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Life on the edge

Photography by Lisa Tomasetti, courtesy of Bill's Holiday.

Photography by Lisa Tomasetti, courtesy of Bill's Holiday.

Celebrity chef Bill Granger is well-known for his upbeat personality, yet, as he reveals in an intimate interview with Sue Williams, he has suffered from depression.

Lauded around the world for his happy-go-lucky, laidback Aussie style, award-winning restaurateur and TV chef Bill Granger seems to have it all. His books sell in their millions internationally, his TV shows air in prime-time on the BBC in the UK, he’s about to extend his successful restaurant business to two more cafes in Japan and he’s head-over-heels in love with his wife and three daughters.

Yet behind the ready smile and cheery greetings to regulars as he walks into one of his three busy Sydney cafes at breakfast time on a Monday morning, there lies a hidden pain. For, sitting in a quiet corner over a mineral water, Bill reveals he has battled depression at times in his life.

“Growing up, Mum was in hospital for a long time with depression and I’ve grown up around it. She suffered from sadness she didn’t really know how to escape,” he says, softly. “I was 14 when I had my first depressive episode. A gradual feeling of disconnection and isolation came over me.

I withdrew from school and my friends. I just wanted to retreat. Again, in my 20s, I went through another rough patch. Since then, I’ve just sort of worked through it, through all the ups and downs. I was on medication for a while but there were side-effects, so I’ve avoided using medication since.” Bill has found that eating well, getting enough sleep, exercising and spending quality time with his family have helped him lead a healthy, fulfilling and balanced life. “I make sure I don’t overwork – that’s the biggest mistake you can make,” he says.

It’s a shock to hear the 39-year-old, renowned for his upbeat public personality, confessing to such private demons, but it does explain one of the Australian food industry’s most enduring mysteries.

Feted in New York, London, Paris and Tokyo, with his award-winning cafes, best-selling books and acclaimed TV shows, Melbourne-born Bill is regularly urged to open restaurants all over the globe, yet usually resists. Now it makes perfect sense: Australia’s answer to Britain’s celebrity chef, Jamie Oliver, has turned down most of the offers because of his desire to keep his life as balanced as possible.

“About a year-and-a-half before I met [wife] Natalie, I was going out a lot and doing too much,” he says. “I was smoking dope and drinking too much. I was busy with the restaurants and had a lot of pressure on me, and I’d relieve that pressure by abusing my body, in the way that a lot of people do. It’s quite common.

“I then checked myself into a clinic for a couple of weeks. You can slip so easily into depressive illnesses, so now I know my own signs and have some insight into my own condition. Depression can be a very self-centred disease, so if you can talk about it and be open, it becomes easier. It’s good to be open about it.”

To read more from Bill Granger’s candid interview, see the June issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly, out now.

Your Say: Do you suffer from depression? Tell us your experiences below…

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The year that broke my heart

In her most revealing interview yet, Deborah Hutton tells Michael Sheather about her devastating family tragedy, a new romance and how, at 47, she has come to terms with never having babies.

You could be forgiven for believing that Deborah Hutton, one of Australia’s most recognised faces, leads a perfect life, unblemished by the troubles that most of us know. She is widely considered one of the country’s most striking women, with a beauty often compared, even today, to a young Candice Bergen. At 47, her complexion is flawless, her smile dazzling. She has a beachside home, an established career and all the glamorous trappings of a contented, fortunate life.

Yet Deborah Hutton’s life is far from perfect. The truth is that she also knows pain and sadness. She and her family have endured a grief that, at times, has been almost unbearable – a double tragedy that has claimed the lives of both her beloved brothers in less than two years.

Her brother Rod, who suffered a severe brain injury in a devastating accident as a young man, died suddenly, aged 47, after an epileptic fit in July 2007.

Shattered and bewildered that she should lose Rod so unexpectedly after life had dealt him such an unfortunate hand, Deborah and her family then suffered a second, equally devastating blow – the death of her brother David, 50, a husband and father of two young boys, from liver cancer, in February this year.

“It’s bad enough to have one brother die suddenly, but then to have the other taken just as abruptly is bewildering,” says Deborah, sitting, head bowed, at the dining table of her home in Sydney’s eastern suburbs. “There are so many mixed-up emotions: loss, sadness, grief, disbelief. I don’t know that I have come to grips with it yet and I don’t know if I ever will.”

