logo
Hollywood star who has been calling America home for the last 19 years emerges in Sydney - as the heartbreaking reason for her relocation is revealed

Hollywood star who has been calling America home for the last 19 years emerges in Sydney - as the heartbreaking reason for her relocation is revealed

Daily Mail​17-07-2025
A former Home and Away star who moved to the United States almost two decades ago has been spotted back in Australia — and she is here to stay.
Tammin Sursok, who appeared on the Channel Seven soap opera from 2000 to 2004, stepped out in Sydney on Wednesday with her two daughters, Phoenix, 11, and Lennon, six, who she shares with husband Sean McEwen.
The 41-year-old actress, who will officially move back home next year, looked radiant in a long-sleeved denim jumpsuit, paired with patent leather loafers and mismatched socks, during an outing at Manly Beach on Sydney's Northern Beaches.
She paired her look with a matching denim duffel bag from Sportsgirl and finished the ensemble with black-framed sunglasses, red nail polish, and dainty gold jewellery.
Her hair was elegantly styled in loose waves, and she opted for a soft makeup palette with a nude lip.
From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop.
A former Home and Away star who moved to the United States almost two decades ago has been spotted back in Australia — and she is here to stay
The actress, who will officially move back home next year, looked radiant in a long-sleeved denim jumpsuit, paired with patent leather loafers and mismatched socks, during an outing at Manly Beach on Sydney's Northern Beaches
Tammin appeared to be having the time of her life as she joined her two young daughters at the beachside playground.
The trio played on the equipment, with the Pretty Little Liars star seen laughing on the seesaw with Lennon.
Tammin was later seen having an impromptu photoshoot, leaning against a pine tree while modelling her $40 bag.
She ensured she got the best shot as she checked each photograph and gave directions on her best angles to the photographer.
Just hours after her playdate in the park with her children, the family were seen hosting a Play-Doh x Barbie Fashion set launch.
The Sursok gang were all smiles as they rubbed shoulders with the likes of Jasmine Stefanovic while attending the Langham High Tea in Sydney.
But while Tammin has put on a brave face and kept herself busy with work, her mother Julie may have recently revealed the heartbreaking reason the actress is back home in Australia.
Daily Mail Australia understands the soap star and her family will be moving back to Australia in January 2026 to spend more time with her ageing parents, Julie and Daryl.
Daily Mail Australia understands the soap star and her family will be moving back to Australia in January 2026 to spend more time with her ageing parents, Julie and Daryl
Tammin is currently in Sydney to organise work and get schooling sorted for her daughters ahead of their relocation.
According to her mother's social media, Daryl is currently battling Alzheimer's disease.
The Sursok matriarch revealed the news in March when she shared a video montage to her Instagram account.
The clip featured several photos of Julie and Daryl cuddling up together and having fun throughout their many years as a couple.
Julie, who is a best-selling author, captioned the video with some hopeful words about the 'battle ahead'.
'Hanging onto these memories. We have a battle ahead but we are strong and positive. Things will be alright,' she wrote.
Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia, with early symptoms including memory loss that gradually worsens over time, according to Mayo Clinic.
In advanced stages, loss of brain function can cause dehydration and poor nutrition, with the worst cases resulting in death.
Alzheimer's is a biological process which begins with the appearance of a build-up of proteins in the form of amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in the brain.
Over time, brain cells begin to die and the organ shrinks.
While there is no cure, there are medicines available that can improve symptoms and slow the decline in thinking.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Major update on I'm A Celeb as ITV make decision on show's future amid talks with Aussie officials over jungle set
Major update on I'm A Celeb as ITV make decision on show's future amid talks with Aussie officials over jungle set

The Sun

time18 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Major update on I'm A Celeb as ITV make decision on show's future amid talks with Aussie officials over jungle set

