When Lisa McCuneโs family โ and most of the world โ went into isolation in March, her 14-year-old daughter Remy announced an ambitious plan to watch every episode of Blue Heelers, the 1990s cop drama that made her mum Australiaโs sweetheart and a four-time TV WEEK Gold Logie winner.
Remyโs proposed TV marathon sounds like a sweet act of daughterly devotion, but Lisa has no delusions.
โSheโll just bag me,โ says the 49-year-old actor, laughing.
โSheโll just go, โOh Mum, youโre so bad!โ She adores me, I know she does, but they like giving me a hard time as well.โ
Such is life in a family full of teenagers.
As Lisa chats to The Australian Womenโs Weekly on the phone (our shoot was done previously), Remy and 16-year-old Oliver are remote learning, their schools shut down by the coronavirus pandemic, while 18-year-old uni student Archer is holed up at home too, enlisted to help his mum in the garden.
Like most parents around the country, Lisa is trying to keep her kids busy, calculating the household toilet paper requirements and contemplating an uncertain future.
She had arrived home in Melbourne only a few days earlier from Sydney, where the acclaimed Bell Shakespeare production of Hamlet (in which she plays Gertrude) has shut down.
It was the last show to leave the Sydney Opera House.
โThere was something very eerie,โ she says, โabout this almighty icon going dark.โ
With the country in quarantine, the COVID-19 crisis may have capsized her work and home life, but not all the adjustments have been unwelcome.
โAs a family weโre talking a lot โ Iโm insisting everybody have dinner together,โ says Lisa.
โThereโs a lot of laughter and I think thatโs because weโre all slowing down a little bit.โ
Lisa suspects this period of enforced reflection will change us all.
โI read somewhere itโs like Mother Nature has sent us to our rooms to have a think about a few things,โ says Lisa.

Lisa performing in The King and I at Melbourneโs Princess Theatre in 2014.
(Image: Getty)โIn my generation weโve had bad things happen, but this could actually be the first time we are going to be living in significant hardship and seeing it around us.
โI just want [my children] to help where they can and be good to people. I really think itโs going to make them a bit more humble. My daughter hasnโt asked for any new sneakers in about three days.โ
Whether itโs lessons in humility, argy-bargy with the in-laws or screen-time stand-offs, family life has always made for rich storytelling fodder.
โItโs full of drama and life,โ says Lisa, โand thatโs why we make shows about it all the time.โ
Thatโs also why Lisa was drawn to the Network 10 comedy series How to Stay Married, which has just launched its second season.
Created by The Projectโs Gold Logie-nominated comedian, Peter Helliar, the show chronicles the lives of Greg and Em Butler, a suburban couple married for 15 years who are trying to keep love alive amid the day-to-day dramas of surly teens, financial woes and flagging libidos.
WATCH BELOW: How To Stay Married was initially picked up from Network 10โs Pilot Week scheme. Story continues after video.
โI love the fact that, as much as this marriage goes though its ups and downs, itโs at its core so full of love and humour,โ says Lisa.
โTheyโre both trying really hard.โ
In one episode, thereโs a flashback to Gregโs 2003 marriage proposal: he buries the ring in Emโs cheesy chicken parma before going down on bended knee in the pub toilets while sheโs in the throes of noisy gastro.
Pete, who writes the show and stars as the hapless Greg, is apparently a joy to work with: โWhen he gets the giggles he can literally not stop,โ says Lisa.
โItโs this internal, Iโm-going-to-self-combust laugh โ he loses it for up to 30 minutes.โ
What she doesnโt reveal is her part in Peteโs laughing jags.
In one scene, they were both wearing bathing suits and bathrobes and, unbeknownst to Pete, Lisa purloined a wig from the hair and make-up department to fashion a makeshift merkin. She flashed him mid-scene and it was all over.
โThere was an overgrown pubic region and there needed to be some back-burning going on,โ says Pete, laughing.
โI just lost it. She has a wicked sense of humour that I think a lot of people wouldnโt expect.โ

