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You're going to LOVE Teresa Palmer's new TV project Mix Tape

You're going to LOVE Teresa Palmer's new TV project Mix Tape

Perth Now9 hours ago

There's busy. And then there's Teresa Palmer busy.
The actor has an easy, breezy air about her that belies the fact she's got enough going on to make your head spin: back-to-back projects for two years, including working with Ryan Gosling, Emily Blunt, Russell Crowe and Liam Neeson, all while parenting five children and this year, balancing the demands of pregnancy.
Palmer is the first to admit she made a conscious decision to 'bust my balls' and go at breakneck speed, so she can hit the brakes hard when her next child is born later this year.
'I was like, 'alright, I am just going to work back-to-back-to-back so that we can have another baby, and I can take time off, and still have stuff coming out,' she explains.
'But I have also been very selective with the projects I take — I won't take just anything.'
There have been movies (Bruna Papandrea's Addition, The Fall Guy with Gosling and Blunt) and TV series (The Last Anniversary and The Clearing, with Miranda Otto), with more to come this year (action-thriller Bear Country with Crowe and the black comedy heist movie 4 Kids Walk Into A Bank with Neeson). Teresa Palmer announces she is expecting another baby, surrounded by her four children. Credit: @teresapalmer
While Palmer agrees it was a lot, it was a means to an end that she's looking forward to.
'I knew that I was in this season of (work), so it was like, 'Alright, for the next 18 months, I am going to bust my balls and then I can have this baby, and take a breath, and focus on being a parent, and taking my kids to school every day,' she says.
The next cab off the rank is her role in the Binge adaptation of Jane Sanderson's novel Mix Tape: a four-part miniseries about the teenage romance of Daniel and Alison in the 1980s, then picking up with them again as adults, played by Jim Sturgess and Palmer, living on opposite sides of the world.
As kids, the young friends, who live in Sheffield in the north of England, fall in love and connect through the making of mix tapes. After a long period of estrangement, they find a way back to one another through music once more. Needless to say, the series boasts a killer late-80s soundtrack.
It struck a chord when it made its debut at SXSW Film and TV Festival in Texas earlier this year, winning the coveted Audience Award in the TV Spotlight category.
'I am not surprised that people connect with it, because it's so nostalgic,' Palmer says. 'I think we dream of a simpler time, when we were making our lovers mix tapes, and burning CDs.
'It's that 'first love' feeling and there's nothing more intoxicating and more beautiful than those butterflies, and that intensity.' Teresa Palmer is starring alongside Jim Sturgess in Mix Tape, coming to Binge. Credit: Supplied
Though much younger than the characters in the book — Palmer was born in 1986, three years before the series is set — Palmer still remembers playing mix tapes in her mum's Holden Barina before graduating to CDs, and her own car, a few years later.
'I had an external plug-in CD player from Cash Converters and a $40 Cash Converter sub-woofer,' she laughs. 'The car was a bright yellow Hyundai Accent, 2002, and I would crank Dr Dre, Eminem, and Snoop Dog with the windows down and drive up to my private Catholic school.'
It's hard to imagine that Palmer — esteemed actress, podcaster, earth mother, Byron Bay resident and co-founder of the parenting blog Your Zen Mama — was ever a rebellious schoolgirl blasting rap music out of the windows of a canary-coloured car.
But if there is one thing Palmer insists upon, it's being true to herself.
Not long ago, she and her husband, director Mark Webber, relocated to Byron Bay, after splitting their time between Palmer's hometown of Adelaide and Los Angeles, where Webber's son is based. They're now in the process of planning their forever home on rural acreage outside of the town.
Palmer says she owes her sanity these past few years to her steadfast commitment to herself to always 'keep things real' as a public figure, as she navigates motherhood and her acting career.
She's always careful to be authentic online, sharing the grief of a miscarriage last year and intimate stories of her pregnancies through her blog.
'I would never be able to do all this without being myself,' Palmer explains. 'I am just so grateful, and so lucky that I am living this beautiful, dream life. But if I suddenly start being a version of myself online, and people start to be in a state of comparison with me, I just . . . I can't. I have just got to keep it real. Because I would go crazy if I wasn't like that.' Teresa Palmer, styled by Irene Tsolakas. Teresa wears: Common Hours top and Golden Goose jeans. Credit: JOHN TSIAVIS Binge
But if Palmer has felt like she was in the eye of the storm the past couple of years, she's about to take that to a much more literal place — she's taking her family on a five-week caravan trip across the US, including her 'bucket list' destination of Tornado Alley.
'We are taking all the kids.' she says with a laugh. 'My stepson Isaac (who lives in America with his mother, actor and director Frankie Shaw) finished year 11 today, so he is coming with us.
'We'll all be in a 30-foot RV that my husband drives, going up through Texas, staying with the Van Der Beeks.'
And yes, the Van Der Beeks that Palmer speaks of are the family of Dawson's Creek star James Van Der Beek, who has six children with wife Kimberly Brook. The older and younger versions of Alison and Daniel: (l-r) Teresa Palmer, Jim Sturgess, Rory Walton-Smith and Florence Hunt. Credit: Supplied Leanne Sullivan
But 11 kids running around is not even where the chaos ends, Palmer laughs, because then they are driving north through the centre of North America known for tornadoes.
'I wanted to do Tornado Alley during tornado season; me and my son Forest are obsessed with Twister, and we watch Storm Stories. I think we have watched every single tornado documentary that has ever been released.
'It's our thing that we do together and he and I secretly want to see one, but also — not.'
Palmer admits her husband isn't fully on board.
'(He) is like, 'Do you want to be Helen Hunt (from Twister) or something?'' she says. 'I said, 'I just want to experience real weather', and Mark is like, 'Wow, that is some weird pregnancy craving'.'
But when this flurry of work is finished, the bucket list item is ticked, the caravan is stowed and Palmer returns home to Byron Bay with her family, a new, slower pace awaits. And she's ready for that season, too.

