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Our golden girls

Photo by Juli Balla  Styling by Julie Russell

It’s the glamorous, successful, über sporty Girl Next Door — times three! Beijing’s Olympic flame may be extinguished, but Australia’s pool queens shine brighter than ever in the September Weekly.

Take a look at the greatest Australian female Olympians of all time here

Olympic darlings Leisel Jones, Libby Trickett and Stephanie Rice dazzle in gold on our cover and share their stories with former Olympian Rose Fydler.

It’s sweet déjà vu. These Beijing heroines are accustomed to the spotlight after making a splash at the greatest athletic contest on earth.

In the tradition of the motto of the father of the modern Olympics, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, “Swifter, higher, stronger”, our aquatic golden girls delighted themselves, thrilled fellow Aussies and put an awestruck world on notice.

While our men historically dominate the pool, this is the first time since 1976 that women have brought home all the gold.

For Leisel, winning gold in the 100m breaststroke was a moment to savour in her third Olympic campaign, after years of self-doubt. “I’ve gone from a naive 14-year-old to an under-pressure 18-year-old and here I am, a relieved 22-year-old. I’m so happy to be able to call myself an Olympic gold medallist,” she says, jubilantly.

“While it’s been hard, the journey to get here has been the best part because I’ve grown as a person. I wouldn’t change a thing.”

Throwing her victor’s bouquet to fiancé Marty Pask in the crowd was a given, as was her vow: “This gold medal is for all the true believers, for those who have stuck by me. I’m eternally grateful.”

Redemption of a sort, too, for wonder sprinter Libby, 23, who missed out on gold in 2004. “My ultimate dream was to win an individual gold medal at an Olympics, so it seems there is a weight off me now,” Libby says, with a smile. “I can walk away a very proud and happy person.”

Stephanie, too, feels the gravity of making history at her first Olympics. “Winning gold was something I’ve dreamt about for a long time and was obviously my ultimate goal,” she says.

Stephanie now joins swimming legend Shane Gould as the only female Australian swimmer to win more than one individual gold medal at an Olympic Games.

To Warren Rice, who witnessed his daughter’s joyful yells after touching the wall a winner, she’s a girl in a million. “I don’t love her any more just because she has an Olympic gold medal, but I’m just so very proud,” he says, echoing the thoughts of many. On the Olympic roll of honour, these three are solid gold.

Take a look at the greatest Australian female Olympians of all time here

Send our “Golden Girls” your message below…

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Naughty but nice

Photo by David Gubert. Styling by Julie Russell

Back in the spotlight once more as co-host of the latest series of Dancing with the Stars, the funny, flirty Sonia Kruger has a very full dance card, finds Larry Writer.

See more of gorgeous Sonia Kruger here…

Sonia Kruger was barely minutes into her first TV broadcast when she did a Bridget Jones and almost killed her career before it had begun. “It was a live cross and the cameraman and I were in a jet boat on Sydney Harbour on a blazing summer day,” recalls Sonia, laughing at the memory of her first day as an entertainment and weather reporter on the Seven Network’s 11AM.

“[Host] Anne Fulwood’s voice came over my earpiece. ‘How’s it going, Krugy?’ Now Anne only called me ‘Krugy’ off-air, so I assumed we were in a commercial break. I yawned and replied, ‘Aww, not bad, thanks, Anne.’ She said, ‘What’s going on out there?’ I said, ‘Not a lot.’ She said, ‘How’s the weather?’ I said, ‘Bloody hot.’ Suddenly, the director’s voice bellowed in my earpiece, ‘WE ARE LIVE! WHAT ON EARTH ARE YOU DOING?’ First thing I thought was, ‘Good job I only said “bloody”. “The second, ‘My TV career is over’.”

Funny, flirty, foot-in-mouth former champion ballroom dancer Sonia Kruger has had her fair share of Bridget Jones moments since that awful day back in 1997. In fact, she’s turned them into an art form during her star turn as the co-host of Seven’s Dancing with the Stars, which begins its latest season in September.

Who can forget her saucy quips, such as “the map of Tamsyn”, or the “crack of Dawn”, or telling guest dancer Jamie Durie, who had been criticised by the judges, “Jamie, they’re the judges, you’re the Durie!”).

Sonia, 42, a confessed smart alec and wide-eyed exponent of the double entendre, says, “I try to find the fun in any situation”, though she does admit, “I do tend to sail close to the edge”. And sometimes over it.

