Showing posts with label come in Spinner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label come in Spinner. Show all posts

Kerry Armstrong

Today I shall be learning about the actress Kerry Armstrong. I've seen her in two things: Come in Spinner and SeaChange.

In SeaChange, she played the wife of John Howard's character (the actor; not the Prime Minister). I don't remember much about it, except that her family was wealthy. They were the type of people who play tennis and have cocktail parties.

Her character in Come in Spinner is complex and interesting. Deb is married to a soldier who is off fighting. Her daughter lives at her sister's farm, while Deb stays in Sydney working at a beauty salon/spa at a hotel. There's a wealthy guy at the hotel interested in marrying her. She doesn't seem madly in love with her suitor, but she's contemplating leaving her husband to be with this other man. Deb acts like a sweet woman, but I thought she was a bit of a bitch for betraying her man while he's off fighting.

BUT then we get to learn more about the situation. It turns out Deb's husband doesn't treat their marriage like a partnership. He's one of these guys who gets an idea, drags his family along, gets another idea, and then once again yanks the family away from their life.

Still. Some people are a bit dreamy and impulsive. I wanted Deb to be sympathetic towards her soldier-husband.

But then in the end, we get to meet the husband. It turns out he's a chauvinistic ass. So then I was happy for Deb to dump him and go off with the other guy. Yeah, the husband was probably in line with what most men were like in those days. I thought it was awesome, though, that Deb refused to put up with it.

The only thing is, I'm not sure the new guy is much better. What really bothered me in the story is the new man pressured Deb into forgoing a Sunday with her daughter in order to spend the day with him. She protested and he pushed her, saying the daughter would have Deb on Saturday. 

The poor little girl hardly sees her mother and was so eager to also spend Sunday with her. And then Deb lies! She tells her daughter she has to work. But instead she's frolicking with a man that's not her husband and not her child's father.  I thought that was a bit low. It was mostly Deb's fault for saying yes, but I'm not sure a man is a good one if he pressures you to sacrifice your time with your children.

Okay. I'll stop blabbing away and get onto the actress who plays Deb.

First I'm going to look at the biography information on IMDb.

Kerry Armstrong was born on January 3, 1958. I feel like she should be older, because she was an adult during World War II. Or in my mind she was. I guess Come In Spinner felt so real to me.  I can't say it felt like it was actually made in the 1940's, because then it would be black and white. I think what it felt like was a 1970's movie about World War II...rather than a 1990 one. But this is just a vague ignorant feeling. It's not based on any intelligent insight about film history.

Armstrong was born in Melbourne.

She's been married four times. Wow!  Her last marriage ended in 2001. So maybe she's given up on the marriage thing by now. She might have a partner. Or maybe she's realized she's a lesbian.

One of her husbands was one of the founding members of the band Australian Crawl.

With her third husband, Armstrong has one son. With her fourth, she has two sons (twins).

Kerry Armstrong's life might be even more interesting than that of her characters.

Let's go to her filmography now.

Armstrong's first screen thing was in 1974— a TV show called Marion.  IMDb says it had four episodes, so I'd say it was probably more of a miniseries. Like Come in Spinner, it takes place during World War II. A teacher goes to work in rural Victoria and falls in love with an Italian guy.

Armstrong wasn't the teacher. I'm not sure who she was. IMDb doesn't even provide her character's name. For all I know, she could have just been an extra in a crowd scene.

In 1976, Armstrong appeared on The Sullivans. Isn't that about World War II as well?  I don't think Armstrong had big part in the program. Her name is listed way down in the credits. Her character doesn't have a name, and IMDb doesn't even know which episodes she was in.

Armstrong did get a character name in the 1978 film The Getting of Wisdom. She played Kate. I read the book a few years ago, and daydreamed through most of it, so this might not mean much. But I kind of do remember Kate. Is she a big part in the story?

Lord Wiki says Kate is one of those worldly-wise students. What does that mean?

Here's the trailer. I'll try see if I can spot Armstrong.

Ah! I think I see her. I paused at some girls at :47.  I think she's the one on the right.

In 1979, Armstrong was on a TV show called Skyways. Kylie Minogue was in it too.

This is a bit ridiculous. IMDb lists Minogue as being one of the stars of show, but then in the cast list, it says she was in one episode.

I know movies do this—name an actor as a star of the film even though he or she's only in a cameo. But I thought IMDb was above that. Shame on them!

Lord Wiki says Skyways was about people working for an airline. Kylie Minogue's appearance was significant because guess who else was on the same episode. Jason Donovan! They were together in this before they became a big thing together on Neighbours.

This website has very detailed information about Skyways.  They say Armstrong's character, Angela Murray, was a country girl who came to Melbourne seeking excitement. I'm not sure how she fit in with the airline stuff.

Around the same time, Armstrong was on Skyways, she was also on Prisoner Cell Block H.  It seems like so many people were on that show.

Armstrong was on the first season. She played Lynn Warner.

Lord Wiki's cousin says Warner was a country girl who had moved to Melbourne. It sounds a bit like Angela Murray. But I think Lynn was dealt worse cards than Angela. She was wrongly accused of killing the baby she had been hired to watch. Not only that, but the man of the house raped her, and she ended up pregnant. Shit!

I'm going to watch some of the first episode of the show.

Kerry Armstrong appears at 3:09. She's new to the prison.

Wait?! Is that Celia Stewart? I think it is! I think she's one of the prison guards. I'll have to look at the cast list.

Yes it is! And the actress name is Fiona Spence. I should have known that, probably.

In 1981, Armstrong was in a TV miniseries for children called Cornflakes for Tea. It's about children whose father walks out on them, and they try to live on their own.  I can't find much about it.

I'll move onto 1984.

It looks like maybe Armstrong moved to America. She was on an episode of Tales from the Darkside. Although they might have filmed some episodes outside of the US.

Armstrong was in an episode called Slippage. You know...I can't remember if I ever watched this show or not. I don't think so. But I might be wrong.

I just looked up higher in the Armstrong filmography. I think she was definitely in the US. She was also on an episode of Murder She Wrote, and in 1985-1986, she appeared on seven episodes of Dynasty.

Here's the episode of Tales From the Darkside. Armstrong plays the protagonist's wife. She appears at 2:26. Her voice and accent sound kind of strange to me. It's American, but maybe not quite right. It kind of reminds me of what I heard from Daniel Radcliffe in this trailer.  Or maybe it IS right, but just not an accent I'm familiar with.

On Dynasty, Armstrong played a Duchess named Elena. Lord Wiki's cousin is trying to explain who she is, but it's going way over my head.

Wait. Now I'm getting it. Elena was supposed to marry Prince Michael, but then he fell in love with someone else.

And other stuff happened.

This Dynasty blog has a picture of Armstrong as Elena.

It looks like Armstrong returned to Australia in the late 1980's.  In 1988, she appeared in Dadah is Death. It's one of those stories about Australians getting arrested in Asia for drugs. Hugo Weaving is in the movie, and it sounds familar to me. Maybe I wrote about it way back when I did a post on him.

There's an American in the film. Sarah Jessica Parker! That kind of surprised me.

Here's a trailer the movie. But it's not in English. Well, the actors speak English, but the trailer narration is in another language. I wish I was smart enough to know WHICH language.

Also in 1988, Armstrong appeared in a crime drama called Grievous Body Harm.  In this, the lovely John Waters plays a schoolteacher whose wife was supposidly killed in a car accident. But he doesn't believe that. I was thinking the story sounded familar to me...like I saw it on another movie or show. But now I'm thinking it was actually Facebook where I saw it. There was some drama where a guy believed that some woman's death involved more than a car accident, and another person on Facebook was mad at him for bringing it up. Or something like that.

Kerry Armstrong played Annie in the movie. Is Annie very important? I don't know.

Here's a trailer for the movie.

Kerry Armstrong's next screen thing was Police Rescue. It's a bit confusing. If IMDb has it right, the pilot was on in March 1989, but the series didn't start until February 1991. Armstrong was on the pilot episode, and then came back for episodes 4, 6, and 7 in season one.

