After a hard year at work, the young guns of Home And Away are ready to let their hair down and celebrate their โ and their screen charactersโ โ achievements.
Jacqui Purvis, who has navigated some of the hardest storylines this season as Felicity, says she has grown on and off screen. She also produced and starred in her own short film โ the cherry on top of a stellar 2023.

โWe all get along really well.โ
(Image: Phillip Castleton, Paul Suesse)โItโs been a massive year for me and Iโve had many highlights,โ she tells TV WEEK. โI also had to make a really big personal decision recently, and I was so scared of making the wrong decision that I put off making it. But I had to come to terms with the fact that I actually might make the wrong decision โ and thatโs OK.โ
Itโs been a big year too for co-star and musician Matt, who plays Theo. He has another single, โAs Good As It Getsโ, coming out in 2024.
โBalancing my schedule has been tough, but rewarding,โ Matt says. โThe grind doesnโt stop, but thatโs how I like it. Singing on H&A [as a member of band Lyrik] sparked my love for music again.โ

Jacqui and Matt both made their debut in 2021.
(Image: Phillip Castleton, Paul Suesse)The four castmates, who are still relatively new to the show, have already forged a close bond. Jacqui and Matt, who both made their debut in 2021, are former housemates, while Luke and Kirsty who joined as brother and sister Xander and Rose in 2022, established a special connection from the start.
โWe all get along really well,โ Luke says. โKirsty and I are close and I spend time with Matt โ usually getting a pub feed!โ
Jacqui adds that โthe cast have helped shaped me in some wayโ.
For Kirsty, a highlight was working with Bert LaBontรฉ, who played her on-screen father Samuel.

Kristyโs cherished family tradition is โthe Marillier volleyball tournament in the pool!โ
(Image: Phillip Castleton, Paul Suesse)โHeโs ridiculously funny in real life,โ she says of the screen veteran. โWe got on like a house on fire.โ
Ready to unwind over the break, Matt is heading home to Perth, where he says a certain incident lives on forever.
โFalling in the pool fully clothed has definitely happened!โ he says, laughing.
Melbourne-born Luke says his family gathering has an open-door policy. โEveryone is welcome โ usually a lot of people who donโt have families to share the day with anymore,โ he says.

โItโs been a massive year for me.โ
(Image: Phillip Castleton, Paul Suesse)And as far as unusual Christmas gifts go, he remembers one in particular.
โIโve no idea why, but one year, my mum got me a real bowling pin. I like bowling, but not enough to justify the gift. I donโt even know what to use it for? Door stopper?โ
As for South-African born Kirsty, this year features โcocktails, trifle and a food comaโ. But her cherished family tradition is far more active.
โThe Marillier volleyball tournament in the pool!โ she says.