See more of gorgeous Sonia Kruger here…

Send Sonia Kruger your message below…

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King of Tonga

Photo by Getty Images

Earlier this year, King George V decided to use his patronage for a major initiative to tackle diabetes in Tonga and other Pacific nations where it has become a serious and debilitating problem.

Take a look at the King’s coronation here

Suffering from Type II diabetes himself, His Majesty is somewhat of an expert on the disease. To mark his recent coronation, he has formed a charity, the Royal Endocrinology Society, to help treat and research diabetes. His Majesty said of the disease, “If not properly managed, it can completely and painfully break the health, and lead to the death of its victims. It hurts their families, already puts a strain on overstretched medical services, and has a negative economic effect.”

The king has drawn upon his contacts around the world to assist him in this charity, including the dean of the Sydney University Medical School, who attended the Coronation in support of this laudable new royal endeavour.

Tonga has one of the fattest populations in the world, with statistics showing 70 per cent of Tongan women aged 15 to 85 are obese. As a result, diabetes is a problem of national significance and His Majesty is putting his energy, influence and patronage into this major research initiative.

The Royal Endocrinology Society is governed by a board of trustees and functions as an independent private charity. All funds raised through the media rights for the coronation and from the sale of mementos and merchandise will help finance the society.

Australia is also helping the cause by sponsoring the publication of a book on Tonga calledDream of the South Seas, written by Dr Michael Schirmer, the proceeds of which will also go towards the charity.

In a press release authorised by the Office of the Lord Chamberlain, His Majesty stated that his plan is to establish a centre of excellence in Tonga with the objectives of; “offering surgery and outpatient facilities, dispensing medication at subsidised rates, starting a national awareness campaign, promoting preventative measures, setting up diagnostic and blood analysis laboratories, forming a research programme and entering into co-operation with similar societies abroad.”

Take a look at the King’s coronation here

For more information and to make a donation please visit www.palaceoffice.gov.to

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60 seconds with Giaan Rooney

Athlete, presenter and favourite Aussie, Giaan Rooney gives us a snapshot into her busy life…

You’re an Ambassador for the Lort Smith Animal Hospital in Melbourne – how did this come about?

I was new to Melbourne and had heard about the Hospital, so when a friend wanted to adopt a Cat, I took him there. After a tour and a brief history lesson, I contacted the CEO. Rick Holland and asked if I could help out.

You are about to start hosting a new show on television called ‘Battlefronts.’ Tell us about that?

2 Front yards, 2 neighbours, 8 hours and $10,000 each for our 2 teams of 3 to make them over. At the end of the day the neighbourhood votes to decide their favourite design.

As a regular presenter on Getaway, you visit some amazing places – where is your favourite destination?

Sipidar Island, off the coast of Saba (Malaysia) One of the best dive spots in the world is virtually untouched..

A place you love in Australia?

Where do I start! I love the Great Ocean Road in Victoria, Jervis Bay in NSW and Melbourne for shopping and the food!

Do you still find time to swim and is it something you still enjoy?

I only swim once a year for a charity and apart from that I only ‘swim’ at the beach, I never really enjoyed the training side of swimming, so if I can’t compete then it holds no interest for me.

Three things that make you tick?

Good Food. Great Friends and lots of sleep.

You never leave home without…….?

Lucas ‘Paw Paw’ Ointment

What’s your motto in life?

Have no regrets!

Book that changed your life?

Every book changed me in some way. I love stepping away from reality for a while and getting lost in a good story.

What do you wish you had more time to do?

Travel, learn to sew/knit and spend more time with my family.

Food you allow yourself to indulge in?

Big bowls of pasta and fresh bread.

Favourite thing to do on a lazy Sunday?

Sleep in and have a big late breakfast.

**Most memorable career point to date?

Singing the national Anthem at the 2004 Olympics after winning the 4 x 100m medley relay with 3 amazing women , Petria Thomas, Leisal Jones and Jodie Henry.**

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I put a fake birth notice in the paper

My twin sister and I are identical — we look the same, dress the same, laugh the same. But we don’t act the same. In fact, my sister is not the same person as me at all. My twin sister is mean and spiteful. And this is no clearer than when it comes to our children.

