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Asher Keddie in her producing era but isn't quitting acting

Asher Keddie in her producing era but isn't quitting acting

Perth Now14-05-2025
When watching a comedy movie or TV show, you may wonder if the actors struggle with trying not to crack up when reciting their lines on set.
For one of Australia's most adored actors Asher Keddie, becoming hysterical mid-line is something she is very good at.
These latest crack-ups came when playing Evelyn Jones, the lead character in Strife, which follows the modern imperfect woman and publisher on her journey from a blogger to a force in digital media with her startup Eve Life.
After the first season in 2023 became Binge's biggest original series premiere of all time, the second season premiered on May 8 and sees Keddie's character exploring the complexities of womanhood, relationships, dealing with the threat of a new rival women's website, and tackling nasty trolls — all the while keeping up just the right level of lighthearted gags.
'This is the sort of show that incites so much mischief and laughter,' Keddie says on a phone call from Sydney.
'The whole ensemble is always engaged in shenanigans and humour and, you know, so much fun behind the scenes. It's about creating a certain level of hysteria when you're doing comedy drama, I think.'
It's something the actor, who also serves as executive producer on the show, always encourages 'to the point of being probably the most unprofessional of the lot of them'.
'I'm terrible when it comes to hysterical laughing in the middle of a scene,' she says.
'It's not my strong point, put it that way. if I'm amused by something, I find it difficult not to respond in the moment, and this cast is incredibly amusing, so we've had such fun together.' Asher Keddie as Evelyn Jones. Credit: John Platt
In among the comedy, of course, is the importance of telling authentic female stories.
After all, the series is a fictionalised adaptation of Mia Freedman's 2017 memoir Work Strife Balance, about her experience of leaving magazines to launch women's lifestyle website Mamamia.
'It was just so incredible listening to the stories at the beginning that Mia had of her experiences throughout, and the challenge of presenting her ideas online and putting them out there and using her voice no matter what the consequences were, and sometimes the consequences in the cost to her were huge,' Keddie says.
'We explore in the second series trolling, which became a really big thing around the time that Mia started up Mamamia, so that's a really interesting storyline.'
The Offspring star says viewers need to see women's vulnerabilities on screen.
'What I want to see is not to apologise for getting it wrong and failing sometimes and not being able to achieve that kind of elusive perfection that we put on ourselves all the time,' she says.
'I think those themes that we explore in the show, particularly in the second season, are the things that I really want to lean into as a woman and a viewer, so I'm hoping that other people feel the same way.' Asher Keddie attends the 2025 AACTA Awards. Credit: Dan Peled / Getty Images for AFI
The Melburnian reunited with Bruna Papandrea, whom she worked with for roles in Nine Perfect Strangers and The Lost Flowers Of Alice Heart, to produce the show.
Keddie found it helpful rather than challenging to be a producer as well as an actor.
'Being able to produce and being in conversation about how we can write it, how we're going to perform it, where it's gonna be, all the different millions of choices that you make on the entirety of a production, it's so involving for me that it's almost easier to be a bigger part of it in that way than it is just to deliver a performance,' she says.
Despite loving the production side of things, Keddie isn't stepping away from acting.
'Oh no, I'm not gonna give up my day job,' she says.
'I love acting. I always have. I enjoy it more now actually than ever so no, I still love what I do but I just like combining the two.'
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But landing a lead in one of Hollywood's most anticipated sequels has seen the world's entertainment media sit up and take notice. Entertainment bible US Weekly quickly published a story titled Who is Patrick Brammall? 5 Things to Know about Devil Wears Prada 2 Leading Man. (They did leave out the bit how Brammall grew up in the same suburb as another leading man, Offspring's Matt Le Nevez who used to ride the milk truck past Brammall's house. Brammall also later starred in Offspring.) Brammall grew up in Kambah and attended the local St Thomas' primary school and Marist College. He came from a family of journalists, including dad Bruce Brammall, whose jobs included working for The Canberra Times. Bruce Brammall was also one of the inaugural journalists at Rupert Murdoch's national broadsheet The Australian. A background that came in handy when Brammall played a young Murdoch in the 2013 Nine mini-series Power Games: The Packer-Murdoch War. It's almost 20 years since The Devil Wears Prada starring Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci was released in 2006. It was a hit. The film had fashion, comedy, love and delicious speculation over how much of the film was about Vogue editor Anna Wintour. It will be 20 years when its sequel, The Devil Wears Prada 2, is released in May, 2026. All the big stars are back for the sequel, with Brammall joining them as, it's speculated, Hathaway's new love interest. In real life, Brammall and wife Harriet Dyer live in the United States with their two young daughters. He also appears in the current series of the family history show Who Do You Think You Are? on SBS-TV. On that show he said, "I live overseas and have done for the last seven years or so. But I wish I was more connected to where I'm from, my family. I do feel and will always feel very Australian". And Brammall was grateful for everything. 