ITV bosses are planning beyond the next series of I'm A Celebrity — with talks underway for another five years in the jungle after that. The unusual long-term move would take the channel's most-watched returning series up to its landmark 30th season. 4 4 Execs are now locked in negotiations with Australian authorities to secure until the year 2030 the area of jungle where they film. A TV insider told The Sun: 'ITV wouldn't commission a new series five years in advance, but the production team are planning that far ahead which is a long-term approach they haven't adopted before. 'This is not a done deal with the local authorities and negotiations have just started with officials to secure the site. "They're not taking anything for granted but are hopeful all parties involved will be able to reach some kind of agreement.' It is a sign of ITV's long-term commitment to the show, hosted by Ant & Dec. Previously only three-year deals were struck to secure the site in Murwillumbah, New South Wales. 4 4 Filming there beyond 2030 would require further negotiations with Tweed Shire Council, which must give its official blessing. Confirming talks with ITV, a council spokeswoman said: 'They will need to seek permission again – we can't give open-ended filming permissions to anyone.' I'm A Celebrity will return this autumn for the 25th series, though the line-up has yet to be unveiled. It has proved a huge hit for ITV, with DJ Tony Blackburn winning the first series in 2002. During the Covid pandemic in 2020 and 2021 it moved to Gwrych Castle in North Wales. Last year, its 24th instalment, was won by McFly's Danny Jones. It was 2024's most-watched entertainment series, averaging 9.1m viewers. ITV has been approached for comment. I'm A Celebrity - All The Winners Here's every star who has been crowned King or Queen of the Jungle to date: 2024: Danny Jones, McFly star 2023: Sam Thompson, Made in Chelsea star 2022: Jill Scott, England footballer 2021: Danny Miller, Emmerdale star 2020: Giovanna Fletcher, actress and podcaster 2019: Jacqueline Jossa, EastEnders star 2018: Harry Redknapp, England legend 2017: Georgia Toffolo, Made In Chelsea star 2016: Scarlett Moffatt, Gogglebox star 2015: Vicky Pattison, Geordie Shore star 2014: Carl Fogarty, famed racer 2013: Kian Egan, Westlife star 2012: Charlie Brooks, EastEnders actor 2011: Dougie Poynter, McFly star 2010: Stacey Solomon, X Factor star now TV personality 2009: Gino D'ACampo, TV Chef 2008: Joe Swash, TV personality 2007: Christopher Biggins, actor 2006: Matt Willis, Busted star 2005: Carol Thatcher, author and broadcaster 2004 (second series): Joe Pasquale, comedian 2004: Kerry Katona, Atomic Kitten star and reality star 2003: Phil Tufnell, England Cricketer 2002: Tony Blackburn, Radio DJ There was also an All Star series in South Africa in 2023, which was won by Myleene Klass.

I'd never wear budgie smugglers – but I did once help smuggle a budgie
I'd never wear budgie smugglers – but I did once help smuggle a budgie

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

I'd never wear budgie smugglers – but I did once help smuggle a budgie

Incredibly, given all the trouble in the world, we were short of an item or two on my BBC radio show recently. Someone suggested something about budgie smugglers coming back into fashion. Hardly very Reithian, is it? On the other hand, we all need a break from the dark stuff. And anyway, it turned out there was plenty in the budgie smugglers story with which to inform, educate and entertain our listeners. For a start, we needed to define the term. I'd been banging on about budgie smugglers on the radio all morning when I got a text from my mum demanding I explain what the devil these budgie smugglers were. In fact, she was so unfamiliar with the term that she spelt it phonetically using her Croatian keyboard, which renders it 'bađi smagles'. So, to be clear, we're talking men's swimwear, with bađi smagles being the tight, not-leaving-much-to-the-imagination style, as distinct from rather more modest swimming shorts which, mercifully, have become the norm. The tight ones had fallen out of favour but now, someone read somewhere, they were making a comeback. Eyewateringly tight swimming pants have been referred to as budgie smugglers for barely a quarter of a century, the description originating in a 1998 Australian television series called The Games, which satirised the 2000 Sydney Olympics. We can only wonder what kind of twisted mind came up with it, or indeed what kind of gentleman's arrangement they saw that looked as if there might have been a couple of budgerigars down there. I for one have never seen such a thing and certainly have no desire to. I can't get past the thought of some fella, engaged in rearranging things, inadvertently releasing a couple – or would it be three? – relieved budgies, freeing them to live better lives. If the fashion comeback is for real, it'll be good news for the Australian brand, Budgy Smuggler. Shame on them for the spelling but we'll let that pass. Their website says they are 'On a mission to free the thighs of the world'. That's an interestingly demure take on the purpose of their gear. I've always taken these things to be less about freeing anything and more about a) packing things up rather too snugly and b) showing off what there is to be proud of, including, but not restricted to, the thighs. I, needless to say, am very much a swimming shorts man. If you'd given the matter any thought, I hope you'd have reached this conclusion. Take any man, and it's clear which way they lean when it comes to swimwear. Ronaldo's a smuggler all day long. I'd be staggered if a single pair of swimming shorts had ever seen the inside of his wardrobe. Lionel Messi, on the other hand, shorts all the way. Have a Google of this and you'll see I'm right. There is, to be fair, the odd shot of Ronaldo in shorts, but only in ones tailored tight enough to suggest that some kind of smuggling operation is indeed under way. Messi, though, is 100% standard shorts, bless him. In politics I have our prime minister in shorts, as is only right and proper. The only male member of the cabinet I can see in smugglers is Hilary Benn, for some reason. Across the floor, I can imagine Robert Jenrick keeping him company. Nigel Farage, shorts. Lee Anderson, definitely smugglers. Feel free to play this game at home. On the radio I was enjoying myself no end with all this when a listener texted in alleging that in France, budgie smugglers are mandatory! How I laughed! But it's true. Jump into a public pool wearing shorts and you'll be hauled right back out. Hygiene reasons, apparently. I'd have thought that shorts, allowing a bit more freedom and ventilation, would be healthier. But the logic is that you might have been in shorts all day before getting in the pool, whereas you're unlikely, even in France, to have been a man about town in your contrebandiers de perruches. You may by now be wondering if my level of interest in all this is entirely healthy. Well, the truth is, I once had a hand in a budgie-smuggling operation – that is, the smuggling of an actual budgie. I'm not proud of it, but it's time to come clean. In mitigation, this was in the 1970s and I was but a child. Auntie Lily and Uncle Sid, Lily being my grandad's sister, had long lived in Perth, Australia. But now they decided to live out their days back in Birmingham. They brought with them a budgerigar called Timmy. Timmy was a most excellent budgie. He'd tilt his head in a sweet way when whistled to, say the odd word, and fly around the front room without crapping everywhere. They loved Timmy. We all loved Timmy. But Lily and Sid didn't love life back in Birmingham, so resolved to return to Perth. Disastrously though, the rules were such that Timmy wouldn't be allowed back into Australia. Disaster. Lily – pardon the slight pun – hatched a plan. She'd smuggle Timmy back to Oz in her handbag. The Timmy training commenced. Day by day we accustomed him to ever longer periods of handbag time which, being a prince among budgies, he soon got the hang of. During the flight Lily planned to feed him and let him out for a quick flap when she went to the toilet. Departure day dawned. The jeopardy was very real. If, God forbid, they were rumbled and Timmy was to be confiscated, Lily even had with her something with which to euthanise him. Quite where she sourced this budgie poison, I know not. But off they went on a flight that still feels like the longest flight I've ever taken, even though I wasn't on it. The wait was awful. Then a three-word telegram arrived: 'All is well.' Oh, the joy. And the three of them lived happily ever after. I am now bracing myself for letters about some ghastly avian health calamity that subsequently came to pass down under, with the finger pointing at our Timmy as budgie zero. Please let it not be so. If it is, as my penance, I'll wear nothing but budgie smugglers, in and out of the water, for the rest of my days. Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