In-between  the pilot of Police Rescue and the start of the series, Armstrong was on Come in Spinner.

In 1991, Armstrong starred in a movie called Hunting.  It was about an American tycoon in Australia.

Here's a trailer. A lot of trailers I'm watching today are coming from non-Australian countries. Maybe these movies are more popular as foreign films than they are a domestic-Australia one.

Guy Pearce is in the movie. For a moment I got confused and thought he was Val Kilmer.

I'm confused by the trailer. It has satanic-type music. Is it supposed to be supernatural? Or is it just about normal adultery?

I'm intrigued.

In 1993, Armstrong was in a TV show with her Come in Spinner co-star (Rebecca Gibney). This was All Together Now. I've seen one episode of this. I didn't like it.

Armstrong joined the cast in the fourth season.

Also in 1993, she was on the children's show Halfway Across the Galaxy and Turn Left. It sounds familar to me. Did I write about it recently? The stuff Lord Wiki is saying about it doesn't sound overly familiar to me. So maybe not.

The show is about children from another planet who struggle with neglectful parents.

Here's part of the first episode.

They look like earthlings. It looks like Earth.

Well...now it's looking more like an alien thing.

I wonder how the aliens connect to the earthling kids at the beginning.

Is that Armstrong at 7:34? She has a lot of alien-make up. But it might be her. I'm not sure. Or maybe she's the other woman in the scene—the one with red hair.

From 1994-1995, Armstrong did another children's show. This was Ocean Girl. I saw an episode of this once.

Armstrong played Dr. Dianne Bates. I think she was the mother in the main family.

Lord Wiki's cousin says Dr. Bates was a marine biologist. If I remember the story correctly, it's futuristic. A family goes to live on some kind of ocean vessel. And they end up seeing a mermaid-type girl.

Here's a promo-opening credits thing.

For more of my biography posts, click here!

In 1997, Armstrong was in an American TV movie filmed in Queensland. This was Heart of Fire. It's an American movie filmed in Australia, and it was about a New Zealand firefighter. I wonder why they didn't film it in New Zealand.

Lord Wiki'c cousin has the story, and it's pretty amazing. This guy Royd Kennedy was very heroic. There was a crash with a lot of fire. Kennedy risked his life to rescue a trapped mother and baby.

I'm looking at the cast list and I'm seeing none of the names from the real story. And then I looked closer at the plot description. It's BASED on a true story. So I bet what they did is turn it into an American story.  Patrick Duffy plays the heroic firefighter. They changed his name to Max Tucker.

I'm okay with Americans feeling inspired by international events and making a movie about it. But I'm not okay with it if they say it's based on a true story. Because then people will watch it and assume it happened in America. And that's adds to our ethnocentrism problem.

In 1997, Armstrong was in a remake of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. It's an Australian-American thing, with a little British as well (Michael Caine is the star).  Armstrong played someone named Lydia Rawlings. According to this review in People Magazine, Rawlings was someone's father's mistress.

Here's a trailer. No, never mind. That's the old 1954 movie.

I'm getting tired, so I'm just going to move on.

In 1998, Armstrong was in Amy. I think I've looked at this movie before. It's about a little girl who suffers a psychological injury and becomes deaf and mute. Then people try to help her.

Here's the trailer. I didn't see Armstrong. I see from IMDb that she's part of the Trendle family in the movie. There's three of them. I'm not sure what they do in the story.

In 1999, Armstrong was in a short film called Taken. It's on YouTube, fortunately. I will watch it later. I want to get done with this filmography. I feel like it's going on forever and ever.....

Jump back a year. We have to return to 1998. Armstrong was on SeaChange. Her character's name was Heather Jelly. It's kind of a cute name.

Oh wow! I was just consulting Lord Wiki about the show. I had stopped watching it after season 1. Or maybe I stopped before the end? But anyway, there's a huge revelation about Heather Jelly. I think I would have remembered seeing it. Or maybe not. I do have a tendency to forget things sometimes.

In 2001, Armstrong was in Lantana with Anthony LaPaglia. And now I remember I saw the trailer, and Armstrong, when I was doing the post on Ben Mortley. Armstrong looked familar to me, and then I found out she was on SeaChange.

Since I just watched the trailer a few weeks ago, I think I'll skip watching it again. Just because I feel short on time.

Lord Wiki says Armstrong won an AACTA award for the film, so it's probably very important to her career.

I think I'm going to do something different. I'm tired of going in chronological order.  I'm feeling like Nick on my daily episode of McLeod's Daughters. He recited his old speech about rodeos, and Tess pointed out that he was pretty much just listing things.

That's pretty much what I'm doing. It's getting old. Maybe I need to learn how to shorten the filmography section of this posts. I feel bad skipping things, but in reality I probably need to skip MORE things.

Maybe I should just look at the highlights of their career. But how do you define the highlights? What are  highlights to me might not be highlights to someone else. I think what I fear is getting comments where someone says, You missed blah blah blah.... I shouldn't worry, though, because people rarely comment on these posts. I'm not sure if anyone really even reads them.

Anyway, I'm going to look at things out of order. I'm going to go by type of project instead. And maybe for my next filmography, I'll do that for the whole thing.

So...Armstrong was in two more TV shows. One was MDA in 2002-2003, and the other was Bed of Roses in 2008-2011.  I can see from the photo illustration on IMDb that she's one of the main stars of Bed of Roses.  The show looks more like something from the 1980's...just by the little...what do you call it?  I guess it's the poster?

Jason Donovan was one of the stars of MDA. Lord Wiki says it's about medical malpractice stuff. The first episode is on YouTube. I might be more excited about seeing Donovan than Armstrong. Nothing against Armstrong; it's just sometimes I get mildly obsessed with Jason Donovan.

Armstrong appears at about 2:18. She's missed her husband's speech, because she's late. That happened in my novel!

I'm jumping through—trying to find Donovan.

I'm going to try to multitask—look at Bed of Roses at the same time.  Lord Wiki says it's a comedy-drama about a woman (Armstrong) whose husband dies in the arms of another women. It's kind of like what happened with Bree van de Camp's husband. But he didn't die right away. He had a heart attack and survived. At least for awhile.

When is Donovan going to show up?

Oh! There he is!  He has a beard. He's there at 24:36.  He may have appeared earlier, but I missed him because...well, maybe I'm not so great at multitasking.

I have way too many windows open on my browser.

I wish Donovan would start singing. That would relieve some of the stress I'm feeling now.

Armstrong has ten more things on her filmography. Six of them are short films. I'll watch some. There might not be many available.

As for full length-projects...I'll see if anything looks substantial.

There's a 2004 movie called One Perfect Day. The title sounds familiar, but I think I might be thinking of something else. Maybe there was a book with that title, or...an episode of a TV show.

Ah! There were two Australian shows that title for an episode. One was Sea Patrol and the other was Dance Academy. I remember the Dance Academy one. It's the one where Abigal's younger sister comes to visit. I think it might have been a tear-jerker. Although I think that show almost always was a tear-jerker for me.

Here's the trailer for the One Perfect Day movie.

I see Armstrong. The main star (Dan Spielman) of the film looked familiar to me. I looked at his filmography. He played Andrew on Offspring. I think that was Mick's brother?

Armstrong was in a romantic-comedy called Oyster Farmer. Lord Wiki says the movie got free publicity, because the star was one of the finalists for James Bond. That's kind of funny, or...interesting, at least.

Here's the trailer.  It looks kind of sweet.

In 2007, Armstrong was in a dance movie called Razzle Dazzle.  Here's the trailer.  I think it's a mockumentary.

The little girl at 1:21 looks familar to me.

The movie is supposed to be funny, but the trailer didn't make me laugh. Is there something wrong with me? Or the movie? Or maybe we're both messed up.