I got married a little earlier than Roxanne, and started having my babies almost straight away. From the very first moment, Roxanne was completely jealous of my new happy family — maybe because it didn’t include her as much as it once had. Roxanne would often drop by to see her niece and nephew, two years apart, but I don’t know why she bothered; she was never particularly nice to them. In fact, sometimes she was downright horrible:

“Look who got their daddy’s looks,” she used to coo.

“I’m sorry, Tanya,” she would then say to me, “but your children are just ugly.”

Naturally, I would get defensive, but at the end of the day I knew that Roxanne was wrong, and just being malicious, so I never banished her from my house — as I probably should have. I was sure she was just saying what she said out of jealousy, and because she knew the children were too young to understand what she was telling them. And it seemed I was right — when my eldest was four, the taunts stopped.

Then, Roxanne fell pregnant with her own baby. She was suddenly too excited to focus on my kids anymore, and I was delighted — both for her happiness and the end of her jealousy.

So you can’t imagine my outrage when, just a few weeks before she was due to give birth, she told my four year old daughter that she was “really a very ugly, naughty child,” and that her little girl would both beautiful and good. My child was crushed, and I had only one thing on my mind… Revenge.

I wasn’t really sure how to go about it. Merely telling my sister to never come near my family again just didn’t seem satisfying enough. I wanted her to suffer in the same way I had for four years of her hurting me and my children.

It wasn’t until the day her little girl was born that the perfect idea came to me: I would put a very special birth notice in the papers. It was so perfect and devious, I was sure it would never be allowed. But I was determined to give it a try!

A few days after baby Marian’s birth, a notice appeared in both the state and local papers announcing:

“Roxanne and her husband Daniel are pleased to announce the arrival of the World’s Ugliest Baby, Marian. Born at 4.56am, she is long and fat, and with a face so concaved by the forceps, it is inconceivable that she could ever be pretty. Commiserations to the whole family.”

Both papers tried to argue with me that it was too harsh, but I had Roxanne’s driver’s license. As far as they were concerned, I was the mother — and I could therefore say what I liked.

Of course, Roxanne was furious. The whole town (let alone the whole state!) had seen the notice, and assumed Roxanne and Daniel had indeed had a hideously ugly baby. They also thought Roxanne the nastiest mother alive, and Roxanne had a very difficult time enrolling in her local mothers’ group!

Marian is, of course, a beautiful child, and when I visit with my young family, I make sure I tell her so. While I delight in the fact that I viciously wounded my twin sister’s pride — and she doesn’t even realise it was me!

Picture: Getty Images. Posed by model.

Your say: Have your say about this true confession below…

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Jeanne and Barry Little: Our mad, mad life!

By Glen Williams

They said Jeanne and Barry Little wouldn’t last two months — 36 years on they’re still having a wild time together!

We’ve loved Jeanne Little since she first burst into our consciousness back in the early 1970s with her raucous and endearing “Hello daaarling, gee you’re gorgeous!” And every step of the madcap way, Barry, her ever-supportive (he would say long-suffering) husband, has been there, believing in and shoring up Jeanne’s offbeat and amazing talent. He says he “tolerates” her insanity, but it’s obvious he absolutely adores it.

As part of our 60th birthday celebrations, we couldn’t help but stroll down memory lane with a couple who are part of the Woman’s Day family — and have one of Australia’s most enduring marriages — the Littles.

How do you describe Jeanne?

Barry: She’s mad. And she gets away with murder.

Jeanne: I am mad. I love being mad. When I go up to the shop to get some milk or something, people stop me and say, “Hello Jeanne, how are you?” And I’ll say, “You’re looking fantastic,” when they really look shocking. [Laughs]

Barry: I don’t know how she gets away with it. Jeanne is oblivious to her madness. She made a dress out of rubber gloves and she went up the street to get something. This old lady stopped her and said, “What’s that dress made of, condoms?” Jeanne said, “Daarling, if they were condoms I’d be stripped naked by now.” It’s true she has this tremendous warmth. When she goes up to the shops she’s gone for hours because she talks to everyone. And she’s the kindest person in the world. Generous to a fault. She’s just given you one of my 15th-century statues. And it’s not hers to give. But we never have really bad fights do we?

Is it true you picked Barry up at a railway station?

Jeanne: Yes that’s right, sort of. I was on my way to a party with friends and picked Barry up at North Sydney station.

Barry: That was the first time I saw Jeanne.