Jane Etta Pitt dead: Brad Pitt's mum dies as heartbroken family issue statement
Jane Etta Pitt dead: Brad Pitt's mum dies as heartbroken family issue statement

Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Jane Etta Pitt dead: Brad Pitt's mum dies as heartbroken family issue statement

Brad Pitt's mother, Jane Etta Pitt, has died aged 84. The news about the former school counsellor was announced by her granddaughter, Sydney, who took to her Instagram page to share a carousel of throwback photos of Jane before reminiscing about her childhood with her 'grammy'. She wrote: "My sweet Grammy, Jane Etta, we were not ready for you to go yet but knowing you are finally free to sing, dance, and paint again makes it a tad easier. If you knew Grammy, you knew she had the biggest heart. She cared deeply for everyone and everything, no questions asked. "She taught me how to paint, how to be strong, how to lead with kindness, to love Jesus through everything, and to find joy in the smallest things. She made up the silliest games just to make us laugh, and she believed in fairness, in putting others first, and doing good simply because it was the right thing to do." The heartbroken granddaughter added: "Every year before school, she gave each of us grandkids a 'special day' which was a whole day to do whatever we wanted (and Papa had to go along with it… though I know he secretly loved it too). "Mine usually started with banana splits for breakfast, hours of playing Trouble, a craft project obvi, riding every ride together at Silver Dollar City like the badass she was, dinner at Olive Garden with Papa, mini golf where she'd make a V with her feet to help me aim… (and somehow still beat me) and ending the night watching Paulie until we feel asleep." Sydney said Jane had no problem keeping up with all her 14 grandchildren 'without missing a beat', before adding there wasn't a 'limit' to the love she gave. "I don't know how we move forward without her. But I know she's still here in every brushstroke, every kind gesture, every hummingbird. She was love in its purest form," she added. "We were truly blessed to have her to love on growing up and I know she lives on through each of us." Sydney included snaps of Jane lounging in a lake with a drink, posing with family on her 80th birthday, relaxing on a private jet and hugging her husband William. Sydney also added snaps of Jane's charity work as well as holiday memories. Jane's granddaughter added the lake snap onto her Instagram stories and wrote: "The sweetest guardian angel around," along with a white heart emoji.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store