Advertisement
Home Page 5376

Jen and Orlando hook up

Jennifer Aniston has Hollywood in a tailspin after she is spotted holidaying with hunky Orlando bloom in Mexico.

Hollywood is abuzz with talk that Jennifer Aniston has finally found love — with hunky British actor Orlando Bloom. The pair were last week snapped enjoying a romantic weekend away at an exclusive Mexican resort.

Insiders confirm Jen, 38, and Orlando, 30, have been “getting to know one another” in private for some time, encouraged by mutual friends, who accompanied them on holiday.

“Jen resisted her attraction to Orlando for the longest time, because she didn’t want to date another actor,” says a friend. “She got her fingers burnt with Brad Pitt and Vince Vaughn, but Orlando is slowly making her forget that.

“He’s the kind of guy she could imagine settling down with, and now she’s having trouble taking things slowly…”

For the full story, plus exclusive photos, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on-sale October 8, 2007)

Your say: Do Jen and Orlando make a good couple? Leave your comments below…

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5376

Tom and Katie’s alien bunker

Protective dad Tom isn’t about to let evil Xenu get his children.

Tom Cruise is reportedly building an $11million luxury underground bunker at his Colorado property, so his family can survive an alien invasion.

Insiders say the star has ordered a reinforced shelter from UK firm Powerhouse, which will be big enough to house 10 people, including his wife Katie Holmes, baby Suri, and his older children Isabella, 14 and Connor, 12.

“Tom is planning to build the facility under his Telluride estate,” a source told US magazine Star. “It’s a self-contained underground shelter with a high-tech air-purifying system.”

Although reps for the actor have denied the reports, as well as claims he’s fearful of UFOs, it’s known his Scientology beliefs include teachings about aliens and an evil intergalactic warlord called Xenu — who is said to have menaced Earth in the past…

Read the full story in this week’s Woman’s Day (on-sale October 8, 2007)

Your say: Does Tom seem just a little paranoid? Leave your comments below…

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5376

12-year-old: I’ve been modelling since eight

Young Morgan Featherstone and her mum defend pre-teen modelling, following the international outrage over a 12-year-old model as the face of fashion week.

Morgan is a model child. Blonde, leggy and blue-eyed, she’s polite, kind, studious, and popular with schoolmates and teachers.

A typical 12-year-old, she’s crazy about wildlife, adores her pet dogs, admires Bindi Irwin, loves playing sport, laughs at The Simpsons and still likes hanging out with her parents.

She’s also the girl who created global shockwaves when, aged only eight, she posed for photos in sultry, Lolita-style make-up that portrayed her as a pouting sex kitten.

Today, modelling at least once a week, Morgan is a comparatively grown-up Year 8 student. Her part-time job has earned a healthy trust fund and flown her around the world. She has met Cameron Diaz, Alyssa Milano, Rose McGowan, Cold Chisel, Delta Goodrem and Kiss. She even appeared in a Gene Simmons video clip! But for Morgan, it’s not about fame or money.

“I like getting dressed up, getting the shots done, seeing the result,” Morgan beams, cosmetic-free and chilling out at home in Brisbane, her hair pulled back in a ponytail.

“Mum has always asked if I wanted to stop or carry on, so she’s never pushed me.

“I wouldn’t want to say anything that makes people angry, but I really like modelling. It’s just so much fun, and my friends all think it’s cool. Nobody has ever been bitchy.”

Not, at least, until the provocative child-woman image of young Morgan — image of young Morgan — for an ad commissioned by a Taiwanese pool manufacturer — sparked a fiery debate about sexploitation of under-age models.

Psychologists and industry spokesmen criticised her parents. The Federal Minister for Children and Youth Affairs waded in with a heartfelt plea, “For goodness sake, let a child be a child, rather than make them grow up too fast with sexually explicit clothing.”

Four years down the track and Morgan’s mum, Virgin Blue flight attendant Amy Dean, hoped the family had put that torrid time behind them.