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You're going to LOVE Teresa Palmer's new TV project Mix Tape
You're going to LOVE Teresa Palmer's new TV project Mix Tape

Perth Now

time9 hours ago

  • Perth Now

You're going to LOVE Teresa Palmer's new TV project Mix Tape

There's busy. And then there's Teresa Palmer busy. The actor has an easy, breezy air about her that belies the fact she's got enough going on to make your head spin: back-to-back projects for two years, including working with Ryan Gosling, Emily Blunt, Russell Crowe and Liam Neeson, all while parenting five children and this year, balancing the demands of pregnancy. Palmer is the first to admit she made a conscious decision to 'bust my balls' and go at breakneck speed, so she can hit the brakes hard when her next child is born later this year. 'I was like, 'alright, I am just going to work back-to-back-to-back so that we can have another baby, and I can take time off, and still have stuff coming out,' she explains. 'But I have also been very selective with the projects I take — I won't take just anything.' There have been movies (Bruna Papandrea's Addition, The Fall Guy with Gosling and Blunt) and TV series (The Last Anniversary and The Clearing, with Miranda Otto), with more to come this year (action-thriller Bear Country with Crowe and the black comedy heist movie 4 Kids Walk Into A Bank with Neeson). Teresa Palmer announces she is expecting another baby, surrounded by her four children. Credit: @teresapalmer While Palmer agrees it was a lot, it was a means to an end that she's looking forward to. 'I knew that I was in this season of (work), so it was like, 'Alright, for the next 18 months, I am going to bust my balls and then I can have this baby, and take a breath, and focus on being a parent, and taking my kids to school every day,' she says. The next cab off the rank is her role in the Binge adaptation of Jane Sanderson's novel Mix Tape: a four-part miniseries about the teenage romance of Daniel and Alison in the 1980s, then picking up with them again as adults, played by Jim Sturgess and Palmer, living on opposite sides of the world. As kids, the young friends, who live in Sheffield in the north of England, fall in love and connect through the making of mix tapes. After a long period of estrangement, they find a way back to one another through music once more. Needless to say, the series boasts a killer late-80s soundtrack. It struck a chord when it made its debut at SXSW Film and TV Festival in Texas earlier this year, winning the coveted Audience Award in the TV Spotlight category. 'I am not surprised that people connect with it, because it's so nostalgic,' Palmer says. 'I think we dream of a simpler time, when we were making our lovers mix tapes, and burning CDs. 'It's that 'first love' feeling and there's nothing more intoxicating and more beautiful than those butterflies, and that intensity.' Teresa Palmer is starring alongside Jim Sturgess in Mix Tape, coming to Binge. Credit: Supplied Though much younger than the characters in the book — Palmer was born in 1986, three years before the series is set — Palmer still remembers playing mix tapes in her mum's Holden Barina before graduating to CDs, and her own car, a few years later. 'I had an external plug-in CD player from Cash Converters and a $40 Cash Converter sub-woofer,' she laughs. 