kids who go on to have careers.

How did Salman Rushdie come to play the character of a gynaecologist in Then She Found Me?

There’s a scene where people are praying and I wanted this character to be Indian, so you wouldn’t know which God they were praying to. I auditioned actors and approached him and he was interested, so that’s how it happened. He could not have been more professional, he did a terrific job.

Are you just as comfortable being a director as you are playing the lead role?

There wasn’t much of a separation between the two. I just did whatever needed to be done; it felt like all like one job.

Does your daughter show any qualities of an actress?

I would never begin to imagine what she’s going to be. She’s three years old and she’s become herself very quickly. She’s very funny and expresses herself when she doesn’t like something, which makes me very happy. I’m glad when she says, “I don’t like it”.

How would you describe the type of mother you are?

It’s important for my daughter to feel like there’s someone in charge of the day, it makes her more secure, that I have a plan.

How did winning an Oscar change your life?

I don’t know that it did. It was an exciting, stressful night, but there’s theories it could go either way. I have no idea what it did for my career.

What was the Mad About You experience like from the inside? It was such a huge show around the world.

I was very lucky, because that gave me the financial freedom not to have take jobs that I didn’t like. On a daily basis it was the hardest work I’d ever done, it was like standing at the bottom of a tidal wave. Paul [Reiser] and I are still friends, so I feel very fortunate and I was old enough to appreciate it.

Would you consider returning to TV?

Absolutely I would.

What is your favourite show at the moment?

Californication with David Duchovny. I love it. I’d like that job!

For more of this interview, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on sale May 19).

Your say:

Have your say below.

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I had two sex changes

Seven years after becoming a woman, Charles realised he’d made a massive mistake.

Ladies’ man Charles Kane never fails to charm women. The sporty multi-millionaire property developer, who owns a luxury home and a yacht, seems to tick all the right boxes. However, his secret past means he’s struggling to find true love.

Charles was born a man, but underwent sex-change surgery to become a woman. Incredibly, seven years later, he realised he’d made a mistake — and now, after spending more than $200,000 on painful operations, Charles has made history by becoming the first person in the UK to have two sex changes, and now lives as a man again.

A lonely journey

But Charles reveals he still hasn’t found happiness and is desperate to settle down with a woman.

“When I tell women about my past, it puts them off,” admits 48-year-old Charles. “I’d make the perfect boyfriend, because I can really understand women — I used to be one — but I struggle with relationships.”

Born Sam Hashimi, Charles married in 1985. He and his wife had two children, but she left him for another man 12 years later. Feeling lonely, Charles — who’d experimented with his sexuality before marrying — began visiting gay clubs.

Text: Lisa Woollard/Closer. Pictures: Nick Strugnell/Closer.

For the full story, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on sale May 19).

Your say:

Would you date a man who’s had two sex changes? Have your say below…

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Glamour and glitz at the Cannes Film Festival

Every year, the prestigious and influential Cannes Film Festival creates a media frenzy as the elite of the film industry jet-set to the beautiful French Riviera to soak up the sun, the glamour, and some of the world’s finest cinematic talent.

Check out our greatest Cannes red carpet moments here.

This year marks the 61st festival, which since opening in September 1939 has become famous for both its star-studded parties and premieres, and of course, for its films. From the 14th to the 23rd May, producers, distributors, writers, directors and actors in their dozens will flock to they playground of the rich and famous to feast upon the latest film premiers and judge an exciting line-up of hot new talent. Hollywood heavyweights Steven Soderbergh, Clint Eastwood and screenwriter Charlie Kaufman are just a few to be debuting their works, alongside newer faces on the film-making circuit hoping for that all-important break into the big time.

Certainly, the success of these movies is largely pre-empted by their reception amongst the discerning Cannes audiences. The festival has been known to make or break a film in a day; with the extensive media exposure and the audience’s potential for sheer brutality towards films that don’t take their fancy, this can lead to an overnight hit or an overnight flop.

Equally as much of the media’s focus, however, is usually on the festival’s glamourous attendees, which in previous years have included the likes of Warren Beatty, Elizabeth Taylor, Vanessa Redgrave, Sophia Loren and Princess Diana to name just a few. Tinseltown’s finest continue to hit the red carpet in style each year to be greeted by the glare of the paparazzi. In honour of this most celebrated internationally acclaimed event, The Weekly captures some of the greatest red carpet moments from Cannes —past to present.