But with the recent choice of 12-year-old Maddison Gabriel as the face of Gold Coast Fashion Week, the row has reignited…

For the full story, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on-sale October 8, 2007)

Your say: Is 12 too young to be a model? Leave your comments below…

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5376

Freckles

Freckles

Getty

Home Page 5376

Insomniac cat

Home Page 5376

We faked an engagement to get presents

During my first two years of uni I met a fantastic guy named Leon. We clicked straight away and had an absolute blast, really making the most of uni life. He was gay and I was way too immature for any kind of serious relationship so he was the perfect ‘boyfriend’. We fast became best friends and spent almost all our time together.

After two years of parties and fun, we decided to move off campus and get a flat together. We found a cute little place not too far from school. We both had part-time jobs but, as we were studying full-time, we found it hard to work many hours and were therefore always pretty strapped for cash. We made do — brightening the place as best we could with bits and pieces we’d buy at secondhand places or make ourselves (milk crate bookcases — very practical but not so aesthetically pleasing!)

After the first year in our flat we were getting pretty sick of living such a basic life. We both came from pretty wealthy families and had grown up used to luxuries — we were sick of making do and decided that after three years of basic living, we’d had enough.

We’d both had a few casual relationships — nothing serious — and we were aware that our families were hoping we’d get together. My parents adored Leon and continually made playful hints that suggested they thought we were a couple. Leon still hadn’t gotten around to telling his parents he was gay, though I’m sure they had their suspicions over the years. They always treated me very warmly — obviously delighted that Leon was showing interest in a girl.

We came up with a great plan: we’d get engaged! It was perfect — his parents would be happy and mine would be thrilled that their wild daughter was finally settling down with a “nice young fellow”, as Dad always described Leon. We’d get a heap of presents and finally be able to furnish our little flat.

We went to a discount jeweller and picked out a ring. We went halves in the $200 and concocted a romantic story to tell our parents. We had such fun that day, lying in the sun on our patio, sipping cheap wine and trying to outdo each other with stories of Leon’s proposal.

My parents were pretty shocked when we made the announcement — they were used to us denying that we were a couple. They were happy, though, and Mum, ever the entertainer, almost straightaway began organising our engagement party.

Our parents met and thankfully got on as well as Leon and I always had. The engagement party was amazing. All my aunts and uncles came laden with expensive gifts, kissing me on the cheek and telling me how excited they were. Leon and I could barely wait to get home and open our gifts — it was all a fabulous game to us. We got some shocking things, like doilies from my Aunt Mollie and a secondhand benchtop pie warmer from his grandma, but mostly we got great things.

We told our parents that we wanted to wait until we had finished uni before we set a date for the wedding. We spent the next year, our final year of uni, living in luxury with our Egyptian cotton bath sheets and whiz-bang coffee-maker. We were the envy of our friends with our four-burner barbecue and spent many happy evenings drinking beer out of the crystal wine glasses given to us by my godmother.

At the end of the year Leon got a fabulous job offer interstate. I was keen to stay put and do an honours degree. It was time to “break up”. I was sad to say goodbye to my best friend but nothing prepared me for how Mum and Dad would take the news — they were crushed. I had to pretend to be heartbroken as Dad fluffed around feeling awkward and Mum hugged me so sadly.

Leon and I had always said that we’d make some sort of auction-style game out of dividing up the gifts we’d shared over the past year. When the time came we’d both lost heart and were feeling pretty ashamed of what we’d done. It had seemed like such a great idea but now Mum and Dad were so miserable, I felt bad about it. But life, as it does, went on.

I still hear from Leon occasionally, he’s making it big with some finance company and happily living with a partner.

I’m now engaged to a lovely man called Tom. He knows this is my second engagement, but I’ve carefully avoided telling him the full story. Tom and I didn’t have an engagement party — it just didn’t seem right. Mum and Dad like Tom, but they seem to be holding out a bit — scared that he’ll break their daughter’s heart like Leon did. If only they knew that I’m the one who broke their hearts.