The last full-length screen project Armstrong did was an American thing. It's a movie called Reservations.  It's about a thirsty castaway on an island; and lonely people in NYC; and people at a hotel who reach out to each other. Thats' what I'm getting from the plot description on IMDb.

Here's some festival photos involving the film. That's about all I can find.

Wait. I found something else. Here's an article about it. Armstrong plays a flight attendant who has cancer.

I'm going to take a break, and then I'll return to watch some of the short films.

Okay. I'm back. I'm going to watch two of her film shorts.

You know...I was thinking one thing I can guess about Armstrong, based on the fact that she's in many short films, is that she supports new filmmakers. Because I think it's usually new filmmakers—sometimes film students—who makes these short movies.

The first movie I'm going to watch is Taken.

There's rain; then books; and then someone holding an umbrella.

It's a dark movie. It's hard to see anything.

You know who else is in the movie. Samuel Johnson! I should have recognized his name in the credits, since I've watched him in The Secret Life of Us. And I'm currently watching him on Rush.

The movie is a little slow. Is it my Americanness that causes me to be intolerant of these moments in films?

Or maybe it's an artsy thing vs. mainstream.

I think artsy films tend to have a lot of pauses—no dialogue and no action. Just quietness.

Maybe I'm just in an impatient mood.

I went back to the beginning of the movie. There was a phone message. I didn't listen to it carefully enough and I knew it explained why Samuel Johnson is taking things from Armstrong's home.

Well, the message must have been from Armstrong's ex-partner. He says he sent someone over to pick up the rest of his things.

Now Johnson and Armstrong are flirting with each other.

And there's kissing.

Oh...I am SO lost.

Samuel Johnson was the wrong guy. He wasn't there to pick up the things. The husband sent someone else. Then who was Samuel Johnson? A burglar?

I don't get it.

Next film....

It's called Mind the Gap.

Kerry Armstrong needs to get up the stairs, but they're closed. She's told to use the elevator. She doesn't want to, but she does it anyway.

There are protesters outside the building. I think they're protesting a decision made by Armstrong.

Now she's stuck on the elevator with a student...maybe one of the protestors.

The girl in the elevator looked familar; and her name did too. I looked at her filmography. She was on Dance Academy. She played Rebecca.  I don't remember her at all.

Oh. Wait. I think maybe she worked for the musical that Abigail was in.  No...that's not it. I think she was the person who worked for the Dance Company all the kids were trying to get into.

Armstrong has a panic attack in the elevator. The student is very sweet and helpful. She's a good listener.

Oh. Wow! There was a good twist in the film.

Things are not what they seemed.

If you want to watch it for yourself, skip the next two paragraph. But I think I want to talk about it.

So...when they get off the elevator, the student goes to the custodian cleaning the stairs and hands her money.  It's revealed it was all set up. The students knew Armstrong didn't like elevators. They got her on it. They arranged for it to be stuck with the student inside with her. Then somehow their conversation leads her to reject her initial plan to increase tuition fees. I'm just not sure how the student convinces her to do that. When she has her panic attack, the student does some kind of counting thing. Maybe she hypnotized Armstrong?  I liked the twist. What I also like is the student seems to feel conflicted and guilty at the end.

When people want to make a change in the world, it seems the three choices are terrorism, picket signs, and petition signing. But this movie brings up a fourth method—devious manipulation.

Here's an example. Animal rights. Terrorism is just wrong. You really shouldn't blow up a lab. I saw it happen on Rush yesterday. It was horrible. But do picket signs and petitions work?  Maybe they do...to a point. Still...so many animals suffer. Why not just do something like sneak into a restaurant and replace all the hamburgers with veggie burgers?

It's probably a bit naive of me to imagine no one would notice.

I have a better plan! You know those people who slaughter farm animals, and they get all disgusting and cruel about it. How about you get an animal slaughterer person into an elevator with a pig. Get them to bond. Then let them out. The animal slaughterer might decide to stop working at the slaughterhouse. Or he at least might be more gentle about the whole thing.  Things could go wrong, though. What if the pig tries to attack the human? Or what if the human gets hungry and decides to show off by killing the pig with his bare hands?

Now I'm going to see what Lord Wiki has to say about Armstrong.

He says in 2001, she won TWO awards—one for Lantana and the other for SeaChange.  This is the AACTA award, but back then it was called the AFI award. I much prefer the latter name. I guess I'm just more used to it.

Lord Wiki says Armstrong lived in America from 1981-1987.

Armstrong co-wrote one of the Australian Crawl songs: Easy on Our Own. I'm listening to it now. It sounds nice.

This gets really interesting.

Armstrong's second marriage was apparently a sham. She and Robinson (Australian Crawl guy) separated so she could marry an American and get residency.  This American marriage was with a friend. It wasn't a romantic thing. Lord Wiki says it's not what broke up Robinson and Armstrong. The distance did.

Lord Wiki says Armstrong was on One Live to Live. Either Lord Wiki is lying. Or IMDb missed that.

OR maybe I missed it?

I just checked her filmography. I don't see it.

Lord Wiki says Armstrong was involved with Tim Robbins, both professionally and romantically.

Armstrong has written some books. One is a self-help book called The Circles. The reviewers on Amazon say it's about relationships.

She has another book, Fool on the Hill. It looks less available than the first one. I can't find much about it. Not that I'm trying hard. I'm tired.

Lord Wiki says Armstrong does charity work. She was on Dancing with the Stars, and on that she represented a charity called Cure for Life. They try to help people with brain tumors. I hate brain tumors. They scare me.  So...I'm thankful to Armstrong for trying to fight them.

Armstrong was against the war in Iraq. She sat on the steps of Victorian Parliament wearing a purple bra as a sign of protest.  It's too bad she didn't throw ice water on her head while she was there.  You know, kill two birds with one stone.

Armstrong participated in a Coke campaign where they tried to speak out against so-called myths—Coke rots your teeth, makes you fat, and has a lot of caffeine.

Well....

I'm not a very healthy eater. I eat a lot of junk food. So I feel strange questioning such a campaign. But I think Coke CAN rot our teeth, make you fat, and...I don't know about the caffeine bit. It's not that I'm against Coke. But like anything that's sort of bad for you. You have to use it in moderation.

And maybe that type of message WAS conveyed by Armstrong.

Crikey has an article about the situation. I'll read it when I'm done with Lord Wiki.

I just read further Lord Wiki stuff. He says I'm not the only one who questioned the ads. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commissioner ruled that the ads were misleading.

What were you thinking, Kerry Armstrong?  Oh well. We all do nutty things sometimes.

I mean really. It's okay to like Coke. But you're supposed to be a hypocrite about it. You talk about how it's bad for you. Then you drink it when your other health nut friends aren't looking. You don't go out and shout to the world that it's healthy.

What's Kerry Armstrong doing now?

Lord Wiki says she lives with her sons in the Yarra Valley. Maybe drinking Coke? Hopefully in a responsible way. Because if you drink too much coke and you don't brush your teeth, you probably will get fat and have rotten teeth. Unless you have superb metabolism and bacteria-resistant teeth.

Now I'm going to read the Crikey article.

The advertisement wasn't a TV thing. It was a print advertisement in something called Good Weekend.

Crikey points out some irony. In an Herald Sun interview prior to the fiasco, she said, I have had to turn things down that could have brought me great financial freedom because I knew the audience would not appreciate them.

Well, maybe Armstrong's financial situation changed between the interview and the Coke offer. Or maybe she thought her audience would appreciate her defending Coke.

Here's another article about it. Like the Coke ad, this is kind of a case of false-advertising. The title says Armstrong finally breaks her silence over the ad. But then in the article, this is what Armstrong says. The campaign that I did has passed and gone and I haven't made any comment yet - nor am I going to - because there were things that happened that were out of my control as well  

Well, she did say something. So I guess that's breaking the silence. The title of the article isn't an outright lie. But I was hoping for something more.

Now I'm going to watch a video about Kerry's Armstrong's book The Circles.

If I'm understanding it right, you're supposed to make circles and write down the names of people who bullied you? And I think also the people that were nice to you. And somehow that's supposed to make you feel better.