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Canberra-born Brammall, now 49, is a respected actor and writer with a host of hit shows under his belt including A Moody Christmas, Upper Middle Bogan and Colin from Accounts, in which he stars with wife Harriet Dyer. (He's also the voice of Bandit's older brother Radley "Rad" on Bluey, which may trump everything he's done to date.) But landing a lead in one of Hollywood's most anticipated sequels has seen the world's entertainment media sit up and take notice. Entertainment bible US Weekly quickly published a story titled Who is Patrick Brammall? 5 Things to Know about Devil Wears Prada 2 Leading Man. (They did leave out the bit how Brammall grew up in the same suburb as another leading man, Offspring's Matt Le Nevez who used to ride the milk truck past Brammall's house. Brammall also later starred in Offspring.) Brammall grew up in Kambah and attended the local St Thomas' primary school and Marist College. He came from a family of journalists, including dad Bruce Brammall, whose jobs included working for The Canberra Times. Bruce Brammall was also one of the inaugural journalists at Rupert Murdoch's national broadsheet The Australian. A background that came in handy when Brammall played a young Murdoch in the 2013 Nine mini-series Power Games: The Packer-Murdoch War. It's almost 20 years since The Devil Wears Prada starring Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci was released in 2006. It was a hit. The film had fashion, comedy, love and delicious speculation over how much of the film was about Vogue editor Anna Wintour. It will be 20 years when its sequel, The Devil Wears Prada 2, is released in May, 2026. All the big stars are back for the sequel, with Brammall joining them as, it's speculated, Hathaway's new love interest. In real life, Brammall and wife Harriet Dyer live in the United States with their two young daughters. He also appears in the current series of the family history show Who Do You Think You Are? on SBS-TV. On that show he said, "I live overseas and have done for the last seven years or so. But I wish I was more connected to where I'm from, my family. I do feel and will always feel very Australian". And Brammall was grateful for everything. "I sort of can't quite believe that I've had the career so far that I've had," he said. "I certainly went for it. Like I really have worked very hard. I kind of think the important stuff is the decisions that you make in a life." Brammall also spoke on Who Do You Think You Are? about being born with the congenital condition prune belly syndrome and that there was a "pretty good chance I wasn't going to make it". But he did, thanks to his dad Bruce and, especially his mum Janice, who was his "lifeline" as a kid. "Mum and dad were the sun and moon in my life," he said. It seems the whole entertainment world is abuzz right now about the rise and rise of former Kambah kid Patrick Brammall. Photographs of Brammall filming the highly-anticipated The Devil Wears Prada 2 alongside Anne Hathaway in New York this week have set the internet alight. Canberra-born Brammall, now 49, is a respected actor and writer with a host of hit shows under his belt including A Moody Christmas, Upper Middle Bogan and Colin from Accounts, in which he stars with wife Harriet Dyer. (He's also the voice of Bandit's older brother Radley "Rad" on Bluey, which may trump everything he's done to date.) But landing a lead in one of Hollywood's most anticipated sequels has seen the world's entertainment media sit up and take notice. Entertainment bible US Weekly quickly published a story titled Who is Patrick Brammall? 5 Things to Know about Devil Wears Prada 2 Leading Man. (They did leave out the bit how Brammall grew up in the same suburb as another leading man, Offspring's Matt Le Nevez who used to ride the milk truck past Brammall's house. Brammall also later starred in Offspring.) Brammall grew up in Kambah and attended the local St Thomas' primary school and Marist College. He came from a family of journalists, including dad Bruce Brammall, whose jobs included working for The Canberra Times. Bruce Brammall was also one of the inaugural journalists at Rupert Murdoch's national broadsheet The Australian. A background that came in handy when Brammall played a young Murdoch in the 2013 Nine mini-series Power Games: The Packer-Murdoch War. It's almost 20 years since The Devil Wears Prada starring Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci was released in 2006. It was a hit. The film had fashion, comedy, love and delicious speculation over how much of the film was about Vogue editor Anna Wintour. It will be 20 years when its sequel, The Devil Wears Prada 2, is released in May, 2026. All the big stars are back for the sequel, with Brammall joining them as, it's speculated, Hathaway's new love interest. In real life, Brammall and wife Harriet Dyer live in the United States with their two young daughters. He also appears in the current series of the family history show Who Do You Think You Are? on SBS-TV. On that show he said, "I live overseas and have done for the last seven years or so. But I wish I was more connected to where I'm from, my family. I do feel and will always feel very Australian". And Brammall was grateful for everything. "I sort of can't quite believe that I've had the career so far that I've had," he said. "I certainly went for it. Like I really have worked very hard. I kind of think the important stuff is the decisions that you make in a life." Brammall also spoke on Who Do You Think You Are? about being born with the congenital condition prune belly syndrome and that there was a "pretty good chance I wasn't going to make it". But he did, thanks to his dad Bruce and, especially his mum Janice, who was his "lifeline" as a kid. "Mum and dad were the sun and moon in my life," he said.

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