Image: Getty. Picture posed by models

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5376

Bali 9 twin tells: “Our death-row 21st”

The sister of the Bali nine’s youngest prisoner Matthew Norman fears this birthday may be her brother’s last

With her twin brother sentenced to death by firing squad, a pale and shockingly thin Cheryl Norman flew to Bali to celebrate what might be their last birthday together … their 21st. Cheryl is haunted by the fact her dear brother — the youngest of the Bali Nine — may not live to share future birthdays.

Speaking exclusively to Woman’s Day, for the first time since Matthew’s 2005 arrest, Cheryl whispers, “I think about it all the time … all the time.

“It’s so scary. It’s always at the back of my mind, the death sentence … always,” she adds, with tears brimming.

“We’ve spent every birthday together since we were born, apart from our 19th just after he was arrested. I can’t imagine living without him,” she says.

“I love him. He’s the best brother and he’ll do anything for me. And I’ll do anything for him. But there is nothing I can do that will help him now. I’m powerless. What can I do?” she asks.

But Cheryl was determined to put on a brave face for their 21st celebration, despite the grim surroundings of Kerobokan Prison. They sat on the dirty concrete floor of the sweltering visitors’ area, crammed among the prison’s inmates, eating cakes and drinking Coca-Cola with about 13 friends and invited prisoners — including Schapelle Corby and several of the Bali Nine.

Bittersweet day

It was a million miles from the twins’ childhood birthdays, but their mum Robyn — who lives in Bali to look after Matthew — did her best to make it festive by laying out a spread of cakes, chips and chocolate.

“Matthew’s eyes really lit up for those couple of hours,” Robyn says.

Matthew, who rarely speaks to the press for fear of it hurting his last-ditch appeal against death — currently before the Supreme Court in Jakarta — says it was a bittersweet day.

“I just try to live every moment and make the most of times with my family,” says Matthew. “It was great to spend my birthday with Mum, Cheryl and a bunch of my friends. But I really regret what I’ve done, and putting everyone who loves me through this.”

For the full story, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on-sale October 1)

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5376

Nicole tells: My mid-life crisis

The star is haunted by fears of death and a lingering sense of failure.

Nicole Kidman has revealed she often thinks about death as she confronts reaching 40 with many of her deepest dreams unfulfilled. She also admits that she experiences motherhood through her sister Antonia’s four children.

In a tell-all interview that lays bare many of her deepest anxieties about marriage, children and family, the Oscar-winning actress confesses that her life is anything but a Hollywood fairytale — and she often feels like a “failure”.

“I tend to have a lot of thoughts about [death],” Nicole told US magazine Ladies’ Home Journal recently. “I’m just glad that I made it to 40! Sometimes you say, ‘My gosh, with all the trauma and pain in the world, it’s a big feat now to get to that age.'”

No Fairytale

Nicole confesses that her Sydney-based sister Antonia has been her “rock” throughout many personal traumas, and now the actress is keen to return the favour. When Antonia’s marriage to husband Angus Hawley broke down and he had a stint in rehab for anxiety and depression, Nicole was forced to face many of the demons from her own past.

“She’s gone through her own personal tragedy,” says Nicole of her little sister. “It’s so good that I’m in Australia right now. I can be her rock because she was that for me.

“When I’m in Sydney, we’re together every day. I’m at her place almost every night feeding the kids. She wrote me the most beautiful letter the other day saying, ‘You make me feel safe’. I thought, ‘Gosh, that’s exactly how I feel’.”

Indeed, Nicole has been able to provide a shoulder for Antonia to lean on after going through a divorce and watching a person she loves check into a rehab clinic. But having to face her sister’s pain has forced her to reconfront her own.

“That’s all so raw still …” Nicole admits of her husband Keith Urban’s drug and alcohol battle, her voice trailing off mid-sentence.