Lisaโs How To Stay Married co-star Peter Helliar says she is โas lovely as you could ever hopeโ.
(Credit: Photography by Alana Landsberry.)Itโs probably not surprising, however, that sheโs also โas lovely as you could ever hopeโ.
Lisa went to her screen daughtersโ school productions, says Pete, and took the older one to see Hugh Jackmanโs stage show.
โLisa McCune has no idea that sheโs Lisa McCune,โ says Pete.
โShe is there to help everyone, whether itโs hair and make-up or catering. Itโs like itโs her first day on set and sheโs really excited to be there and she just wants to help everyone out.โ
For Lisa, assuming the mindset of everywoman Em โ who tries, and often fails, to balance work and parenting โ isnโt a stretch.
โI totally get it โ the whole thing of wanting to be a great mum but at the same time still wondering whatโs in life for you,โ she says.
โI think a lot of mums go through that.โ
Lisa is now single but by no means parenting solo โ โand I donโt want that for my kids,โ she says.
She and Tim Disney, whom she met when he was a props handler on the set of Blue Heelers and married in 2000, have an unconventional arrangement that works for them.
โWe all live on one property so weโre here for the kids โ we have to because our work is so all over the place,โ she says.
โTim and I are very much dual parenting. We are all over them as parents. I think it takes two people a lot of the time.โ
While sheโs open to dating โat some pointโ, Lisa brushes off questions about her love-life, suggesting that romance is the least of her priorities at the moment.
โI donโt really think about any of that,โ she says. โI have a really full, rich life and things will come and go as theyโre meant to.โ
WATCH BELOW: A clip from the first season of Lisaโs TV show, How To Stay Married. Story continues after video.
If she seems cagey, itโs understandable. In 2012, photos of Lisa kissing her South Pacific co-star Teddy Tahu Rhodes famously hit the gossip pages while the two of them were supposedly still married to other people, setting off a media feeding frenzy. Judgement and nastiness ensued.
Since then, her love life has been off limits.
โIโm happily single,โ she says. โWhen I do have something to talk about, I will absolutely shout it from the rooftops, but I just want to talk about the things that are really important. I find that [romantic] stuff starts to define who you are and it really doesnโt need to.โ
In a career thatโs spanned three decades, Lisa has done everything from sitcoms to Shakespeare, indie films to opera.
Media commentator David Knox studied at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts with Lisa in the late โ80s, and says it was there that she perfected the โtriple-threatโ skills that have helped her thrive for so long in the arts industry.
He remembers Lisa as a petite 17 year old โ the youngest-ever student to be accepted into WAAPAโs music theatre course.
โShe had a sweet soprano voice,โ says David, the editor of TV Tonight, โand held her own alongside older, more worldly students.โ
In 1991, the Perth-raised actor made her first appearance in our living rooms โ as checkout chick Lisa in the Coles TV commercials.
Having just graduated from drama school and moved to Melbourne, the ads gave Lisa the official girl-next-door stamp of approval โ โand now Iโm the mum-next-door,โ she jokes. (For the record, Lisa is still a loyal Coles shopper, although apparently not getting any special toilet paper treatment.)
Lisaโs big break, however, came when she was cast as Constable Maggie Doyle in Blue Heelers, which ran from 1994 to 2006 and became one of the highest-rating shows in Australian TV history, with more than 2.5 million viewers every week at its peak.
โSeven executives went on the record ahead of the showโs launch saying they had found a new star,โ says David. โThey were right. What you see is what you get, which is why Australians have taken her to their heart.โ
Lisa became the indisputable darling of the small screen and a serial TV Week cover girl, but after six years in fictional Mount Thomas, Lisa was ready to move on. In 2000 she left the show in a shower of bullets, and her death is still one of the most watched moments on Australian television.
Lisa has no intention, though, of joining Remy in her Blue Heelers binge: โI might watch a couple of scenes,โ she says, โbut no, Iโm such a move-forward person.โ

Lisa with daughter Remy Elise Disney in 2018.
(Image: Getty)In a career studded with highlights, her first role after Blue Heelers โ as Maria in The Sound of Music โ stands out for Lisa.
โComing out on stage after the opening in Sydney and getting a standing ovation was a beautiful moment,โ she recalls. โI felt like [they were saying], โItโs okay, you can step away from one thing and do something else.'โ
In a 2002 interview, Lisa wondered, โCan a popular girl be taken seriously?โ She didnโt have to wait long for her answer: the next year she took out the Green Room Award for her turn as Sally Bowles in Cabaret.
She may have once yearned for professional credibility, but she has since learnt to ignore the critics and run her own race, chasing the roles that intimidate her.
โI want to be terrified now because it puts me in a place where youโve got to keep learning and putting yourself out there,โ she says.

