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EXCLUSIVE Insiders reveal ALL the gossip and drama from Justin Hemmes' exclusive Silver Party: Which guests were seen getting cosy, who was banished to 'social Siberia' - and why you didn't see THAT scandalous dress on the red carpet

EXCLUSIVE Insiders reveal ALL the gossip and drama from Justin Hemmes' exclusive Silver Party: Which guests were seen getting cosy, who was banished to 'social Siberia' - and why you didn't see THAT scandalous dress on the red carpet

Daily Mail​12-05-2025

Long hailed as a crown jewel of Sydney's social calendar, the Silver Party is more than a prestigious charity gala - it's the grandest stage for the city's most glamorous to see and be seen, swap gossip, and vie for best dressed.
On Saturday night, more than 300 guests gathered at the Vaucluse mansion of hospitality billionaire Justin Hemmes for the annual fundraiser which this year had a 'rock royalty' theme.

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Hugh Jackman gives small Melbourne theatre huge celebrity endorsement
Hugh Jackman gives small Melbourne theatre huge celebrity endorsement

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Hugh Jackman gives small Melbourne theatre huge celebrity endorsement

Hugh Jackman has given a huge shout out to a little local theatre in regional Victoria. The Aussie A-lister, 56, took to his Instagram Stories on Saturday to drum up support for his old drama school mate, Mark Constable, who is putting on an Australian comedy in Macdeon. 'I recommend you go and check out this gem of a play. It's an Aussie play. 'For people who are in Australia, or wherever you are in the world, if you want to go down to Mount Macedon just outside Melbourne - there is an incredible little theatre called the Mountview theatre,' Hugh said. 'And they are doing a production of the Appleton Ladies Potato Race. It's a gem of a play. It will move you. It will make you laugh. You will laugh your heads off. 'It's directed by a great mate of mine that I went to drama school with, Mark Constable, who is awesome. He told me to say he's a genius. He's great.' The Aussie A-lister, 56, took to his Instagram Stories on Saturday to drum up support for his old drama school mate, Mark Constable, who is putting on an Australian comedy 'The Appleton Ladies Potato Race' at the Mountview Theatre in Macedon from June 13 'It's at a regional theatre and it's going to be phenomenal,' the Wolverine star continued in his glowing endorsement. The Mountview theatre has a capacity of 100 and the play will run for three weekends from June 13 to June 29. 'Although I have a funny feeling it may get extended,' Hugh said. 'When Penny Anderson, the town's new GP, returns to her childhood home of Appleton, she's shocked to find the local potato race prize still sits at $1000 for men and just $200 for women,' a synopsis for the play reads. 'Determined to change this outdated tradition, she sets out on a mission to even the playing field. But not everyone is on board, especially the no-nonsense Bev, who sees Penny as another city slicker disrupting country ways.' Margot Knight, Shayne Francis, Sharnie Page, Sophie Cleary and Sheila Kumar star in the 'big-hearted Australian comedy.' Hugh, who is currently starring in his one-man live show at Radio City and his new off-Broadway play 'Sexual Misconduct of the Middle Classes', recently appeared on Good Morning America to talk about why he returned to the stage. 'I felt I wasn't doing the thing I loved to do enough,' he revealed. 'I wasn't acting enough. I love the theatre. I think it should be available for everyone.' 'Sometimes I feel more relaxed on stage than I do in life,' Hugh admitted during his sit down interview. 'I don't know what it is. I'm living the dream.' In Sexual Misconduct of the Middle Classes, Hugh engages in multiple steamy make-out sessions with his 25-year-old co-star, Ella Beatty. The pair were seen larking around in rehearsals this week. Hugh had his arm wrapped around the budding actress, who is the daughter of Hollywood legend Warren Beatty, and he beamed from ear to ear as he gave the camera a thumbs up. It follows reports that Hugh is turning up the heat on stage - as he continues to date his new girlfriend, Broadway actress Sutton Foster. Foster, 50, even made a backstage appearance this week, trying to quiet whispers that their new relationship has been on shaky ground since going public in January. But the show's raunchy moments can't be easy to watch for Foster, who reportedly struck up an offstage relationship with the Greatest Showman star while playing his love interest onstage. Adding more fuel to the gossip mill, fresh photos of the pair holding hands during the curtain call have sent tongues wagging. Offstage, Hugh's own split from Deborra-Lee Furness seems to mirror the emotional storm The two beamed with pride, looking completely at ease with the intimate gesture. It's not just the steamy make-out scenes turning up the heat — Hugh also unleashes a barrage of expletives, including blunt, graphic lines about a college cheerleader 'sucking his c***' Offstage, Hugh's own split from Deborra-Lee Furness seems to mirror the emotional storm. The actor, who has only been married once, announced his split from Deborra-Lee Furness, 69, in September 2023 after 27 years of marriage. In a joint statement at the time, they said they were 'shifting' and had decided to 'separate to pursue our individual growth.' The couple share two adopted children, Oscar, 24, and Ava, 19. Hugh and Sutton's relationship reportedly overlapped with the end of his marriage.