It's something to do with facing your feelings about people.

I wish it was that easy. But for me, it's not good circles and bad. It's all mixed up. The people who have been the nicest to me are usually the same ones who have hurt me the most.

I think the basic idea is people hurt you and you write it down and let it go. It sounds good in theory. But I think a lot of times that doesn't work.

I'm still hurt from people hurting me. I haven't let it go. But I'm okay. I get on with my life and I rarely think about these people. I rarely feel the hurt. Because I'm kind of busy and there's a ton of things to think about.  Not only do I have the people in my life. I have the people in all the books I read, the people on all my TV shows, and a ton of people in my dreams.

Here's an ABC interview about the book. Maybe it will give me more insight.  I want it to be something I can like. But maybe that's an unrealistic wish, because I'm a bit skeptical and negative when it comes to self-help stuff.

Armstrong says she feels there are seven Kerry Armstrongs out there.

And she likes the number 7. I do too. We have that in common.

I'm starting to understand the circle thing. Though it's not making me like it more. The idea is you put people who make you feel bad in the farther out circles. It's kind of like giving yourself distance from them.  I think that works if you're one of those lucky people who have a tight circle of wonderful people who lift you up and make you feel good, and then other people who treat you like crap.

But for me—and I really doubt I'm alone here—the hurtful stuff comes from my family. Usually. And I'm not saying I can't put them in an outer circle because they're my family. But they're also the ones who are really nice to me. They'd be my inner most circle and probably the outermost circle. Or at least the 6th circle.

You know the book would probably work for most people...normal people with normal friendships.

I don't really have that.

For me, it's confusing. And it changes day by day. Sometimes I'll think about people and wonder, are we friends or just acquaintances? Are we ex-friends? Are we friends who have temporarily lost touch with each other? Are we going to talk again, or is our friendship just a memory?

I think maybe the thing is, I have such vivid dreams with so much socializing and adventure. In my waking life, I kind of want to be on my own a lot. Tim, Jack, and Max (the cat) are pretty enough for me. I do a few emails here and there, and some blog commenting.  Some message boards. A little bit of Twitter. That's about it, for the most part.

The weekend before this one, my sister, my mom, and I had this wonderful time singing together. We were laughing hysterically and majorly bonding. I love moments like that, but I don't need a lot of them.  I don't think I could HANDLE a lot of them.  I think some people need these moments on a very frequent basis. For me, a little goes a long way. And by the next night at the lake house, I already had my fill of socializing. Everyone else played charades, but I had no more social energy. I went outside, lay on a hammock, and looked at the stars.

Shit. I'm rambling on and on, and I'm going on so little information. For all I know, Armstrong might talk about people like me in her book. She might understand that some of us have very confusing relationships.

I just thought of something else about the book. I'm wondering if it would be hard to be honest. Even if it's just being honest with yourself. For example, what if you're trying to put your parents in circles. What if deep inside you feel one parent belongs in circle 1, but another parent belongs in circle 3? Are most people going to feel okay writing that down? I would feel guilty about things like that.

Or what if it's your kids? Are you going to be able to admit that you feel closer to one than the other four? What if one of your kids is being hateful towards you lately? Will you admit that you feel they belong in the 7th circle?

Sometimes it's best NOT to write things down and admit your feelings. Sometimes it's better to distract yourself.  Go play a video game or something. And eat some ice-cream. Drink a Coke. Or a healthier drink.

I've been struggling to find some recent information on Armstrong. The most recent I've found so far is this 2012 article.  Armstrong says that she's refusing projects, she's being offered, because she doesn't like female roles she's seeing.

The article says she was teaching acting at the 16th Street Acting Studio.  I wonder if that's still the case.

Yep! She is actually. Here's one of the classes. It's Industry/Advanced Scene Study.  Then there's also a Scene Study class.  For one you have to audition, and the other requires submitting a showreel. So it's not like if you're a fan of Armstrong (or a stalker) you can just pay $600 and spend every Thursday with her. Well, if you're a stalker or fan with good acting ability, there might be some potential there.

I just thought of something. How many successful TV/movie stars were once borderline-stalker fans of other celebrities? I mean before they became famous themselves.

Well, I'm glad Armstrong is keeping busy with something.  It makes me feel she might be okay in life. I like knowing that, Or...imagining that.  You can be busy teaching acting classes and still be having a really tough time in life.  The same can be said on someone who's currently on a hit TV show.

And yesterday I was feeling sad for Peter Bensley because it seemed like he faded into oblivion. But who knows...He could be super happy and busy, just not doing things that are attention worthy.

I think I've written a novel here.

I need to go to bed.

If anyone has actually read this, I hope at least some of it made sense to you.


For more of my biography posts, click here!  

Read my novel: The Dead are Online 




Justine Clarke

I've been watching Justine Clarke in Come in Spinner. She plays a young woman who's raped by her sister's ex-boyfriend. A total jerk!

Edited to Add (8/26/14) Major correction. Days after watching this, I realized she was NOT raped by her sister's ex-boyfriend. She was raped by an American soldier. My mistake really gave me a skewed view of the mini-series—at least with the storyline concerning Clarke's onscreen sister. 

I used to watch Clarke as Roo in Home and Away. She was on from the beginning, and then left after a year or so. At first, Roo was a bit of a pain—a spoiled brat. But then she had a baby, gave it up for adoption, and somehow the experience turned her super nice. I adored super-nice Roo and was sad to see her go.

I've also seen Clarke in the TV show Tangle. I was about to say I watched the first episode, but you know what. I don't think that's true. I think I actually saw the first episode of the second season.  There was a funeral, and it was for a character who had been one of the stars of the first season. 

Clarke was recently on Play School. Or maybe she's still on it. I know she did some scenes with the guy who played Frank (her lover boy on Home and Away). What's his name again?  

Alex Papps!

Thank you, Google and Lord Wiki.

Yes, So Papps and Clarke played lovers in the late 1980's and entertained children together in this decade. That's very sweet.

I know two more things about Clarke. One is that she had an appearance in a Mad Max movie. And two, she sings songs for children. I have some of her songs on my Aussie Spotify list.

I already kind of know a fair bit about Clarke, but I'm hoping to learn some more stuff.

I'm going to start with IMDb. They say she was born in 1971, but there's no exact date here. They also say she was born in Australia, but there's no exact city or state. It's somewhat mysterious.

She was in a band called Automatic Cherry. I'm not sure when, though. Maybe I'll read more about it later.

Now I'm looking at her filmography. Her first screen thing was in 1984. She starred in a kid's TV show called The Maestro's Company. The other star was Adam Willits who would later be on Home and Away with her. He played the foster brother of Roo's boyfriend.

A puppeteer from The Maestro's Company has left a review of the show on IMDb, and talks about her experiences. It was some kind of opera thing. 

Willits and Clarke played children who stumble onto this opera company while trying to retrieve their lost soccer ball.  

I think basically the show was a program to teach children and their parents about opera.  

1985 is the year Clarke was in Max Max Beyond Thunderdome. I think that's the second movie? It's the one with Tina Turner. 

Clarke played a character named Anna Goanna. That's cute.  

In 1986, Clarke did another show for children. This one was called Professor Poopsnagle's Steam Zeppelin

Someone has uploaded the opening credits of the show on YouTube. I'm glad they did. It's a very fun song. And Clarke does some singing in it.

Lord Wiki says the show was very popular in the UK, and still had a cult following today. I imagine the people who like Dr. Who would like this show. 

In 1987, Clarke appeared in five episodes of A Country Practice. She played a character named Nicki Simpson. Who is Nicki Simpson? I don't know. I'm not having luck finding anything about her.

Let's move on.....

On January 20, 1988 Clarke appeared on her first episode of Home and Away. She didn't start with the first episode as I had imagined. She began on episode 3.

In April 1988, Clarke starred in a children's TV movie called Princess Kate. She had the title role. The movie was about a girl learning that she's adopted. 