'The car was a bright yellow Hyundai Accent, 2002, and I would crank Dr Dre, Eminem, and Snoop Dog with the windows down and drive up to my private Catholic school.' It's hard to imagine that Palmer — esteemed actress, podcaster, earth mother, Byron Bay resident and co-founder of the parenting blog Your Zen Mama — was ever a rebellious schoolgirl blasting rap music out of the windows of a canary-coloured car. But if there is one thing Palmer insists upon, it's being true to herself. Not long ago, she and her husband, director Mark Webber, relocated to Byron Bay, after splitting their time between Palmer's hometown of Adelaide and Los Angeles, where Webber's son is based. They're now in the process of planning their forever home on rural acreage outside of the town. Palmer says she owes her sanity these past few years to her steadfast commitment to herself to always 'keep things real' as a public figure, as she navigates motherhood and her acting career. She's always careful to be authentic online, sharing the grief of a miscarriage last year and intimate stories of her pregnancies through her blog. 'I would never be able to do all this without being myself,' Palmer explains. 'I am just so grateful, and so lucky that I am living this beautiful, dream life. But if I suddenly start being a version of myself online, and people start to be in a state of comparison with me, I just . . . I can't. I have just got to keep it real. Because I would go crazy if I wasn't like that.' Teresa Palmer, styled by Irene Tsolakas. Teresa wears: Common Hours top and Golden Goose jeans. Credit: JOHN TSIAVIS Binge But if Palmer has felt like she was in the eye of the storm the past couple of years, she's about to take that to a much more literal place — she's taking her family on a five-week caravan trip across the US, including her 'bucket list' destination of Tornado Alley. 'We are taking all the kids.' she says with a laugh. 'My stepson Isaac (who lives in America with his mother, actor and director Frankie Shaw) finished year 11 today, so he is coming with us. 'We'll all be in a 30-foot RV that my husband drives, going up through Texas, staying with the Van Der Beeks.' And yes, the Van Der Beeks that Palmer speaks of are the family of Dawson's Creek star James Van Der Beek, who has six children with wife Kimberly Brook. The older and younger versions of Alison and Daniel: (l-r) Teresa Palmer, Jim Sturgess, Rory Walton-Smith and Florence Hunt. Credit: Supplied Leanne Sullivan But 11 kids running around is not even where the chaos ends, Palmer laughs, because then they are driving north through the centre of North America known for tornadoes. 'I wanted to do Tornado Alley during tornado season; me and my son Forest are obsessed with Twister, and we watch Storm Stories. I think we have watched every single tornado documentary that has ever been released. 'It's our thing that we do together and he and I secretly want to see one, but also — not.' Palmer admits her husband isn't fully on board. '(He) is like, 'Do you want to be Helen Hunt (from Twister) or something?'' she says. 'I said, 'I just want to experience real weather', and Mark is like, 'Wow, that is some weird pregnancy craving'.' But when this flurry of work is finished, the bucket list item is ticked, the caravan is stowed and Palmer returns home to Byron Bay with her family, a new, slower pace awaits. And she's ready for that season, too.

What to Watch: Mix Tape, Ocean With David Attenborough, Play School, Fubar and The Inspired Unemployed
What to Watch: Mix Tape, Ocean With David Attenborough, Play School, Fubar and The Inspired Unemployed

West Australian

timea day ago

  • West Australian

What to Watch: Mix Tape, Ocean With David Attenborough, Play School, Fubar and The Inspired Unemployed

