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Pantherboy
18-08-2024, 03:24
Sunday Telegraph (subscription only) article on Rachael Carpani, including her joining H&A in a short guest role as Claudia Salini. She will appear onscreen from August 29th.

We still don't know much about her character, with the main H&A relevant parts of the article being:


"On the long-running soap Carpani plays Claudia - a newcomer to Summer Bay who makes waves in the Morgan household. The role struck a chord with Carpani straight away because "Louise Bowes [previously a scriptwriter on McLeod's Daughters] was at the helm of designing and creating Claudia, and she makes it far more real. I know we're talking about a fun soap here where people get kidnapped and people blow things up and crazy things happen, but there was a realness to this character." "


The whole article is:


"Former McLeod's Daughters star Rachael Carpani on fame, Hollywood - and her return to acting
After finding fame on McLeod's Daughters, Rachael Carpani moved to Hollywood. Now 43, the actor reveals the "baptism of fire" she received - and the new role that brought her home.


Most people go to Hollywood in search of fame. Rachael Carpani went there to escape it.

After filming a string of small roles in shows including All Saints and Home And Away, Carpani hit the big time when she was cast as teenager Jodi Fountain McLeod on TV drama McLeod's Daughters.

It may have started out as a supporting role, but Carpani's knack for comedic timing coupled with her natural talents as a dramatic actor made her one

of the series' most popular stars when it launched in 2001. By 2007, she had scored a Gold Logie nomination.

Overwhelmed by all the attention, Carpani recalls going to her agent and threatening to quit if she wasn't sent to the "acting equivalent of Siberia. I said: "I don't want to be famous! Earning a living would be nice. I adore 'action' to 'cut', but everything else - the networking, the hobnobbing, the dealing with sleazy directors - I just don't want any of it," Carpani tells Stellar.

"Without missing a beat, she looked at me and said, 'I'm sending you to Hollywood, love. No-one knows who you are there, and they'll never care.'"

Carpani was undaunted by the proposition. She had been just out of her teens when she left her family home in Sydney's northwestern suburbs to shoot McLeod's Daughters in Kingsford, South Australia. There she honed her craft watching more experienced co-stars such as Sonia Todd and John Jarratt, and learnt the value of hard work - even amid trying personal circumstances.

"In 2001, you didn't announce to a crew of 80 men, 'I'm sorry, I've got endometriosis. I feel like I'm being stabbed in the stomach. I'll need five minutes,'" Carpani explains.

So, she found ways to secretly manage her condition.

She would discreetly tuck ice packs under her belt buckle and hid her stitches from the wardrobe department after admitting herself to hospital for a laparoscopy - a surgical procedure that examines abdominal organs. On top of that, she points out, "Getting on and off a horse and riding while you've got full-blown endometriosis is terrible. Unbelievably and indescribably painful."

Despite having navigated all of that on her own, life in Los Angeles would prove harder than she could have imagined.

"Talk about a baptism of fire; I had one after another after another," she says.

"Just when I'd got a handle on an Australian set, I went straight to the US into pilot season with these big stars. I remember 20-foot trailers, these big directors and $5 million being spent on a pilot. I was wide-eyed. And every time I thought I knew something, I became wide-eyed again.?

Like so many vulnerable young actors, especially women, Carpani often found herself in uncomfortable situations that she would have to 'giggle my way out of. Because the first thing you're taught is: 'Don't embarrass [powerful men], because embarrassment is dangerous.'"

Worse still, Carpani didn't feel that she could share what was going on with her family back home. "We do not swear in our household," she explains. "We would say 'Oh my gosh', not 'Oh my God'. So how would I call my parents and say, 'Oh, the director of this show that apparently is launching my US career made a pass at me tonight and I don't know who to tell

or what to do - and I have to work with him for 16 hours tomorrow!'"

Carpani hastens to add that what she encountered is not exclusive to Hollywood, and that the industry here could be just as fraught. "I was [so young], working with men in their 30s, and it was a dodge ball game every day," she says with a shrug.

"It was like, just don't get caught alone. [In both Australia and the US] we would leave Post-it notes for each other on certain sets of which men to not be left alone with. Or we'd write in lipstick on the mirrors things like 'Blah Blah is on the prowl today' or 'Avoid Blah Blah'."

Carpani believes she was able to navigate the 'unsafe parts of the industry' with support from other women.

"I always believed that women supported women, surrounded myself with women-owned agencies, and have been an advocate for supporting young women and making sure we look out for each other before I even understood why," she says.

Now 43 and working in an industry that has been reshaped by the #MeToo movement, Carpani feels more confident than ever to speak up for herself and the issues she's passionate about. "The Rachael that speaks now was always in there, she just couldn't come out," she explains.

"If I had back then, I probably would have been blackballed and not worked again."

The actor is eager to share the wisdom of her experience with her young co-stars on Home And Away, where she has been filming a guest role. Not that they need much coaching. "They're more empowered," she marvels. "They have more information at their fingertips. The entire culture changed. The young men I work with now have so much respect for women."

As for herself, Carpani has found that things get better with age. "I'm not saying that to hit back at societal norms that tell us that everything that's of value - youth, beauty and our ability to procreate - dissipates with age," she tells Stellar.

"It's actually true. You stop worrying so much about what people think. In the past, I've truly cared way too much about the optics about how I was perceived."

Carpani believes the nurturing environment on the Home And Away set is helping the next generation of actors find that same sense of security far earlier.

"The entire energy of that place is let's shoot it [and] do a good job," she enthuses.

"Let's give the audience some fun, juicy storylines. It's far less about bikinis and lip gloss on the beach."