I recognize some other names in the credits—Claudia Karvan! And also Rebekah Elmaloglou who became a resident of Home and Away's Summer Bay months after Roo left.

It would be so fun to see Karvan when she was that young. I just looked at her age. She's about a year younger than Clarke, and a few months older than me. How old is Emaloglou? 

Well, she's a bit younger. She was born in 1974.  

1990 is the year Clarke appeared in Come in Spinner. I watched the second part of that today.

Clarke has a long filmography. I'm already getting tired. I'm going to skip writing about things in which I can't find a lot of information. 

In 1994, Clarke was in a miniseries called Golden Fiddles. One of the stars is Kate Milligan. I think she might be in Come in Spinner

No. I am totally wrong. She's not in the movie. She's actually an American-Canadian actress. She was in The Prince of Tides. I think maybe she played Nick Nolte's mother. 

Anyway....back to Golden Fiddles.  Here's a trailer

Well, no. The person who uploaded it called it a trailer. It's more like the opening credits. 

The little description on the video says it's about The Great Depression. 

In the next few years, Clarke was in a couple of other things I'm going to skip over.

I'm going to jump to a 1997 movie called Blackrock.  It's about a young girl who's raped and murdered; and surfers are involved. I guess one of them did it? I'm not sure. 

Lord Wiki says the movie is known as being the first prominent film role of Heath Ledger. I should have recognized the title then, since I just read his biography a few weeks ago. What's wrong with me?

There are other names I recognize in the credits—Jessica Napier, Bojana Novakovic, and John Howard. I don't know if any of those people had significant roles in the film.  Nor do I know if Justine Clarke did. I'm getting the idea that the starring-role part of her career happened when she was a teen and young adult; then she moved onto smaller roles. I think later her career picked up again. Really,though, I'm just guessing about this. She might have had some huge roles in the late 1990's. 

I'm reading Lord Wiki's description of the plot. Heath Ledger didn't play the rapist. I was wondering about that. His character had consensual sex with the girl. But then he watches as other people rape her. I think that might be just as bad. 

No. Wait. I have it all wrong.

It's another guy who watches the rape. And he also watched the consensual sex. What's the deal with that?

Clarke's character isn't listed in the plot description, so I'm guessing it wasn't a big role.

In 1998, Clarke did three episodes of a TV show called Wildside. What seems weird to me is within one year she played two different characters. I know shows do this often. Actors are used multiple times as different characters. But don't they usually space the appearance years apart? Even then viewers might recognize the actor. But if it's less than a year apart, it's even more likely. Why not just hire a different actor? Or if they liked the actor who guest-starred, why not just bring back their character?

I see now that I was totally wrong about Clarke having small roles in the late 1990's. In 1998, she started working on All Saints. She played Dr. Samantha O'Hara in 21 episodes. What season was that?

Well, from what I'm seeing on IMDb, she started in season 1— towards the end of the season. Then she came back again in season 2.

I'm skipping more stuff....

I'm going to stop at Danny Deckchair which came out in 2003. It looks like Clarke had a fairly significant role in this one. This is the movie where the guy makes a flying machine out of helium balloons. Clarke plays the guy's girlfriend...who's not very nice, apparently. 

Here's the trailer.

Clarke changed her hair color for the film.

The movie looks really cute and sweet.

I think I've written about it before—probably when I did a post about Miranda Otto. She's another one of the stars of the movie.

Also, in 2003...Clarke was in the movie Japanese Story which stars Toni Collette. I think most of the movie is about Toni Collete and her Japanese co-star stuck out alone together in the outback.  So I doubt Clarke had much of a role. I'll watch the trailer, though, just in case. I'll see if I can spot here. 

Nope. I didn't see her.

In 2004, Clarke was in a TV movie called Go Big. And she was the main star. She plays a woman who's fired from her telemarketing job.  It's a romantic-comedy type thing.

What's funny is there's this picture of the movie, and there's a woman who looks much older than I'd imagine Justine Clarke would have be in 2004. She looks like she's about sixty or seventy. Then I clicked on the picture because it's supposed to be a link to the film. Well, it turns out it's the wrong link...the wrong Go Big. The Go Big video provided is an art instructional video.  

In 2005, Clarke was in a movie called Look Both Ways. It's about a bad weekend. Not a comedy bad weekend, but a drama one. Clarke plays a woman who illustrates sympathy cards. She witnesses someone getting hit by a train and dying. I think that would be incredibly traumatic...seeing that.

Here's the trailer.  I like it. There's a line in the movie where Clarke's character says everyone has to witness something ghastly one day. She says, you know, your fifteen minutes of blah.

That's probably true. And the world is incredibly unfair. Some of us get rare and small glimpses of horror. Others see things like that on a daily basis. 

Clarke looks very cute in this movie—in a very casual and real way.

I have to say it again. I was so wrong about Clarke having small roles until recently and after the late 1980's.

She had another TV show in 2005. The Surgeon. It didn't last long. But she was the star, along with Sam Worthington.  

Here's a clip from the show. I'm not sure if Clarke is in the scene because the surgeons are wearing surgical masks. 

Here. I can see her in this other video. At least I think that's her. 

Justine Clarke was in Love My Way! Really? I didn't know that. Or I knew it and I forgot. I can't remember if I started watching Home and Away first or Love My Way

Oh. You know what. Now I see what's going on. She was in the third season. I stopped watching during that season. Or maybe I stopped watching in season two? I can't remember. It's just the show got to be too depressing for me. I might have missed her.

I'm skipping some stuff that might be important. Sorry. I'm getting tired.

Now I'm jumping way ahead to 2012. Clarke was in a TV series called Woodley. It's a comedy about a guy who's accident prone. Clarke plays his ex-wife. The guy wants to win her back.  

Someone has uploaded one of the episodes. I'll watch part of it.  

I think maybe that little girl was in Mental. I'll check in a minute.

Clarke appears at 4:20.  

And no...the kid isn't from Mental. She was actually on Offspring. She played the child version of Nina.

Wait. Back up. I always make these IMDb mistakes.

I have to rewind to 2009. That's when Clarke started working on Tangle. It was on for three seasons. 2009-2012. 

Here's a promo/featurette for the show. 

I had so many misconceptions about Clarke. Another thing I thought about her is that she pretty much quit television and movies to become a children's music singer. But recently she has starred in yet another TV show— The Time of Our Lives

Claudia Karvan is in this?! I feel so lost. I feel like I've been living under a rock. How am I missing so many things? Or at least forgetting them.

The show is made by the same people who made The Secret Life of Us. Shit! How did I miss this? 

And is it on Hulu? I don't think I saw it when I was searching the other day. Maybe it will be on someday, though. 

The last thing on Justine Clarke's filmography is an animated project called Maya the Bee Movie. Lord Wiki says Maya the Bee is an anime series based on an old German children's series. I don't know if this movie is anime and connected to the Japanese thing. Or is it just based on the book? 

Actually, I think it's the book because the credits have actors listed as being either in the German version or English version. So maybe it's a German-Australian thing that has nothing to do with Japan. 

Well...yeah. Now I'm looking more closely at IMDb. It's German-Australian. 

Here's the trailer. The little girl who plays the title character in the movie is going to be in the new Mad Max film. Just like Justine Clarke was back in the 1980's.

Now I'm moving onto Lord Wiki. Unlike IMDb, he knows Clarke's month of birth. But he doesn't know her date. Maybe Clarke keeps that secret because she doesn't want anyone figuring out her numerology number.

I'm joking.

Sort of.

Young Justine Clarke attended Woollahra Public School. I feel like I read about Woollahra recently, but I don't know why. Maybe it was in a novel I read? 

I must not have been paying good attention, though, because I had to look at Google Maps to figure out where it was.

It's a suburb in Sydney, towards the east. 

Anyway....

When Clarke was about seven-years-old, she appeared in a commercial for Arnott's Humphrey Bear biscuits. How cute. I wonder if they still make those. I don't think I've seen them around. I might have seen bears biscuits, but I don't know if they were modeled after Humphrey. 