Binge is fast carving a place for itself as the go-to for reliably excellent locally produced series. This is a good thing: they recently lost their HBO slate to new streaming rival Max, so investing locally is probably a solid strategy going forward. In recent years Binge has given us some ripper series, including The Twelve, Love Me and Colin From Accounts. Now they're blessing us with this great four-part drama, based on the acclaimed novel by Jane Sanderson. Told through dual timelines, it charts the teen love story of school friends Alison and Daniel (Florence Hunt and Rory Walton-Smith), living in Sheffield, England, in 1989, who fall in love and exchange mix tapes, which provide the musical backdrop to this beautifully realised series. Alison and Daniel's story picks up again in 2015, and by this stage the pair (now played by Teresa Palmer and Jim Sturgess) are long estranged, and living very different lives to their teen selves. Daniel is a music critic, still living in his hometown, and Alison is on the other side of the world in Sydney, the wife of an accomplished surgeon (played by Ben Lawson) — neither is wholly satisfied with where they've landed. They reconnect again, once more through music, and their stories pick up where they left off. But there's been a whole life lived between the stories, and the series asks whether lost love can ever really be reclaimed, and whether 'the road not taken' really is the better one. This is beautifully shot, with a great script and superb performances, especially from Bridgerton's Hunt and newcomer Walton-Smith, who infuse their portrayals with just the right amount of teen intensity and crackling tension. I adored this sweetly nostalgic series. You won't want to miss it. 'If we save the sea, we save our world,' says David Attenborough in the trailer for his latest landmark documentary special, which highlights the importance of the world's vast oceans and the part we all have to play in ensuring they remain healthy and viable. It's a marvel that Attenborough, now aged 99, is still involving himself with these types of programs. How blessed we are to still be hearing his voice. A cinematic journey into the deep. This one's for all of you with teen boys at home: chances are they'll be tuning in to the new season, which sees the four mates up to their old tricks, thriving in the chaos they create through their attempts to one-up each other in the embarrassment stakes. Real talk: this show is not for everyone, but if you like puerile humour and rapscallion hijinks (see also: teenage boys), then you're in the right place. Not for the faint of heart. There's something so wholesome about Play School — I miss the time I spent watching it daily with my little one. This week sees the start of a new spin-off, this one all about 'the beauty and diversity of Australia'. Different places are explored through the premise that regular presenter Teo is off having adventures, posting back parcels and videos showcasing where he's been. For curious little minds. He promised us he'd be back, and Arnold Schwarzenegger is nothing if not a man of his word. He's returning for another season of his surprisingly funny comedy, which has him star as an ageing CIA operative who realises his daughter, played by Monica Barbaro, is also working for his organisation. For years they've both been living double lives, unaware of each other's professions — great premise, no? This season they're joined by The Matrix's Carrie-Anne Moss. Count us in!

Filled with nostalgia and great music, this Gen X romantic drama hits the right notes
Filled with nostalgia and great music, this Gen X romantic drama hits the right notes

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Filled with nostalgia and great music, this Gen X romantic drama hits the right notes

Mix Tape ★★★ Mix Tape is all about the wonder. First love, favourite songs and inescapable heartbreak are the building blocks of this Irish-Australian romantic drama. Ricocheting between past and present, the teenage protagonists and their middle-aged successors, these four hour-long episodes have an inexorable momentum. It's not subtle, but it's effective. Yes, the plot forcefully pushes these characters into bitter circumstances, but there's also a deeper recognition that sometimes a gesture, or an unspoken decision, or a great song, can add more than carefully crafted detail. Sheffield, England, 1989: lanky teen Dan O'Toole (Rory Walton-Smith) sights high school classmate Alison Connor (Florence Hunt) across the room at a house party. New Order's Bizarre Love Triangle is playing: 'I feel shot right through with a bolt of blue.' Cut to the present day and Dan (Jim Sturgess) is a music journalist, still based in Sheffield and married with a son to Katja (Sara Soulie), while Alison (Teresa Palmer) is getting far more sunshine in Sydney, mother of two daughters and married to surgeon Michael (Ben Lawson). Why aren't they together? When will they get back together? Joy Division's Love Will Tear Us Apart is obviously cued up, but this adaptation of Jane Sanderson's 2020 novel knows, as does the viewer, that Dan and Alison are meant to be together, both as a means of healing and a wellspring of happiness. Their children are mostly leaving home and their partners are slightly off – the emphasis Michael puts on the 'my' in 'you're my wife' lingers uneasily. Loading 'You never forget the boy who makes you your first mix-tape,' Alison tells her daughter, Stella (Julia Savage), which means more once Alison explains to her Spotify-era child what a mix-tape is. Irish writer Jo Spain (Harry Wild) and Australian director Lucy Gaffy (Irreverent) treat love and longing as a magnetic force. It draws the teenagers together, with montages and shared reveries that come with an impeccable soundtrack – Psychedelic Furs, The Church, The Cure – and immaculate production design for the adolescent bedrooms.

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