What It Feels Like for a Girl to Turnstile : the week in rave reviews
What It Feels Like for a Girl to Turnstile : the week in rave reviews

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

What It Feels Like for a Girl to Turnstile : the week in rave reviews

BBC iPlayer; full series available Summed up in a sentence The wild, witty tale of a 00s Nottinghamshire adolescence that leaps from sex work to drug-fuelled nights of hedonism, adapted from trans writer Paris Lees' autobiography. What our reviewer said 'A resolutely unsentimental tale of a chaotic, morally ambiguous period of transition. It's certainly a wild ride.' Rachel Aroesti Read the full review Further reading 'All of us felt like we had touched gold': What It Feels Like for a Girl, the BBC's electric coming-of-age tale Netflix; all episodes available Summed up in a sentence A tense, twisty adaptation of an Australian crime novel, set against the tale of the only survivor of a disaster moving back to his rage- and sorrow-filled small town home after 15 years of self-imposed exile. What our reviewer said 'A study in how raw grief and festering resentment warp everything – and how surviving a tragedy rarely means getting away unscathed.' Lucy Mangan Read the full review Apple TV+; episodes weekly Summed up in a sentence Owen Wilson charms as a washed-up golfer turned coach in a redemptive sporting tale that hopes to be the Ted Lasso of hitting balls with metal sticks. What our reviewer said 'It's a pleasant, feelgood half-hour every time. It never outstays its welcome, everyone puts in a solid performance and Wilson brings every ounce of energy he has to every scene he's in.' Lucy Mangan Read the full review Further reading Owen Wilson's charmingly funny golf drama is as feelgood as Ted Lasso BBC iPlayer; full series available Summed up in a sentence A profile of the terrorist who was once the most wanted man in the world, featuring an exclusive phone interview with him from prison – in which he inadvertently shatters his mystique. What our reviewer said 'This guy has been romanticised as international terrorism's answer to James Bond – a man of mystery as suave as he is elusive. Close up, he gives off loner vibes, and the photos we see of his various guises don't burnish his cool-villain credentials, either: he almost always looks like a beady uncle whom female guests have to avoid at a wedding disco.' Jack Seale Read the full review BBC iPlayer; full series available Summed up in a sentence A thoughtful, sober documentary about a staggering football stadium fire, to mark 40 years since the tragedy unfolded. What our reviewer said 'Perhaps the film's most memorable sequence arrives when we watch television coverage of the game, which soon becomes a report on the fire. The shortness of the time that elapses between minor incident and major disaster is wholly terrifying.' Jack Seale Read the full review Further reading: 'The whole city was touched': Bradford marks 40 years since the Valley Parade fire In cinemas now Summed up in a sentence In a spinoff from the John Wick franchise, Ana de Armas is a feisty assassin trained in ballet and martial arts, combining delicacy and violence in her quest for vengeance. What our reviewer said 'De Armas carries off the essential silliness of Ballerina and, after her performance as Paloma in No Time to Die opposite Daniel Craig's 007, she proves again she can do action, in both couture and daytime wear.' Peter Bradshaw Read the full review In cinemas now Summed up in a sentence Joachim Lang's bleak film shows a preening Goebbels and a careworn Hitler as they battle to convince the German public, and themselves, they will win the war. What our reviewer said 'In its subversive, austerely satirical way, the film feels almost like a B-side to Oliver Hirschbiegel's Downfall from 2004, and Lang has perhaps even inhaled, just a little, the numberless internet parody memes that Downfall inspired, with English subtitles reinterpreting Hitler's impotent rage.' Peter Bradshaw Read the full review In cinemas now Summed up in a sentence Documentary on Columbia pro-Palestine student protests of April 2024, is fascinating but much has been superseded by the arrest of student organiser Mahmoud Khalil after the re-election of Trump. What our reviewer said 'Khalil is smilingly interviewed at the end, stating his belief that this cause is approaching success. But that interview was presumably filmed before the new brutality of the Trump administration and the outrageous arrest of Khalil, who is now held in a Louisiana jail, and was only recently allowed to see his infant son.' Peter Bradshaw Read the full review In cinemas now Summed up in a sentence Isabelle Huppert gives the performance of her career in Michael Haneke's 2001 tale of a sado-masochistic music professor, rereleased as part of a Haneke retrospective. What our reviewer said 'There can be no doubt of Haneke's extraordinary ability to generate scenes of nerve-jangling disquiet and intimately unpleasant trauma. He can simply put you in a place you don't want to be, and keep you there.' Peter Bradshaw Further reading No pain no gain: director Michael Haneke talks sadomasochism with Stuart Jeffries Read the full review Prime Video; available now Summed up in a sentence Cillian Murphy plays a man who witnesses Ireland's church's abusive workhouses for unwed mothers in a piercingly painful Magdalene Laundries drama. What our reviewer said 'Murphy shows us once again his sightless stare of fear and pain, as the witness to something terrible not just in the real world but within himself.' Peter Bradshaw Read the full review Review by Olivia Laing Summed up in a sentence The enigmatic novelist reconsidered. What our reviewer said 'Brilliant, beautiful and disinclined to conceal her talent or ambition, Spark was much desired and much despised in London.' Read the full review Review by Gaby Hinsliff Summed up in a sentence The former New Zealand PM takes us behind the scenes of her years in office. What our reviewer said 'Ardern is a disarmingly likable, warm and funny narrator, as gloriously informal on the page as she seems in person.' 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Bindi Irwin reveals what she really thinks about brother Robert's shirtless thirst traps: 'It is rough'
Bindi Irwin reveals what she really thinks about brother Robert's shirtless thirst traps: 'It is rough'