Someone on a message board asks about the biscuits. No one really answers. Or at least there's no answer that's satisfying to me.

Lord Wiki has some information on Clarke's music career. She did a country music thing in the early 90's with a band called Honky Tonk Angels. Later, she did the Automatic Cherry thing. I can't find any of their songs on Spotify or YouTube.

I totally forgot to look at Clarke's Play School work on IMDb. I often forget to look at the category where the actor plays themselves.  

So here...I'm back over there. According to IMDb, Clarke started working on Play School in 2000. There's no end date. So maybe she's still on it?

Here's a clip of her teaching children to do the Macarena. 

Lord Wiki says that Clarke is married to an Aussie actor named Jack Finsterer. They have three kids. The oldest is about thirteen and the youngest is about five. I imagine she sang/sings to them a lot.

Crap. Our Internet is acting up. This might be difficult. Hopefully it will fix itself soon.

Will YouTube work for me?  Yes! Good.

Here's a song I have on my Spotify. It's called "Watermelon".

And YouTube has fooled me. It's actually not working. I can't see the video. But it worked well enough for me to get the link. You guys can watch the video. I'll listen to it on Spotify.

I'm going to dance.

At one point, Justine Clarke asks if we're dancing. I was proud to say...Yes!

Maybe when people get tired of the ice-bucket thing, we can start a new viral campaign where people dance to the watermelon song. What charity could we connect it to?

Maybe we'll just let people choose their own. And after they dance, they can do a brief explanation of why they chose that charity.

Why does Spotify work, but not YouTube? That's what I want to know. Actually, I don't want to know. I don't really care. I mean I don't need reasons. I'd just like it all to work again.

I think I'm going to take a break—give up for awhile. I've been wanting to work on my new Minecraft world. I'm building a bird park that has other animals as well. Yesterday I spawned a bunch of rabbits and named them after Home and Away characters.  You know what's crazy? I think I forgot Roo!

Okay...I'm gone and planted more flowers and trees in my bird park. I named a rabbit Roo, and I also added Neville and Floss.

While I was working, I was visited and watched by Celia and Carly...at different times. The two of them weren't hanging out together.

The Internet is still not working for me. In fact, Blogger just sent me that little message saying they're not able to save or publish my post.

Ah...now it's saved.

It's going off and on.

I'm going to give up on YouTube, though. I'll just leave it at that there are several Justine Clarke music videos. Maybe I'll watch them later. Or I'll just add more of her music to my Spotify list. Right now I'm listening to the list and hearing Damien Leith's "Songbird".

I'll try to read some interviews. That might work with my moody Internet.

Nope. It's not working.

I CAN get to Google, though, and I'm seeing there are a lot of articles/interviews about her.

Yes! One is working. I have a bunch of windows with various things loading.

The first one to work is in The Weekly Review.

It's from 2011. Clarke's family was moving back to Sydney from Elwood. I'd like to know where Elwood is, but I'm doubting Google Maps is going to work for me now.

Wait. The next paragraph says where it is. Melbourne. Tangled was filmed there. Clarke said her family stayed for awhile (beyond shooting?), because they liked it there.

Clarke says you could get closer to the water with less money in Melbourne. I didn't know that.

She talks about how they have to move a lot because of the acting jobs. She says they're kind of like gypsies. I wonder if her kids resent it. Or if they will resent it in the future. I moved around a lot. I resented it sometimes when it was happening, but when I was older I didn't look back with regret. What did bother me is getting guilt trips and anger from my parents for wanting to move as an adult. It's fine for them to move us around during our childhood, but bad of us to want to move when we're adults. Kind of hypocritical.

My dad did say he's over that now. Which is good. Though we have no immediate plans to move.

I think I'm too lazy at this point.

Clarke is described in the article as being friendly and no-fuss. That's cool.

When she's doing her show on the road, she often leaves her children behind with their daddy.  I imagine she probably misses her own kids while entertaining other kids. Though it's a common thing—like teachers who teach other children and nannies who have their own children at home. Or actually the nanny's children are probably at school being taught by some other child's parent.

Clarke says she loves performing. It's good she gets to do what she loves.

She and her husband met while doing the play Cyrano de Bergerac at the Sydney Theatre Company. That's romantic.

Clarke says she wanted to be on Play School since she was seventeen. She seems to really love it.

You know...I think I'd probably like that type of job. Singing and performing for children. I'm bad at memorizing lyrics, though...even for kid's songs. I sing to my nephews sometimes and my mind often goes blank.

Here's a blog post about someone's love for Justine Clarke. The blogger talks about the year 1988. She was in high school and dreamed of being an actress. She passionately pursued that path, and one of the things she did was write to actresses she admired.

Justine Clarke wrote back. The blogger has scanned in the old letters. They're cute. I was going to be negative and say the letter is egocentric.  Not that I would expect more from an actor writing to a fan. But Clarke is actually quite chatty in the letter. I mean it goes way beyond, thanks for writing to me. I appreciate and love all my fans. She actually opens up a bit, talks about annoying fans and a meddling agent. It almost sounds like had a need to vent her feelings to someone.

I was just thinking, though, if she had the time to write about her life, she could have asked some questions of the blogger. But Clarke was young. And youth sometimes is an excuse.

The blogger goes on to talk about how she kind of lost interest in Clarke. That happens sometimes. We're fans of someone or something, and then other things replace them in our heart.

But sometimes the love comes back.

This happened to the blogger when she saw Look Both Ways.

Then she had kids and Clarke became part of their lives with her Play School stuff and music concerts.

The blogger concludes her post by saying she liked that Clarke didn't mock her acting aspirations in the letter back she wrote. That's true. But she really didn't encourage her either.

The blogger is much more positive than I am.

That being said, I was like her as a kid. I wrote to celebrities. I think it was mostly for the fun of getting mail back. And like her I was happy for any bone thrown to me. An actress from V said something nice about the poem I wrote. Frank Oz answered some questions I asked him. Besides that I usually got form letters and/or autographed photos.

It's not really right to expect more. Actors are busy people. And they have their lives outside of acting. For example—their families and friends. And these days, they probably also have their video games.

I think lately, though, I have this distaste for it all. It's kind of that us vs them mentality. Royalty vs, the commoners. I'm famous. You're not. I'll do you a huge favor and sign your autograph book. Or I'll even let you take a photo of me.

It's a part of life, though, and my distaste of the whole thing is probably not about high-level philosophical objections. It's probably jealousy. I want to be on the royalty side. I look down at those people who beg celebrities to follow them on Twitter, but at the same time I'm secretly wishing those celebrities would notice me.

Why? I have no idea. It's pretty stupid.

Actually, it's very stupid.

But I think as long as you don't go from wishing to stalking—probably harmless. And my secret wishing is probably less bothersome than those who openly beg.

I should say quiet rather than secret...since I'm talking about it on my blog. How can something be secret if you're blogging about it?

I should stop blabbing, but there's more bitching I'd like to do.

It goes back to Clarke's letter. She was young and a busy actress when she wrote that. Both are good excuses to write egocentric letters. What really gets to me is when I have communications like that with people who are neither very young nor celebrities. They treat me like a fan. For example, I might respond to many of their Tweets on Twitter and they never respond to any of mine. Or there's those who blab on and on in their email about their lives. But they never or rarely ask about what's going on in my life.

It's so narcissistic.

Maybe that's why I'm less tolerant of the whole celebrity-fan relationship. I've had so many people in my life who engage in frequent conversational narcissism. I've had too much of it, and therefore have become intolerant in situations where it would actually be normal and expected.

You know. I was just about to quit this post. I was closing the windows on my browser, one of them being from the Sydney Theatre Company. I looked at it and saw Clarke. She's in a play called Children of the Sun. It will be on in September and October.

I'm wondering how Justine Clarke manages to do all the things she does. She seems so busy.

I was getting exhausted by her filmography. And I was just writing about it. She's actually living it.