Was it instant attraction?

Barry: Yes. We talked all night at the party together.

Jeanne: It really was instant, wasn’t it? It was lovely.

What year was that?

Barry: It was the early ’60s. We had a 10-year relationship together before we decided to get married. We didn’t rush into it.

Jeanne: Yes, we were together a long time. Lots of cocktail parties in between and having tons of people who were wild and mad.

It sounds a very Bohemian life!

Jeanne: Yes, we love all that.

Barry: They were the days, lots of drinking and good times. We all got together on Saturday nights outside the Rex Hotel [in Sydney’s Kings Cross] at 10 o’clock, just hanging around and waiting to go to some party or other. The rest of the week we had these fairly ordinary jobs. Jeanne worked at the attorney-general’s office as a bookkeeper and I was an interior designer.

Is that how you brought your daughter Katie up, to have a strong belief in herself?

Jeanne: I think so.

Barry: It was very hard for Katie, growing up, she used to get abused at school. It must have been hell with kids screaming at her, “Hello daaaaarling.” We had problems with her when she was an adolescent. She was a bit wild.

Jeanne: You can understand that.

It’s not every day your mum’s Jeanne Little, is it?

Jeanne: That’s true! Perfectly true. Exactly.

Barry: She’s a very sensible girl, quite level-headed.

Jeanne: We sent Katie to a really good school and I used to go and pick her up after being on The Mike Walsh Show in the ’70s and I sometimes had hot pants on and a matching purple wig and make-up galore, and I’d sort of be there at the school and all these other mothers would go, “Oh, hello”. Some of the mums were real snobs. But the kids at the convent next door used to hang out the window and loved it.

Barry: I think the other kids wished their mother was as mad and fun as Jeanne.

And now you’re grandparents to Katie’s kids…

Jeanne: Oh, it’s nice, isn’t it Barry?

Barry: Yes, we like it.

Jeanne: They like to drop them in. They say they’re coming over so we run out and get chocolate and ice-cream and everything. And their mother says, “Don’t give them chocolate or ice-cream because it makes them frenetic.” But as soon as the door slams we run and get the chocolate and the ice-cream and jelly. It’s fabulous, and by the time the parents come back they’ve wrecked the house and they’re on to the next place. They are lovely.

Barry: He’s a dear little boy. Tom is three and Charlotte’s one.

Do you still read tea leaves Jeanne?

Jeanne: Yes, I do. My mother used to read them, too. One day my mother was waiting for this woman’s son from Brighton-Le-Sands to bring his mother’s tea cup to her. When he brought it, she said, “See this person with a hatchet on a woman’s head?” and by the time her son came home she’d been killed. So isn’t that terrible.

What happens when you see death in a tea cup?

Barry: She’s seen a few deaths but she doesn’t tell anyone. We saw a boot at the top of the cup last week and that means we’re moving. And that’s exactly what happened.

Yes, you’re at an amazing turning point. After all these years you’re moving house…

Jeanne: Yes, we are. It really is an end of an era.

Barry: It’s enormous. We’re getting rid of everything.

Jeanne: We are happy about it. We’ve been here a long time and there are too many stairs. I fell down them with high heels on. I was shooting down thinking, “Will it be my neck, will it be my knees? Here I go.” Another time Barry was home and I could here this crashing sound and I thought , “Oohwah, there’s an elephant in the house. It was Barry crashing headfirst into a wall.”

Barry: I was lucky I didn’t knock myself out. We’ve both had falls in the house.

For more of this interview, see this week’s 60th anniversary issue of Woman’s Day (on sale August 25).

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The amazing world of Ann Ann

By Glen Williams

Pictures: David Hahn

Woman’s Day‘s spookily accurate psychic shares the ups and downs of life with ‘the gift’…

Woman’s Day psychic Ann Ann is the first to admit her incredible supernatural gift can leave her mentally and physically drained.

Her intuitive ability to tap into the spiritual world often means very little rest for the alarmingly accurate Ann. She is constantly besieged by a clamouring of ghostly voices all vying for her attention.

Thankfully, Ann knows when to listen to these voices, and as a result she has helped to solve some horrific crimes, assisted in locating missing persons, and allowed troubled souls to finally find peace.

