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Deborah Hutton, 59, finally confirms relationship with meditation guru Andrew Marsh
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It’s a humid autumn morning and I can’t take my eyes off the beads of sweat rolling down Michael Yabsley’s brow. Sitting in his eclectic apartment in Sydney’s Darlinghurst, the former Liberal firebrand and antiques collector pours me a steaming cup of English Breakfast. He offers a melting moment to go with the tea, which is served in an elegant white porcelain cup and saucer. “Store-bought,” he says sheepishly, referring to the biscuit. Not that I would expect the man once described as the NSW Liberals’ much-feared “pet assassin” to have whipped up a batch of bikkies. We share an awkward chuckle.
Now she s releasing her own homewares line, Home with Deborah Hutton with MyHouse, and Deb acknowledges she s struck the career jackpot time and again. I ve also been the face of Qantas and Holden, did a line with Kmart, released a line of eyewear. so you ve got cars, planes, only thing I was missing from was meat pies, she laughs. It s been fantastic really – such an incredible life.
WATCH BELOW: Deb Hutton talks entertaining. Post continues after the video.
And while she credits everything to her modelling days, there s one thing she wishes she had left behind. Look, I knew I wasn t going to do it [model] for too long, I was always too short and probably just a bit too chubby for everybody, she says.
I kicked and fought for my life : Sue Kedgley reveals all in new memoir
11 minutes to read
By: Joanna Wane
Me too. Young women didn t say those words out loud when Sue Kedgley was at university, not even to each other. It s time, she says, for her to say them now. Let s call the assault what it was: an attempted rape by a powerful, entitled older man used to getting what he wanted and who probably didn t give her a second thought after she fled his hotel room. Sound familiar? The parallels with Harvey Weinstein don t stop there.
There s far more to Kedgley s new memoir, Fifty Years a Feminist an intriguing insider s view of gender politics from the emergence of women s lib in the 1970s to the hashtag feminism of today. But after decades of silence, she s chosen this as her moment to open up publicly about the incident for the first time.
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