On a sideboard in Deborah’s elegantly decorated dining room is a framed photograph of her with her brother, Rod. Downstairs, among a collection of other photos, is a portrait of Deborah enfolded in the arms of her brother, David. The affection between these three siblings is clear for all to see. They were close, though often divided by geography and circumstance. They were family who loved each other and that’s what mattered most to them.

And it’s from this affection that Deborah draws the only possible hope from a devastating situation. This and the two beautiful little boys – Jackson, four, and Joshua, one – whom David left behind. It’s in their smiles that Deborah finds a lasting affirmation of life and a signpost to the future.

To read more from our exclusive interview with Deborah Hutton, see the June issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly, out now.

Your Say: What do you think of Deborah Hutton? Tell us below…

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Madonna gets the best bang for her bucks!

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Photograph by Getty Images

Turning 50, divorcing Guy Ritchie and controversy over her recent attempt to adopt Mercy, a four-year-old orphan from Malawi, doesn’t seem to have dented Madonna’s fortune – or her bankability. Robert Sandall investigates the business of being a Material Girl.

She flagged herself in her 1985 hit as a Material Girl and what a prophetic hook that turned out to be. After last year’s box-office receipts had all been added up, it was revealed that the highest earning pop star on the planet in 2008 was, yet again, Madonna. She grossed more than $371million, nearly all of it on her Sticky & Sweet world tour – more than twice what Coldplay, the hottest rock band on the road at the time, made from theirs.

This remarkable result went almost unnoticed outside the entertainment trade press. We seem to have got used to the phenomenon that is Madonna Ciccone, now a 50-year-old mother of three who, defying all pop’s laws of obsolescence, is still at the top of the greasy pole after 26 years in the game. We don’t seem to mind paying the eye-watering prices she charges to watch her perform these days, either. The average price of tickets for the next leg of her Sticky & Sweet tour, which kicks off in London in July, is around $400 and some can fetch up to $1000.

If the second leg of Sticky & Sweet repeats the success of the first, it will overtake the Rolling Stones’ A Bigger Bang outings to become the biggest earning concert tour ever.

Anyone hoping to have a word with Madonna about her ticketing policy meets a wall of silence. Not talking about money in public is one of the few taboos this canny iconoclast respects.

There’s an incident in the 1991 fly-on-the-wall documentary, In Bed with Madonna, that memorably makes the point. It’s when the director Alek Keshishian tries to follow her into the trailer where she is about to have a meeting. “Get out, this is business,” she snaps and shuts the door in his face.

The viewer is left marvelling at Madonna’s priorities. Here is a woman who, elsewhere in the movie, rolls around on her mother’s grave, fellates a water bottle for the amusement of various gay members of her entourage, strips on stage and generally affects an air of devil-may-care candour – then baulks at allowing a glimpse of a business meeting.

There have been a lot of such meetings in the past 26 years. In the manner of a successful corporate brand, Madonna has spread herself far and wide. Aside from her creative output – the 14 albums, eight world tours, 19 feature films, scores of videos and the recent series of children’s books, The English Roses – Madonna has been an indefatigable dealmaker.

In 1992, she set up Maverick, a record label with video, film and publishing interests, which she jointly owned with Time Warner until 2004. Since 1989, when she accepted $7million from Pepsi for a TV commercial (which got pulled after one showing for its presumed blasphemy), she has been involved in ad campaigns for BMW, Max Factor, Versace and Gap. Last year, she put her name to a clothing line for the UK retailer H&M.

Then there are the merchandising deals, investments in fine art and property, appearance fees and other income accrued. It’s uncertain exactly how rich she actually is – estimates of Madonna’s worth start at the figure quoted in The Sunday Times Rich List 2008 edition: $601million.

To read more about Madonna’s millions, see the June issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly, out now.

Your Say: What do you think of Madonna and her fortunes? Tell us below…

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Australia loves Rebecca Gibney

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Australia loves Rebecca Gibney – her Gold Logie proves that. Yet her success has masked enormous pain, as she tells Wendy Squires.

