logo
Strife: Mary Coustas stars in series based on Mia Freedman, Mamamia

Strife: Mary Coustas stars in series based on Mia Freedman, Mamamia

Courier-Mail03-05-2025
Don't miss out on the headlines from Stellar. Followed categories will be added to My News.
From the moment that Mary Coustas first stepped on stage in 1987 as Effie Stephanidis – a second-generation Greek woman with a personality as big as her wig – she knew she had struck a cultural chord.
'As soon as I opened my mouth, I felt something shift,' the actor tells The Binge Guide of introducing Australia to the proud dynamo, whose fierceness carried over to the hit 1989-1992 TV series Acropolis Now.
'I felt like I birthed the biggest baby in the hospital that year – hair and all.'
Now the actor known best for comedy is making a return to television in dramatic fashion. In the second season of Strife, the breakout Binge show about the messy but exhilarating life of digital publisher Evelyn Jones (Asher Keddie), Coustas plays psychologist Sylvie, whose ear Evelyn needs to bend, especially when friend Christine (Maria Angelico) decides to launch a rival website.
'I know what it's like for any woman that juggles a lot.' Mary Coustas pictured in character as Sylvie in Strife. Picture: Binge
'I love that this [show] is about a woman trying to do something that hadn't been done before on a very large scale,' Coustas says of Mia Freedman, the real-life Mamamia co-founder whose 2017 memoir, Work Strife Balance, became the jump-off point for the series, which offers an edgy examination of celebrity and popular culture in the early 2010s.
'I know Mia. I was around when that was all happening for her at the beginning,' Coustas recalls.
'I know what it's like for any woman that juggles a lot. To just get through the day is a miracle, let alone pull off something miraculous, like an online platform with a million people working for you and getting into trouble a lot.'
Coustas, who says she was initially tapped to work with the writers on Strife, appreciates that the dramedy takes a potentially serious subject like financial strain and makes it funny and watchable.
Listen to the full interview with Tanya Hennessy on Something To Talk About below:
And when she considers the diversity of the cast and crew, she can't help but reflect on how far Australian television has come since 1989, when Acropolis Now made its debut.
Created by Nick Giannopoulos, George Kapiniaris and Simon Palomares, the five-season comedy set in a fictional Melbourne cafe was a pioneering showcase of authentic Greek-Australian culture.
'I do feel very proud of the work that we did and we opened a big door, but I felt it took forever for more people to walk through it,' Coustas, 60, says now.
'Maybe if social media was around back then, it would have been different. We could have put more of us on the map.'
Growing up, Coustas recalls with a laugh, she would 'make fun of my mum, who would watch the credits of everything and look for Greek names.
'When you say the word 'nostalgia', you know it's going to fail.' Picture: David Clark
Strife is loosely based on the life of Mia Freedman – with Asher Keddie portraying a character inspired by her. Picture: Getty Images
Asher Keddie as Evelyn on set of the new series of Binge's Strife. Picture: John Platt
'I was a bit like that, but with faces. I remember thinking, Oh, how am I going to succeed in an industry where there aren't people that look like me in it, or certainly not in any significant way?'
The solution, she explains, was to become the role model she wanted to see.
'I was lucky to find the boys – Nick, George and Simon,' Coustas says.
'They had the same hunger that I did to do something impactful, to have a presence and a career. And the '80s were good to us.'
Not all comedy has aged well, though. Even hit 2000s-era series such as Little Britain and Summer Heights High have been criticised for using racial stereotypes.
For her part, Coustas isn't in a rush to see an Acropolis Now reboot.
'When you say the word 'nostalgia', you know it's going to fail,' she offers with a shrug.
'I love it when it works. And Heartbreak High is a great example of that. But mostly, it doesn't.'
But far from being cancelled, Effie still draws a crowd when Coustas performs as the character in sellout shows around Australia.
'Her hair might be a bit '80s,' she says, 'but her point of view is current.'
Season 2 of Strife premieres on Thursday on Binge. See the full interview and cover story with Mary in The Binge Guide today, via The Sunday Telegraph (NSW), Sunday Herald Sun (VIC), The Sunday Mail (QLD) and Sunday Mail (SA).
For more from Stellar and the podcast Something to Talk About, click here.
Originally published as 'I know what it's like for any woman that juggles a lot': Mary Coustas unveils new role
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scott Cam announces brutal new rule for this season's Block contestants
Scott Cam announces brutal new rule for this season's Block contestants