Read my novel: The Dead are Online 




Rebecca Gibney

I don't know who Rebecca Gibney is.

I added her to the list on 6 July; although that doesn't really give me much of a clue to who she is.

Well....

According to Lord Wiki, she's an actress person.

She's on a show called Packed to the Rafters. I don't think I've ever heard of that.

I have no idea why I added her to my list.

Oh well. I hope I have fun with this.

Lord Wiki says that baby Rebecca was born on 14 December 1964, in Levin New Zealand. So, she's a Kiwi-Australian. Is Levin on the South Island or North Island?

I'm looking at Google Maps.... It's on the North Island...about an hour from Wellington. Lord Wiki says she was brought up in Wellington. I don't know if the family moved, or he's just saying Wellington now because more people are familar with it. It's kind of like when an Australian says they're from Sydney. But when you ask more questions, you realize they're really from Wollongong.

Gibney moved to Australia when she was nineteen. I wonder if she's a citizen?

She did modeling work. Then in 1985, she got a role in a children's TV series called Zoo Family.

I'll leave the rest of her filmography to IMDb.

Lord Wiki provides some personal stuff. She has been married twice....the first was to a rock star person. He was the lead singer for a group called Southern Sons. I've never heard of them. Her second (and current husband) is a production designer. She has had one child with him.

Gibney and her family live in Launceston, Tasmania. That's where one of my best friends live!

All right. I'm on IMDb now. They say her first film/TV appearance wasn't Zoo Family. It was
a German-New Zealand movie called Among the Cinders. This coming-of-age drama was done in 1983. I'm guessing this was before she left for Australia. Maybe she discovered she liked acting and realized New Zealand didn't provide enough opportunity for that.

About two years after that first movie, Gibney did a New Zealand horror movie. Mr Wrong. It was about an evil car....a lot like Christine. Gibney had the role of secretary. Unnamed characters usually indicates that it's a small part.

In that same year, Gibney did an Australian movie. I guess this was after she moved to Australia. It was called I Live With Me Dad. It sounds like a good story. It's about a boy who lives with his alcoholic father. The authorities think the family situation is inappropriate. They want to take the child away from his father, but the child wants to stay. I'm not sure who Gibney is within the story.

The Zoo Family Show was about a family who lives at the Melbourne Zoo. How cute.

I'm skipping something, and jumping ahead to 1990. Gibney was in a movie called Jigsaw. It was a crime thriller thing.

That year she was also in a TV mini-series called Come in Spinner. That sounds like it could be the title of an episode of Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Friends. One of the little kiddie spiders is named Spinner.

This Spinner miniseries isn't about spiders. It's about women working at a beauty salon during World War II. The series earned Gibney a Logie award. Go Rebecca Gibney!

Oh. Things are a bit out of order here. Before this Spinner movie series, Gibney had been on The Flying Doctors. The show had 163 episodes. Gibney was in 58 of them. That's pretty substantial. I'm guessing this show was her big break.

Here's some scenes from the show. I'm guessing the woman in the truck is Gibney. She plays a character named Emma. Lord Wiki says Emma isn't a doctor. She's a mechanic.

Gibney did the show from 1986 until 1991. Then she did a sitcom called All Together Now. It was about a rock star who discovers he has twins when their mother dies in a plane crash. That premise sounds pretty stupid to me, but maybe it was good. You can't always explain a plot well within a few sentences.

The show earned Gibney a Logie nomination, so I guess it wasn't all horrible.

The show reminds me of McLeod's Daughters—people arguing about sheep and all that.

In 1993, Gibney did a TV show called Snowy. Was that related to The Man From Snowy River? Well, it was about the Snowy Mountains, so I guess it's kind of connected. The show was directed by a guy named Paul Moloney. It seems he and Gibson have worked together a lot. He directed I Live With Me Dad, and some episodes of The Flying Doctors. He also directed some TV things called Halifax, and I see Gibney is in these as well.

Lord Wiki says Halifax is a TV show. It's listed in a weird way on IMDb, so I wasn't sure. It's like each episode is listed separately. It's hard to explain. Gibney was the main star. She plays Dr. Halifax, a forensic psychiatrist. It seems the last episode was made in 2002.

Here's a scene from the show.

In 1994, Gibney starred in a romantic-comedy with Anthony LaPaglia. This was Lucky Break. It's about a disabled writer of romance-novels. She tries to hide her disability from a man who's interested in her. It actually sounds a LITTLE bit like my novel Thirty Cats. My character tries to hide her disease. She's not a romance novelist though. Shit. I forgot what she is. A college student....yes. What was she majoring in? I forgot. Maybe education?

Gibney doesn't play the disabled person. Maybe she's the friend or something.

Here's the trailer for the movie. It doesn't really appeal to me, but maybe the trailer doesn't sell it well. I don't know.

In 1997, Gibney starred in a TV movie called Kangaroo Palace. It's about Australians in London during 1960. It was directed by the same guy who did Come in Spinner.

Also that year, Gibney was in Joey. I thought maybe this was that kangaroo movie with The Stand by Me kid. But it's not.

Ruth Cracknell is in the movie. Maybe that's why it's familar to me. Cracknell is one of my favorite Australians right now. I totally love her in Mother and Son. I've watched five full episodes already.

Joey is a family movie about American and Australian children working together to save a kangaroo. Well, I'm not quite sure it's any type of masterpiece.

In 1998, Gibney was in a haunted house horror TV movie called 13 Gantry Row. I'd probably like that. I like haunted house movie stuff.

Also, in 1998, Gibney was in Sabrina, Down Under. Man! I didn't know there WAS a Sabrina, Down Under. I want to see it. Tim and I used to love that show. We watched it when we lived in NYC. I loved that, and Boy Meets World. Actually, we liked a LOT of TV shows. I think we spent most of our time together watching television. Sad, since we lived in NYC. We should have been out and about...exploring the city. But see...a lot of the TV shows were set in NYC, and it was cool to watch the shows and say, we live here too! Although I don't think Sabrina lived in NYC.

Anyway, Sabrina was awesome. But I think maybe the show had jumped the shark a bit, or something else came on at that time that was more interesting to us. Then I moved on to that other witch show...Charmed.

Well, here's the beginning of Sabrina, Down Under.

This is like The Facts of Life Down Under.

I think EVERY American TV show needs a Down Under episode. Like how about True Blood Down Under. Grey Anatomy Down Under? Scrubs Down Under.....

It looks like YouTube has the entire Sabrina Down Under. Maybe I'll watch it one day...maybe after I watch all the episodes of Mother and Son.

I'm skipping some Gibney stuff. In the beginning of the 21st century, she did more Halifax episodes, and some guest appearances on various TV shows.

In 2002 and 2003, Gibney did thirteen episodes of a crime show called Stingers. It doesn't sound like my type of show.

In 2004, she did a TV mystery movie involving a playgroup. Interesting...... It was called Small Claims. The movie earned Gibney another Logie nomination. I guess the Logie folks like her.

Gibney was in the remake of Stephen King's Salem's Lot. It was filmed in Victoria. I'm not sure if I remember it. I do remember The Shining and Carrie remakes. Gibney played Marjorie Glick. I'm not sure if that's a big part or not. Well, from this site I can gather that the Glick family was the first Salem's Lot folks to turn into vampires.

Here's a trailer for the movie. It looks pretty good.

In 2005, Gibney starred in a sequel to Small Claims. And then in 2006, there was yet another sequel. Lisa Chapell from McLeod's Daughters was in this one.

Link
Gibney has hosted two episodes of a documentary called Sensing Murder. It deals with psychics and their involvement in police investigations.

In 2006, Gibney did an Australian-British TV program called Tripping Over. It was a family drama thing.

Here's some scenes from the show. I'm not sure if Gibney is in it.

Wow. Well, that's some pretty intense sex for a family show. Australia must be much more progressive than America. They even show breasts. I'm amazed.