It’s hard to comprehend that the story Rebecca Gibney is telling could actually have happened. It seems impossible that the bubbly actress with the twinkling periwinkle blue eyes, easy smile and contagious laugh at lunch today is the same person who, she’s explaining, suffered a full-scale emotional collapse with agoraphobia, depression and panic attacks that kept her a virtual prisoner in her own home.

It also seems inconceivable that Rebecca was so full of self-loathing, regret and shame that she admits, “I needed Valium to go to the supermarket”, was so fearful that, if she stepped outside her front door, she would be overwhelmed by the belief that “people were staring at me and I’d have to run back inside”, and so unhappy that she couldn’t imagine ever laughing again.

Perhaps it’s because it’s hard not to compare Rebecca with her affable character, Julie Rafter, in the Seven Network’s hugely popular series, Packed to the Rafters.

Or perhaps it’s just that Rebecca is such a warm, friendly and gracious dining companion, it’s simply too disturbing to imagine her in such pain.

Yet in a candid interview with The Weekly, Rebecca confesses her childhood home-life in New Zealand was vastly different to that of the loving Rafter clan. As the youngest of six children, Rebecca regularly witnessed her mother being beaten by her violent, alcoholic father, living in a constant state of fear as to when, where and who he would strike next.

The legacy of abuse left a dark shadow that clouded Rebecca’s happiness until she turned 30 and which, like all shadows, badly needed to be confronted. Yet, like so many surviviors of chaotic childhoods, Rebecca’s self-examination got lost in life’s daily battle until, one day, she explains, “your past comes up and bites you on the bum”.

To read more from Rebecca’s frank interview with Wendy Squires see the June issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly, out now.

Your Say: Tell us why you love Rebecca Gibney?

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Oprah’s secret garden

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Oprah Winfrey

Surrounded by a sea of rose bushes, hydrangeas and dahlias, US chat show queen Oprah Winfrey’s California teahouse is the one place she can go to get away from it all, writes Janet Sternburg in the June issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

See seven of Oprah’s stunning favourite roses here.

Oprah sits on a sofa in her teahouse facing the view – not any view, but the view, the reason she bought her home, in California’s Montecito, and built the teahouse in this spot.

Through an arched door framed by wisteria, stairs lead down to a long gravel path bordered on both sides by roses. An elegant copper fountain sits right in the centre. Beyond, the path seems to vanish into ocean and islands. Oprah’s attention, however, is not on the view, but on the very near distance. On grout. Yes, the grout on the stone floor.

“I chose the colour of the grout,” she says, “and I chose the particular kind of gravel that was right for the rose garden, and the gravel size would drive most people nuts. But it’s all part of the process for me.”

Five years ago, when Oprah first envisioned this small building, she planned it as a cutting room for flowers. Yet, as she watched the structure take shape, she thought, “I’m going to want this space for myself”.

So rather than equip the room with utilitarian countertops and pruning shears, she and her interior designer, Ellie Cullman, filled it with comfortable furnishings, including a green wicker sofa and armchairs. “This is mud from yesterday,” Oprah says, pointing at paw marks left on the sofa by her white golden retrievers. “That’s what you’ve got to live with,” she adds, proving she’s looking at the long view, too.

The teahouse is where Oprah comes to read, meditate and enjoy a cup of tea. She could listen to music at the touch of a button, but doesn’t. “I don’t want to affect the mood here.” She could transact business here, but doesn’t. “No meetings, ever.”

She may not visit for months at a time, only stopping by when she can really get away. “It’s a commitment when I allow myself to come here,” Oprah says. Yet whether she’s in Montecito, Chicago or Johannesburg, the teahouse – just knowing that it’s there – is, she says, essential to her wellbeing. “It’s my dream, having a place like this. Some people ask, ‘Why do you need more space?’ And I tell them, ‘I need it to restore myself.’ ”

See seven of Oprah’s stunning favourite roses here.

To see exclusive photographs of Oprah’s secret garden and read more about her search for serenity, see the June issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly, out now.

Your Say: What do you think of Oprah’s secret garden and her collection of roses? Tell us below…

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Good Samaritan Luke Mitchell loses his life

When he stepped in to stop the brutal bashing of a stranger Luke Mitchell was trying to do the right thing. His act of kindness cost him his life.