Baby Dream

Adding to her midlife crisis is her overwhelming desire to start a family with Keith. While the star has long spoken about her desire to have a biological baby, she recently revealed that it is Keith who is dragging his heels.

Friends say the issue has become a source of conflict between the couple, with Keith forced to defend himself during a recent interview with a Canadian newspaper.

“We both would love to have children when the time is right,” he says. “And right now, we just don’t have that time. But it’s not like we’re not trying.”

While Nicole admits she would be “thrilled” if she became pregnant, for now the star is living out her baby dreams by helping to look after Antonia’s four children.

After suffering two traumatic miscarriages, the star admits that her sister’s healthy pregnancies have become a shared experience. With her two adopted children, Isabella and Connor, now often with their father Tom Cruise in LA, Nicole relishes her involvement with sister Antonia’s family.

An Unusual Bond

“I was on the phone with Antonia when she gave birth,” reveals Nicole. “Antonia always calls them ‘our babies’ so that’s beautiful too. You know, when she gets pregnant, she always says ‘we’re pregnant’, so we sort of share it. We’re just unusual in our bond.”

While Nicole and Keith recently celebrated their first wedding anniversary, she says she can’t help but feel she has failed to find the happiness that her sister has achieved.

“Most of my life is living in a trailer,” she told the US magazine. “My sister lives five minutes from my parents. I didn’t settle down five minutes away, and into that lifestyle, even though I sort of hold it as an ideal.

“But somehow it’s just not my life and it won’t ever be my life. That’s a hard thing to grasp at times. You constantly feel like, ‘Oh, I’ve never lived up to that’.

“I have travelled most of my life. I’ve been a gypsy a long time. I’ve been searching for things and on a quest — my children have travelled the world rather than growing up in the same neighbourhood. And at times I feel like a failure because of that.

“[But] my mum said a really great thing to me the other day. She said, ‘So you have an unusual life, Nic. It’s just different, and that’s OK’.”

For the full story, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on-sale October 1)

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5376

Suzi Quatro still rocks

She turned down Elvis, kissed Alice Cooper, and had an affair with a married man. Life has always been a tug-of-war for the leather-clad rock icon

She was barely out of the international charts during the ’70s, and three decades later the legendary Suzi Quatro still rocks with the best of them. Leather clad and ballsy, Suzi at 57 is a woman clearly in her prime, and fits a pair of tight Levi’s way better than most of us a third of her age.

The seemingly ageless rocker meets Woman’s Day for a revealing, warts-and-all chat about her life and the launch of her autobiography Unzipped.

Your honesty in your book is bracing, even confronting. Is that what you intended?

I intended to write the truth. I wanted it to be what I went through. I didn’t want to paint myself as a saint which I’m not. I wanted people to know the real journey because success always comes with a price.

Your father’s response to your worldwide success with the song Stumblin’ In [with Smokie’s Chris Norman] was very strange. He wanted to know why you dueted with someone other than a family member …

I know, I couldn’t believe it. Instead of saying, ‘Oh great you have a hit.’ My dad’s got dementia, he’s in a home now. I think he had a bit of jealousy all his life, because I think he had dreams of being a very successful musician, and his nose is a little bit out of joint that I was the only one and that I didn’t take the family with me.

It’s families isn’t it? He gave me love of music, I give him all the praise in the world for that, but these things are lessons in life. And it bothered me until it didn’t. A lesson to learn. Stop asking for the applause, stop asking to be the star in the family, they’re never going to let you. Now I don’t try that any more. I learned this from my second husband. He said, “You’re making everybody too important.” We all have to survive families.

You say we wouldn’t have had a Suzi Quatro without Elvis, but we also wouldn’t have had a Chrissie Hynde or Joan Jett without Suzi Quatro.

That’s right. I was the first, which I’m proud of. We’re friends, I’ve known Joan for a long time and Chrissie is lovely, she came on my This Is Your Life. She said, ‘I really wanted to be you’ which was very, very sweet of her. She also interviewed me when she was a rock journo.