In 2007, Gibney did a movie called Clubland. It's about a comedian. Gibney doesn't play the comedian. She plays Lana. I don't know who that is.

In 2008, Gibney returned to her country of birth for The Map Reader. That sounds familar. I wonder if it was shown in America. Gibney plays an alcoholic mother who has a turbulent relationship with her son. The son finds comfort in maps. I find comfort in maps too, but my love didn't develop until after I had Jack. He's VERY good with geography, and it kind of rubbed off on me.

The movie won some American film festival awards...a Las Vegas one, and a Ft. Lauderdale one. Yeah, so I guess it was here.

Here's a trailer for the film. It looks pretty good.

Gibney is going to star in the upcoming movie with Guy Pearce. In Her Skin. Actually, it might have already come out. I'm not sure. Maybe it's been out in Australia but not America yet. Have any of you seen it? It looks like it was released at a March film festival. Maybe it was just shown there, but not elsewhere yet.

The show Gibney currently stars in is Packed to the Rafters. It's a comedy-drama about a family. Gibney plays the mother in the family. Each episode is narrated by a different family member. It sounds pretty interesting.

It earned Gibney another Logie award. The show itself won the 2009 Logie award. Wow. I guess it's pretty popular and successful.

Here's a commercial for the show. I guess it's about adult kids moving back into the empty nest.

Here is a video of Gibney winning the Logie award for the show. Andrew Denton was one of the nominees too....and Adam Hills! Gibney beat both of them. Oh, and she beat Rove....and Stevie from McLeod's Daughters!

I'm so impressed with Jack. I couldn't remember Stevie's name. So, I asked my child...Who was that star of McLeod's Daughter....the one that replaced Claire? And he knew it! We didn't even watch the Stevie episodes.

This is an interesting award. It includes both females and males nominees. I'm not sure if America has that with it's Emmy Awards.

Gibney is very grateful and enthusiastic. She's lovely in that way.

Gibney has an interview with Andrew Denton. Good! I'll read that.

It seems like she was very nervous at first. That's kind of cute. I wonder if I can watch some of the show. I prefer reading Denton's interviews, and that's what I usually do. But I should probably watch a little bit of it as well.

Well, no....I guess won't be watching it. I don't see any clips of it on YouTube. It might be elsewhere, but I don't have the energy to search for it.

Gibney says the New Zealand town she moved to was Hastings. It's four hours away from Wellington. Why would Lord Wiki say she had lived in Wellington? Well, maybe she moved there eventually. I'll keep reading.

In hastings she ate feijoa ice-cream. A feijoa is a kind of fruit. I'm not sure I've heard of it. I bet Jack would love to try the ice-cream. He loves trying exotic flavors.

She moved about forty times when she was a child. So I guess it's likely that she at one time moved to Wellington.

She says the reason they moved a lot was that her dad was an alcoholic. He couldn't hold down a job. They went from one rental place to another.

Denton asks what it was like living with an alcoholic father. She says she thought it was fairly normal. I think she thought it was the type of life most kids live. In some ways, she was kind of right. Many children do live with alcoholic parents. It's awfully common.

It sounds like her mother worked hard to shield her children from the negative stuff. From what Gibney says, it reminds me a little bit of the father in Life is Beautiful.

Her father was pretty awful, though. He'd beat her mother. At one time, he gave her bruises that lasted six months. Wow.

Gibney quit school when she was fifteen. She started working for a whole sale jewelery place. Then when she was sixteen, her dad lost his leg. Her mother asked if Gibney would take care of him a bit. She did. He had stopped drinking by then, and they had a few bonding moments. Then he died.

Denton asked Gibney why her dad lost his leg. She says he had some disease called polycythemia. Her grandma lost two legs from it, and her uncle lost a leg as well. It's caused from drinking and smoking. I wonder if there's a genetic component as well.

Lord Wiki says it involves an overproduction of red blood cells.

Gibney says her childhood experiences have made her passionate about domestic violence...well, helping those who are victims of it.

She says she's gone through therapy for her experiences. There have been times in her life where she's had difficulty with it.

She says she has certain behavior/personality patterns. I guess the therapy has helped her deal with it.

One problem she has is jealousy. I get jealous a lot too, but I've had no domestic violence in my past. So I wonder where my jealousy comes from.

Gibney has never had an acting lesson. That's pretty interesting.

It sounds like Gibney is pretty religious/spiritual. She has strong faith in God.

She says when she was seventeen her brother had a brain tumor. It was a sad situation. His wife was pregnant with their first child. The family all prayed. The brother survived. I guess he's still alive today. He has more brain tumors, but I guess they're not killing him.

I think she's trying to say that it was all a miracle, and it helped her believe in God.

My sister had a brain injury. We all prayed for her. We had people praying left and right....from various religions. She survived. She had a miraculous recovery.

Does that prove to me there's a God? Does that prove to me that God is good? Well, what if she DIDN'T survive? I think some people have such a conditional love for God. If things go well, they love and believe. If things go wrong, they stop believing.

What does it mean when prayers are NOT answered?

Why is a happy ending proof of God's glory?

Why does a sad ending justify anger and disbelief?

I really don't know.....

I didn't stop believing in God until years after my sister's accident. And it really had nothing to do with what happened to her. I just slowly let go of the whole God concept.

I do have faith in other spiritual things. I do question my beliefs sometimes. I have doubts, but I don't think they're dependent on whether life is going well or bad. If someone I love gets sick, I think of it as either some kind of scientific-based random occurrence, or some kind of test....maybe something that's just meant to be.

If we believe God, the angels, or whatever, prove their love and existence to us by performing miracles, then what does that say for the families who don't have a happy ending?

Gibney has problems with panic attacks. I'm not sure if I've ever had one of those....I don't think so. I sometimes have something yucky that happens when I take short naps during the day. I wake up feeling horrible....I have these horrible morbid thoughts. It's like I wake up and suddenly think I'm going to die someday! I don't want to die! Then sometimes it's about something happening to Jack. When I was in college, they involved a fear of my mom dying. Anyway, I panic in these episodes. So I guess it's KIND of a panic attack. Maybe?

Here's a recent article about Gibney in the Daily Telegraph. The article says Packed to the Rafters is Australia's most-loved show. Is that true, or a hyperbole? Do any of you Australian people watch it? I feel out of the loop, because I've never heard of it. Every time, I feel I've succeeded in knowing EVERY little detail about Australia, something major comes along to smash my delusion. How unfair is that!

On the surface, the show reminds me of Party of Five. It kind of has that feel to it...I mean from what I've seen on YouTube.

The article talks about Gibney's psychological problems. In the Denton interview, it seemed like they talked about it in a rather light-hearted way. At least it seems that way from the transcript. But it seems like Denton makes jokes, they both laugh, etc. In this article, it seems much more serious. They say she was afraid to leave the house, and had severe depression.

The article says Such was Gibney's early lack of self-belief that even after she moved to Australia and became a sought-after star in her early twenties, she kept waiting to be outed as a fake.

Oh, that's very common with actors and actresses. I think I've seen it mentioned in almost every actor autobiography I've read. I'm not sure it has anything really to do with her rough childhood.

The article says Gibney's panic attacks ended after her son was born. Well, that's good! I would think motherhood would bring more panic attacks. I guess maybe her therapy helped her.

It sounds like a Gibney overcame a rough childhood, and she's very grateful to the therapist that helped her. But the stuff she talks about....jealousy, panic attacks, insecurity, depression. I'm not sure if that can all be blamed on her childhood. I think it's common to a LOT of people. I don't know what I'm trying to say here. Let me try....

I think she had this very traumatic childhood. Almost all of us have some family dysfunction. But from what I read, Gibney's family had more problems than the typical family. Her childhood seems especially rough. Yet her psychological issues seem very average. She reminds me of many people I know....including myself. So maybe I feel that, for her circumstances, Gibney came out pretty well.

She seems like a very strong person to me. Despite some of her childhood shit, she seems no more damaged than the average human-being.


Read my online novel: The Dead are Online