Two thugs stabbed and bashed Luke, then left him for dead early Sunday morning outside the Spot nightclub in Brunswick, Vic. Lying helpless as he was stabbed, kicked and hit with a pram, Luke was powerless to defend himself.

His heartbroken parents Carol and John have condemned the attackers as “animals and cowards”, and are now left to mourn the death of their precious son, who was just 29.

Two of the men wanted for the attack are believed to have fled to Thailand, while another suspect is believed to be in Sydney.

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Food safety

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Aussie dad tells: I snatched my son from a kidnapper

By Jo Knowsley

Pictures: Oscar Kornyei

Last week Qld dad Matt Munt was working in his yard when he looked up and saw a man running down the driveway with his petrified little boy.

An ordinary weekend turned into something out of a sick horror film for Ipswich father Matthew Munt. It was Saturday afternoon, and Matt was chopping wood out the front of the family home with the help of his son Hayden, 2.

The boy’s mother, Dearne, was away visiting her own mother, and little Hayden was delighted to help his dad with such an important job.

Moments later, all hell broke loose when Matt saw his son, screaming in helpless panic, in the grip of a rough-looking stranger and being bundled towards a waiting car.

“I only looked up because our dog Harvey tore past, barking like mad,” says Matt. “What I saw made me feel sick. There was a man at the bottom of our driveway who had Hayden by the waist and was heading to a parked car.

“I was about 20 metres away and just ran. I don’t think I’ve ever run so fast. By the time I got there, the man had put Hayden in the driver’s seat. There were two other people in the car, but I didn’t look at them. I just wanted my son. I would have thrown myself through the windscreen if I’d had to. The driver was still standing by the car and I barged him and punched him twice, hard, in the face. I might have been screaming, but I really can’t remember.

“Then I grabbed Hayden from the seat by his little blue jumper and sort of flung him back onto our property before hitting the guy some more.

“My little boy was screaming in terror. He was calling out, ‘Daddy, Daddy,’ and sobbing. I felt absolutely sick. I ran to my son and the car sped off.”

Calling the police and then Dearne, to tell her what happened and assure her that Hayden was safe, Matt carried Hayden back into the house as his little boy shook with terror.

For the full story, see this week’s Woman’s Day ?on sale May 25, 2009.

Have you got an amazing tale of bravery to share? Have your say below…

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Sharon Stone’s public tears

Fears grow for the once red-hot actress after a public outpouring of emotion.

Sharon Stone has friends concerned for her emotional wellbeing following a disturbing public meltdown at a restaurant in Los Angeles.

The actress stunned fellow diners when she burst into tears during a lunch date at celebrity eatery Joan’s on Third, sobbing uncontrollably while her pals tried to console her.

She eventually stopped weeping, but continued to gesticulate wildly as she poured her heart out to her friends, gesturing at her chest one minute, and waving her arms about the next.

There were signs that all was not well in the 51-year-old divorcee’s life when she drew stares from onlookers at a recent charity event with her startlingly skinny appearance.

Close friends are now wondering if the string of career and personal problems that have plagued Sharon of late have pushed the famous star too far. Her last headline-grabbing role was in the multimillion-dollar bomb Basic Instinct II, but these days she seems better known for her legal battles than for her acting work.

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Tom and Katie’s new Aussie home

Hollywood’s hottest couple are looking to set up house in Melbourne.

Katie Holmes’ upcoming trip to Australia will now be a family affair, with her husband Tom Cruise and daughter Suri, 3, confirmed to be joining her as she relocates Down Under.

The actress — who recently sparked rumours of a pregnancy when she stepped out with what looked like a baby bump — will be in Australia for three months, filming the supernatural thriller Don’t Be Afraid Of The Dark.

Sources reveal Tom has decided to follow his wife to our shores after a tug-of-love over Suri. “I think Katie thought that Tom would agree she could take Suri with her, and she was very upset when he said no,” an insider told Woman’s Day. “Tom initially ruled out the family going because he had projects of his own for the [northern] summer.

“It came down to a verbal tug of war over Suri. Tom was never going to let her go 10,000 miles away from home without him.”

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