On the long-running soap Carpani plays Claudia - a newcomer to Summer Bay who makes waves in the Morgan household. The role struck a chord with Carpani straight away because "Louise Bowes [previously a scriptwriter on McLeod's Daughters] was at the helm of designing and creating Claudia, and she makes it far more real. I know we're talking about a fun soap here where people get kidnapped and people blow things up and crazy things happen, but there was a realness to this character."

Finding herself one of the older cast members has forced further reflection on how far she has come.

"The difference between walking onto my first day on the McLeod's set, where the thought in my head was, 'Be good, do what you're told, don't get fired', compared to my first day on Home And Away where I was thinking, 'This is going to be fun. I hope I can keep up with the young ones', is enormous."

Home And Away airs at 7pm, Monday to Thursday, on the Seven Network. Rachael Carpani appears from August 29"

https://www.instagram.com/p/C4nBMM_v4B_/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=02c49c9d-744a-4468-97ca-06c9b3ec0756&img_index=1


Earlier articles:

Beloved Aussie TV stars join Home and Away ahead of surprise project
The soap stars are set to pop up in Summer Bay later this year.

https://au.lifestyle.yahoo.com/beloved-aussie-tv-stars-join-home-and-away-ahead-of-surprise-project-023352455.html



McLeod?s stars Aaron Jeffery and Rachael Carpani join Home and Away

https://www.newidea.com.au/entertainment/aaron-jeffery-rachael-carpani-home-and-away/


Home and Away shake up as two stars join soap and one returns after two decades

https://www.dailystar.co.uk/showbiz/home-away-shake-up-two-33149186

Pantherboy
25-08-2024, 23:26
Nowtolove.com.au article:


McLeod's Daughters star Rachael Carpani on her new role on Home And Away: "It knocked me flat on my butt"
The star also reveals why she?s ready to shed her good girl image.

https://www.nowtolove.com.au/entertainment/home-and-away/home-and-away-rachael-carpani/

After spending a good chunk of the past decade living and working in Los Angeles, Rachael Carpani has finally returned home. And there couldn't be a more fitting show for what she's calling her homecoming role than long-running Australian drama Home And Away.

"I feel it's something of a full-circle moment for me," Rachael 43, tells 
TV WEEK. "I started out on an iconic Australian show [McLeod's Daughters], 
I did my stint overseas, and now 
I'm back home and on an iconic 
show - I feel very, very lucky."

The star adds that her appearance 
in Home And Away has been more than 20 years in the making.

"Not that they've been offering 
me roles for that long," she explains with a laugh, "but the idea has popped up ever since McLeod's finished. 
I think I was waiting for the right 
time, and the right role.

"So when this character landed on my agent's desk, she called me and the first words to come out of her mouth were, 'You have to say yes.' And after reading more and realising the depth of the character, and how well written it was, especially for a guest role, I called 
back and accepted it that same day."

Rachael plays strong-willed businesswoman Claudia, who this week crashes into Summer Bay - quite literally - when she's involved in an accident caused by her car's faulty brakes. Injured and irate, she seeks recompense from the mechanic who had only just serviced her car: Justin (James Stewart).

And so begins a narrative that Rachael teases is set to really 'shake up the Bay' and will show viewers she's more than the sweet blonde Jodi Fountain from McLeod's.

"I think when Australians think 
about me as an actor, it's playing those sweet, doe-eyed characters - which is so funny, because it's not really me," she says, adding that for a long while after the drama ended in 2009, she wanted to play against type.

"I wouldn't be human if I didn't 
say there were a few years where I deliberately tried to distance myself from it," she says. "Not that I didn't love that show - I'm so thankful for it - but that's why I went overseas.

"There are shows I did over there [in the US] that were villainous [roles], but when the show did make it to Australia, they were either buried in some streaming service or not promoted.

"So when I heard what Claudia gets up to, I thought, 'Oh, it might be nice to be disliked as a character for a while.' I'm a little worried about the hardcore fans, though. Hopefully, I won't get too many people stopping me and asking, 'How could you do that?'"

After working in the US for more than a decade, appearing in shows such as NCIS: Los Angeles and Flowers In The Attic, as well as Hollywood films like The Very Excellent Mr. Dundee and The Way Back, starring Ben Affleck, Rachael certainly knows her way around a set.

However, she admits she wasn't prepared for just how much work goes into the making of Home And Away.

"I assumed I'd just slip in, do my thing, not rock the boat and take up too many people's time," she says. "And I thought 
I had experience - I've been doing this [acting] for over 20 years. But it seriously knocked me on my butt. I was like, 'Wow, I'm not as mentally ready as I thought I was.' It was overwhelming."

She enthuses that, despite the workload, she's "not been on a more kinder, more welcoming set."

"I kept thinking, 'Are you guys really this nice to everyone?' I'm not sure I would have been [as nice] in my twenties, when I was working on a show full-time and was running 
on no sleep and was exhausted.

"I remember asking Ada [Nicodemou, who plays Leah], 'How do you have time to sleep, let alone prep for this?' and she had such an incredibly upbeat attitude."

Rachael's role in H&A is a guest one for now - and she says "never say never" should she be asked to return - but the Bay could have to wait a while, with the actress teasing that a return to Drover's Run may come first.

"There's something in the works," 
she says of the rumoured McLeod's Daughters reboot. "I'm not sure reboot is the right word, and I don't think it's a sequel given how many character deaths there were after I left. It could be more of a prequel, but that's just my opinion.

"Posie Graeme-Evans [McLeod's creator and writer] likes to keep her cards very close to her chest, as she should, but it's exciting."