It’s amazing reading the book and you’re there for all these amazing moments in rock history and pop culture, but they’re almost like throw-away lines.

Yes I know, it is like that. Iggy Pop — I kicked him off the stage. I’m lying in bed having my affair in Dallas and we see Robert Kennedy assassinated on the TV. Things like that. Life is strange. My life has always been strange.

Your sister Patty. There seems to be a lot of issues there between you? She feels that you got it all and she got nothing?

Yes there is.

How are you going to resolve it?

It’s not up to me to resolve, but she did call me about a month ago and we actually talked about all this stuff. She said, “I understand there are some issues,” she said, “Why didn’t you tell me?” I said, “Well I’m out there doin’ it and being successful and you’re struggling, and I’m going to hit you with this as well.” I just never felt right bringing it up. And then we went through everything. We talked about it all. I can’t see how she’ll mind the book because there are so many loving things about her in the book. I hope the book helps to illuminate what we’ve been through. I’m hoping to hear back from her once she’s read it. I stand by every phrase in this book.

You’ve written a stage musical about 1930s actress, Tallulah Bankhead in which you play her. Is that going to the West End?

My co-writer Shirley trying to get it back up in England. If we get it back up we’ll then tour it. It was a great show. I think it was a little bit before its time, but now that I’ve had theatre success on the West End in Annie Get Your Gun, it may help to get it up.

Suzi’s autobiography Unzipped (Hodder & Stoughton, paperback $35) and her new album Back To The Drive (EMI) are out now.

For more of this interview, see this week’s Woman’s Day (on-sale October 1)

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5376

In the mag – October 8, 2007

On sale Monday October 1, 2007

Charlie Sheen: ‘I didn’t abuse the kids’

A furious Charlie Sheen has accused his ex-wife Denise Richards of instigating “diabolical” allegations by their children’s former nanny that he may have “inappropriately touched” their kids.

Jennifer Garner’s outrage: Ben and Jen get cosy

To Jennifer Garner’s dismay, the chemistry explodes between husband Ben Affleck and his co-star Jennifer Aniston on the set of their new film

True Life — Bali 9 twin tells: ‘Our death-row 21st’

The sister of the Bali nine’s youngest prisoner Matthew Norman fears this birthday may be her brother’s last

Nicole tells: ‘My mid-life crisis’

Nicole Kidman has revealed she often thinks about death as she confronts turning 40 with many of her deepest dreams unfulfilled.

Interview: Suzi Quatro still rocks

She turned down Elvis, kissed Alice Cooper, and had an affair with a married man. Life has always been a tug-of-war for the leather-clad rock icon

  • Girls’ night in!

  • As part of our special Pink Issue, Woman’s Day joins Home And Away‘s Ada Nicodemou, Sharni Vinson, Lynne McGranger, Jess Tovey and Indiana Evans as they get together to raise awareness for breast cancer. Find out how to host your own Girls’ Night In, and get the facts on reducing your risk of breast cancer.

  • Jemima: ‘I’m Shane’s new woman’

  • Jemima Khan has secretly confessed she is the new woman in Shane Warne’s life, following his ex-wife Simone’s claims the cricket star has cheated on her again.

  • Kate’s baby plans

  • Kate Ritchie has quit Home And Away as part of her plan to start a family. Although the award-winning actress last week denied she is pregnant, rumours continue to grow, with fans even stopping to ask her if she is expecting.

  • Chelsy’s revenge date

  • Party-loving Chelsy Davy has enjoyed a wild night out with a handsome mystery date, as her relationship with Prince Harry buckles amid reports he may be the father of a young woman’s unborn baby.

  • Mel’s boozy Bali bender

  • Mel Gibson has fallen off the wagon in spectacular fashion after being caught partying at one of Bali’s hottest bars, shocking holiday-makers with his drunken behaviour. We have the exclusive photo.

Related stories


Advertisement