Happy-go-lucky and quick with a raucous laugh, Ann looks like your normal Aussie mum as she enjoys a cuppa on the verandah of her beautiful Brisbane Queenslander. She loves her footy, her five kids and five grandkids, and she can’t keep away from Bunnings hardware stores. She’s so normal, it’s hard to imagine this is the same woman who has been flung across her bedroom by unruly spirits, who can see dead people as plain as day, and has angered the police with her no-nonsense approach to solving crimes that have left them stumped.

“I call a spade a shovel,” Ann laughs. “I don’t beat around the bush, and the police in general don’t acknowledge what I do. They don’t like to admit that they’ve used information given to them by a psychic.

“To be honest, I try not to get involved in things unless I’m asked, because it becomes too draining. I try not to watch the news, as that usually triggers a psychic happening.”

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Princess Mary comes home to save our children

By Megan Norris

Australia’s favourite princess interrupts a precious family holiday in her native Tasmania to champion a home-grown charity that holds a very special place in her heart.

While Princess Mary’s trip back to Australia is partly a joyous occasion to introduce her 15-month-old daughter Isabella to her Australian relatives, another cause close to Mary’s heart will be top of her agenda during her time in Tasmania this week.

The princess’s unstinting commitment to the Alannah and Madeline Foundation will see her taking time out to step up her crusade to improve the lives of children everywhere and stamp out bullying. The Foundation was established 12 years ago by Australian father Walter Mikac to honour his little girls who died in the nation’s biggest mass murder.

After catching up with family, the princess will attend the only official engagement in her diary — the Alannah and Madeline Foundation’s dinner. As its Royal International Patron, Mary, along with her husband Crown Prince Frederik, will join influential Australians including the charity’s National Patron, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, Victorian Patron Premier John Brumby and Founding Patron Walter Mikac.

For the full story, see this week’s 60th anniversary issue of Woman’s Day (on sale August 25).

Your say: Do you think Princess Mary is the real ‘modern day’ princess?

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Gordon and Tana: How we keep our marriage sexy

By Angela Mollard

Pictures: Chris Terry/Contour by Getty Images

Together for 15 years and with four kids, but the romance still sizzles…

He’s the hottest thing on television and adored by women around the globe, but Gordon Ramsay is a devoted husband who loves nothing better than drinking bubbly in bed and shopping for underwear with his wife.

In an exclusive interview with Woman’s Day, Gordon’s wife Tana reveals how the sexy chef keeps their marriage alive with romantic breaks away and loving notes he leaves in her wardrobe.

The couple, who have four children and plans for a fifth, have one of the most successful marriages in show business, despite the fact that Gordon is an object of desire for millions of women worldwide.

For the full story, see this week’s 60th anniversary issue of Woman’s Day (on sale August 25).

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In the mag – September 1, 2008

60th birthday issue on sale Monday August 25, 2008

Gordon and Tana: How we keep our marriage sexy

Together for 15 years and with four kids, but the romance still sizzles…

Princess Mary comes home to save our children

Australia’s favourite princess interrupts a precious family holiday in her native Tasmania to champion a home-grown charity that holds a very special place in her heart.

The amazing psychic world of Ann Ann

Woman’s Day‘s spookily accurate psychic shares the ups and downs of life with ‘the gift’…

Jeanne and Barry Little: Our mad, mad life!

They said Jeanne and Barry Little wouldn’t last two months — 36 years on they’re still having a wild time together!.

60th anniversary true life special: The girl from the bush

Her rags-to-riches story captured the attention of the nation 50 years ago. Woman’s Day catches up with Joyce Blitner to find out why she turned her back on a life of wealth.

  • Portia and Ellen’s wedding album: The brides say ‘I do’

Newlywed lesbian couple Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi delighted friends and family by ditching their planned Hollywood wedding for an intimate ceremony. Don’t miss this week’s Woman’s Day for photos of the happy couple on their very special day.

  • Saving Matilda

Heath Ledger’s Hollywood friends are generously rallying to secure the future of his daughter Matilda, amid concerns that Heath’s outdated will — which did not mention Matilda or her mother, actress Michelle Williams — could leave Matilda high and dry. Despite Heath’s dad Kim Ledger insisting she will definitely get her fair share, some family members and friends remain uneasy about the management of the estate.

  • Star of The Strip: Aaron Jeffery

He may play a tough guy on screen, but he is a real softie when it comes to his daughter.

  • Hollywood’s new miracle diet

Eat all day and still lose weight!

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