Check out our Cannes’ red carpet glamour slideshow here.

YOUR SAY: Who are your favourite stars of the Cannes Film Festival? Tell us below!

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Cate Blanchett

Catherine Elise Blanchett was born on May 14th, 1969, in Melbourne.

One of Cate’s earlier starring roles was opposite Ralph Fiennes.

Cate was nominated for an Oscar for her performance as Queen Elizabeth, this time alongside Ralph Fiennes’ brother Joseph.

Cate and co-stars Matt Damon, Jude Law, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Gwyneth Paltrow.

Cate and husband Andrew Upton welcomed their first son Dashiell John, in 2001.

Cate with co-star Liv Tyler and director Peter Jackson. Cate confessed that one of the reasons she accepted the role was because she always wanted to do a film wearing pointy ears!

Cate portrayed real-life murdered Irish journalist, Veronica Guerin, to critical acclaim.

In another real-life portrayal, Cate, played Katharine Hepburn in the Howard Hughes biopic, alongside co-stars Kate Beckinsale and Leonardo DiCaprio, and director Martin Scorsese. Cate was nominated for an Oscar…

…and won! This made her the first actor to win an Oscar for portraying another Oscar-winner.

Cate is renouned for arriving at awards ceremonies in style and being among the best-dressed stars.

Cate maintains her sophisticated red-carpet fashion style during her pregnancies.

Cate won an Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Actress as one of several actors portraying aspects of Bob Dylan’s personality in the biopic I’m Not There.

Cate with her two older sons Dashiell and Roman.

Cate and husband, playwright and director Andrew Upton, (right) became Co-Artistic Directors of Sydney Theatre Company at the start of 2008. They’re pictured here with former Artistic Director Robin Nevin and designer Giorgio Armani, who is a new STC patron.

Cate co-chaired the Australia 2020 summit in 2008, accompanied by her less-than-a-week old son, Ignatius Martin.

Can’t get enough celebrity glamour? Take a look back at our photo album of 2008 Oscars jewellery.

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Cheering up a bereaved pup

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Nicole and Katie’s secret deal

The two women unite as Tom’s controlling behaviour pushes both of them to the limit.

Katie Holmes has reached out to Nicole Kidman in a series of secret phone calls, as both struggle to cope with Tom Cruise’s controlling grip on their lives. Following the third anniversary of her first date with the superstar actor, and with Tom pressuring her for a second child, troubled Katie, 29, is taking stock of how her life has changed — and she isn’t happy.

Katie first turned to Tom’s ex-wife Nicole, 40, for advice on how to handle the 45-year-old actor, but as their bond has grown, she has agreed to help Nicole gain more access to the former couple’s children Isabella, 15, and Connor, 13.

Pregnant Nicole — who was initially devastated by Katie’s tactless public revelation that Connor and Isabella “call me Mom” — was thrilled when Katie offered to help her spend more time with her children.

“Katie and Nicole have always had a civil relationship, but they have never had much of a chance to talk privately,” reveals one of Katie’s closest friends.

For the full story, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on sale May 12).

Search:

Read more about Nicole Kidman, Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise.

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Gordon tells: Food, fame and family

By Jenny Brown

Pictures: Andrew Jacob

Always in hot water, super-chef Gordon Ramsay is a stirrer, whose talent and drive, together with his brazen use of the “F” word, have made him an international star.

On top-rating TV shows like Hell’s Kitchen and Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares, his temper boils over with terrifying regularity. He’s even been chased down the street by a knife-wielding cook who couldn’t take his roasting any more.

But there is a softer side to the 41-year-old chef. Loved and loathed in equal measure — a British magazine poll once placed him in its Top 100 Sexiest Men — he adores his wife Tana and four small children, Megan, twins Holly and Jack, and Matilda, and inspires fanatical loyalty in long-time staff.

While chewing the fat with Woman’s Day, a charming, mild-mannered and very funny Gordon reveals what he thinks about wealth, how he gets his son to eat carrots and how he dealt with his wife producing a cookbook.

According to rumours, you’re going to open an Australian restaurant?

There are a couple of options in Sydney and Melbourne and I’d be mad not to look at it. I wouldn’t do it unless we can invest in it and control it. It can go t**ts up without control. But I love it here. The food is phenomenal, but because it’s so remote, Australian chefs don’t get the credit they deserve in Europe.