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bindi Irwin reveals what she really thinks about brother Robert's shirtless thirst traps: 'It is rough'

Bindi Irwin has opened up about how she really feels when she sees her brother Robert participate in shirtless thirst traps online. The Wildlife Warrior, 26, said she 'can't unsee' her brother, 21, flaunting his toned torso in his recent Bondi commercial and Dancing With The Stars US announcement. However, during an appearance on the podcast Not Gonna Lie with Kylie Kelce on Friday, she went on to say she is 'proud' of Robert for all he has accomplished. 'There are some things as his sister that I can't just unsee. Because when he did the Dancing [With The Stars] announcement, he was also just shirtless,' she said. 'He recently did his Bonds commercial where he was just in his underwear. It is rough,' she added with a laugh. 'I really want to be supportive. I really am so proud of him. He is taking the message of conservation to new heights.' Bindi went on to say it is 'wonderful and extraordinary' to watch Robert 'shine' as he grabs people's attention and 'then pivots' them toward wildlife conservation. However, she added: 'Do I get a little bit scared of the girls and women and some guys that are very intense? It can be a lot.' It comes after Robert reacted to Aussie mums checking out his sultry Bonds underwear campaign which went viral earlier this year. 'It was different and pretty nerve-racking but having wild animals part of it, made it a lot more chill for me,' he said during an interview on the Today Show on Thursday. Robert explained he aims to promote conservation and he enjoys raising awareness in a variety of ways. '[The shoot] exemplified that spirit of "even in your undies, Aussies are as cool as a cucumber",' he added. He then joked the shoot was 'scarier than handling any crocodile'. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Not Gonna Lie with Kylie Kelce (@nglwithkylie) The internet went wild over images of Robert posing shirtless in Bonds underwear —flaunting his ripped torso while he cuddled up to native animals including a snake. Robert recently insisted the shoot was never about vanity, and everything he does comes back to one thing: his passion for conservation. 'I really thought in modelling Bonds underwear or doing Dancing With The Stars, that sort of thing, I could bring in a whole new audience to listen to my conservation message,' he told US Weekly. And he's sticking to that plan as just weeks ago, he announced he'd joined the cast of the US version of Dancing With The Stars, once again showing off his buff bod while cradling a snake for the promo. 'That's how I feel comfortable. That's who I am,' he said. 'It's all about this mission and I've got a real sense of purpose and passion. I got to achieve that. 'I definitely feel like I'm really lucky that now I've got a whole new audience that I can reach and hopefully just put out a bit of positivity and hopefully say, "Life's for living at 100."'

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