Lisa says she has learnt to ignore the critics, setting an example for her children.
(Credit: Photography by Alana Landsberry.)โThe other shift in me is that I actually probably donโt care now what people on the outside say because โฆ I have had to thicken my skin a little bit. Iโve had so many hiccups along the way and I think thatโs part of your maturity in any profession. You can only ever go out and do your best.
โSome of the things that people write are mean. Iโve got a responsibility [to make sure] that the kids see me not being really upset about things that are written, because I want to teach them that if they read something [negative] that theyโve got the resilience to go, โSo what? Thatโs on the person who wrote it.'โ
Lisa says sheโs a hard worker but not especially ambitious; then again, she reasons, maybe she has just had so many opportunities she hasnโt had to be. She certainly never felt compelled to try her luck in Hollywood.
โI always knew that I wanted to be a mum,โ she says. โIf [Hollywood] had have come my way it would have been great, but I had Archer at 30, which is old in Hollywood terms, and I really wanted the kids to have a life here.โ
โAnd then I had one baby after another. All of a sudden I was a mum of three kids and working consistently โ I felt like I was in a really good place. I donโt like having regrets so I wouldnโt change anything that Iโve done in the past.โ
Almost two decades into motherhood, she reckons she is still no closer to cracking the code.
โI donโt know how to be a parent,โ says Lisa, who counts Steve Biddulph and Arne Rubinstein among her favourite parenting experts.
WATCH BELOW: Lisa starred in the classic TV show Blue Heelers for six seasons. Story continues below.
โI said to my eldest the other day, โI havenโt done this before โ Iโm going to make mistakes and I just want you to be happy, but letโs try and navigate it the best we can.'โ
Lisa makes a point of giving her teens the space and independence they crave, which means respecting their wishes that she not follow them on social media. Still, she feels thereโs a safety net.
โIโve had the odd phone call from other parents saying, โI think thereโs a post you might want to get taken downโ โ you know, โThe bikini shots are a little bit too bikiniโ,โ she says. โThatโs whatโs terrific about community.โ
Her career holds little interest for the kids โ except maybe when the annual TV Week Logies invitation arrives. (โOllie came one year and had a photo taken with Jen Hawkins,โ she says.
โYouโve never seen a happier face!โ) Which is fine by her. โI want to talk about whatโs going on in their lives โ I donโt really want to talk about mine,โ she says.
โI love watching them step into adulthood and I donโt want them to feel as though they canโt make mistakes in life because they will and we all do. Iโm trying to just be in the kitchen standing there with a buttered Vegemite Salada if they need it.โ
Lisa turns 50 next February and seems unfazed by the prospect. A natural homebody, she jokes that quarantine life is a breeze for her, gardening, reading and cooking.
Yesterday she hauled out her hand-cranked machine and made pasta for the first time; she loves nothing more than a project.
โLife affords us so much more time to do that as weโre not madly buzzing around being social butterflies anymore,โ she says.
โI love going out every now and then but the idea of an all-nighter, drinking and seeing the sun come up โ that makes me feel so vile.โ
Whether sheโll still feel like that post-hibernation remains to be seen. Lisa had toyed with the idea of a trip overseas to celebrate her 50th, but the coronavirus may well put the kybosh on that.
โIโll see how things play out during the year,โ she, โbut I think Iโll probably want to do something outside the house!โ
In the years ahead, Lisa wants to support her younger kids through high school, get fit, and tread the boards again.
โAs entertainers we canโt wait to get out there and do what we do best, which is tell our stories,โ she says.
โIโm going to make [the next decade] so damn joyous and fulfilling. Iโm going to hammer it โ Iโm not slowing down for anything.โ
How to Stay Married airs on Tuesday nights on Network 10. Catch up on tenplay.com.au
Read the full interview in the June issue of The Australian Womenโs Weekly, on sale now.

Lisa Wilkinson on the cover of the June issue of The Australian Womenโs Weekly, on sale now.
(Image: The Australian Womenโs Weekly)