Do you ever get invited to dinner parties?

I swear to God I would rather become a vegetarian than go to a dinner party. You know why? Because you’re gawped at like you’re on Big Brother — every mouthful, every sound, and no-one’s relaxed. It’s that level of diplomacy I’m not very good at. [With disgust] Dinner parties! I mean, if I’m going ’round to theirs, they are going to come to mine and what the f*** do I want to do that for?

So how do you entertain your friends?

We had a celebration on New Year’s Eve, but I didn’t cook. I brought in a chef so I could sit and enjoy myself. Otherwise it’s too bloody hard. Another secret is the art of delegation — make one bring the starter, one the main course and you do the pudding. It works out great. Be responsible for one dish and one dish only.

Do you ever say “I told you so” to your brother?

I don’t want to go into it too much, out of respect. I wear a jacket of guilt because if I wasn’t as successful as I am, I don’t think there would be such need for him to fight against it. I blame myself slightly, but it’s time to let him go. I have my other family to look after. Heroin isn’t a disease, it’s a choice. I stand strong on that.

Have you talked to your children about it?

We tell the kids that all drugs are dangerous. It’s my decision to put the fear of God into them — like smoking causes cancer and it’s why Nanny has a bad heart. I expose them to the harsh reality.

Are celebrity chefs a good or bad thing?

I get frustrated when people come into the industry wanting to cook on TV. That’s thousands of miles away from the coalface and what it takes to perfect food. I’ve been very lucky to be able to diversify, but I would cringe at employing a chef who wants to be famous. I’m not a TV chef, I want that on my tombstone.

And what do you think of most TV chefs’ cuisine?

Celebrity cat food! But as long as they continue making knob meals, it makes my life f**king easier. I’m definitely not complaining.

What would you order for your last meal?

I had some amazing grilled scallops once at Icebergs in Bondi. They were mind-blowing, so that’s my starter, and then I would go for something like sea bass or barramundi resting on a bed of roast potatoes with purple basil and confit tomatoes. For dessert, I’d have the most amazing hot chocolate fondant with ice cream — go out the way you came in … with milk. And the rest is f**king history.

For more of this interview, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on sale May 12).

Your say:

Are you a Ramsay fan? Or does he drop the F-bomb one too many times for your liking? Have your say below.

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WAGs

A trend-setter, a pop-star, and the wife of one of the world’s most famous footballers, David Beckham, Posh Spice is the ultimate WAG.

From our very own shores, the much-loved Bec travels around the world with her tennis champ hubby Lleyton — even keeping up appearances while pregnant during the 2005 US Open.

Golden girl Lara, featured in those infamous Aussie tourism ads, is engaged to cricketer Michael Clarke.

The former wife of Shane Warne, Simone is an on-again, off-again Aussie WAG.

The revealing dress that the girlfriend of AFL footballer Chris Judd wore to the 2004 Brownlow Medal presentation drew attention across Australia.

A wardrobe malfunction waiting to happen, the dress plunged deeply at the front… and the back.

Wife of Socceroo Harry Kewell, actress Sheree Murphy.

Fashion designer Terry Biviano and her rugby player boyfriend Anthony Minnichiello.

Golf champion Tiger Woods and wife, Swedish ex-model Elin.

The term WAGs was invented to describe UK footballers’ wives. And now there’s even a reality TV show, WAGs Boutique, including (clockwise from top L) glamour model Cassie Sumner, singer Madeleine Bowden, the audience’s voted “favourite WAG” Krystell Sidwell, models’ agent Jadene Bircham and model Nicola T.

Prince William’s girlfriend Kate, who royal-watchers have long predicted will become his wife, has been dubbed a ‘Royal WAG’.

Prince Harry’s ex-girlfriend Chelsy didn’t escape the title of ‘Royal WAG’ either.

Fergie was an earlier version of the ‘Royal WAG’, with comparisons being drawn between the youngsters Chelsy and Kate and their generational counterparts, Fergie and Di.

The ‘Queen of people’s hearts’, Diana set the bar high for future ‘Royal WAGs’.

Celebrity divorces

All is not fair in love and war — view our photo gallery of some of the biggest celebrity divorce settlements. Ouch! On RALPH: ‘Hottest pommie WAGs’ slideshow.

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