Courier-Mail

time6 hours ago

  • Courier-Mail

Scott Cam announces brutal new rule for this season's Block contestants

Don't miss out on the headlines from Reality. Followed categories will be added to My News. Scott Cam has implemented a strict new rule change for this year's season of The Block – and it might make for a slightly less comfortable experience for contestants. Usually, contestants would 'rough it' for the first few days of a season, living out of the tent as they built the first room of the house, typically a bedroom. It meant that from the end of week one, they could pack up the tent and have a roof over their heads – and have the rest of the house to live in and use as it was built, week by week. Scott Cam delivers the news. But Cam told contestants this year that he was implementing a strict new rule: 'No overnighters.' The five teams would not be able to spend the night inside their houses at all during the season. Instead, they've been given luxury caravans to call home for the entire season. During Sunday's premiere, all seemed in good spirits at the news they'd be sleeping in them for the next three months, during the testing conditions of a rural Victorian winter (with all that caravan living entails – including emptying of toilet waste). The caravans are lush – but it's a bit of a downgrade from previous seasons, living in the giant house you're renovating. This year's contestants are a diverse bunch, among them two married Northern Territory police officers, a lesbian couple (who, in a slightly awkward first meeting, are initially mistaken for twins by their fellow contestants) a gay and straight best mate, and a champion pole dancer. There is another big change expected this season: The Block's mega-buyer, billionaire Adrian Portelli, should be nowhere to be seen come auction day. In an extravagant move, Portelli bought all five Block houses at last season's auctions – but later struggled to offload them. He insisted the mega-buyout was to be his Block swan song and, as Cam confessed in a recent interview, the feeling was mutual. 'To be honest we said to Adrian 'We'd love you not to come next year, if that's all right,'' Cam revealed on Nova 96.9's Fitzy & Wippa with Kate Ritchie last week. Couple (not twins sisters, as some contestants assumed) Han and Cam. Block megabuyer Adrian Portelli is expected to be absent come auction day. Picture: NewsWire/ David Crosling '[Portelli] said, 'Yeah, okay, he won't come', but he may come. We don't know, but we do want to give mums and dads the opportunity to have a crack at a block house … but if Adrian comes and wants to buy the lot of them, well, that rules them out.' Cam said he hoped to see 'families have a bit of a crack this year,' after recent years have seen the show's finales turn into bidding wars between Portelli and fellow mega-rich investor Danny Wallis. But it seems Portelli's not taking the soft-ban lying down: He's switched allegiances to The Block's competitor show on Seven, My Reno Rules. Portelli's rewards club company LMCT+ will be the major sponsor of the show's new season, and he's even donated two homes that will be flipped by contestants during the show. Originally published as Scott Cam announces brutal new rule for this season's Block contestants

Inside Jodhi Meares' new $4.1m Byron Bay hinterland home
Inside Jodhi Meares' new $4.1m Byron Bay hinterland home

Courier-Mail

time17 hours ago

  • Courier-Mail

Inside Jodhi Meares' new $4.1m Byron Bay hinterland home

Don't miss out on the headlines from Celebrity Life. Followed categories will be added to My News. Jodhi Meares has opened up about the real reason she left Sydney for Byron Bay, and the private life she has created for herself in the hinterland. In a new interview with Stellar, the fashion mogul and ex-wife of James Packer admits she was never comfortable in the spotlight and is 'definitely a behind the scenes person'. 'I'm a true introvert. I like to be able to watch people. I find people really interesting. 'Being in the public eye wrecked that a little bit,' Meares told Stellar. Late last year, Meares purchased a four-bedroom, Modernist-inspired home – which features an avocado, citrus, banana and papaw orchard, at Brooklet. The property is located inland between Ballina and Byron Bay in the NSW Northern Rivers region – and was purchased for a reported $4.1 million. Jodhi Meares is on the cover of today's Stellar. She has opened up about her new life in Byron Bay. Picture: Simon Upton for Stellar Listen to a new episode of the Stellar podcast Something To Talk About below: Speaking to Stellar, The Upside designer explains why she is at home among the papaya trees, a dog named Soda Pop, and her five cows. 'I don't get bored and I don't get lonely. I suffer from other things, but I don't suffer from those things,' Meares said. 'Sometimes I have to ask myself, 'How many days has it been? I need to just go somewhere and speak to another human …'' The former Australia's Next Top Model host and Tigerlily founder also made a surprising confession about her time as a model, saying she 'never really loved having my photos taken'. 'It's been a means to an end. But I felt very lucky to be able to do it because I wasn't sure what I was going to do when I was young. 'And school and I didn't get along that well.' 'I don't get bored …' Jodhi Meares on her new life. Picture: Don Arnold/WireImage In the Stellar cover story, Meares also reflected on interviewing Australian supermodel Elle Macpherson – who stars in a new campaign for Meares' activewear brand, The Upside – for Stellar earlier this year. 'She's such a phenomenal woman. Elle doesn't have to do these things. I thought it was just very special,' Meares said. 'It was very beautiful, really touching that she was able to do that.' Listen to a new episode of the Stellar podcast Something To Talk About below: Read the full interview with Jodhi Meares in today's Stellar, inside The Sunday Telegraph (NSW), Sunday Herald Sun (Victoria), The Sunday Mail (Queensland) and Sunday Mail (SA). For more from Stellar and the podcast Something To Talk About, click here. Originally published as Jodhi Meares opens up about new life in Byron Bay after leaving Sydney: 'I don't get bored'

TikTok meets Real Housewives in nepo baby drama
TikTok meets Real Housewives in nepo baby drama

Perth Now

time18 hours ago

  • Perth Now

TikTok meets Real Housewives in nepo baby drama

With Clare Rigden sick this week — no doubt bingeing a stack of excellent shows to report back on (between well-deserved naps) — it feels like the right time to reflect on my own go-to sick-day viewing. Watching TV while sick is a very different beast to your usual screen time. The shows don't need to grip you completely because you'll be drifting in and out of sleep, missing scenes between coughing fits and nose-blowing. There will be no Emmy nominations in this line-up, and chances are the shows will fall into either a guilty pleasure or hate-watch category. During a recent bout of the flu, I dove into The Real Housewives universe. And wow, what a world it was. We're talking handbags worth more than the average Aussie's annual salary, drama that veers from petty bickering to near fist fights, and housewives actually going to jail for real-life crimes. It's unhinged — and sick me couldn't get enough. While I'm saving the rest of RHOSLC for my next sick day, I have continued dipping into Next Gen NYC as it drops weekly on Hayu. Please don't judge me — I also watch Severance, The Studio, Hacks and all the other highbrow stuff. I have some taste. But if, like me, you need a bit of sugar with all that substance, this series delivers. It follows 'a tangled web of friends raised in the spotlight — or at least close enough for good lighting — as they stumble into adulthood one brunch, break-up and spontaneous decision at a time'. It's like if TikTok and the Housewives had a baby. Literally. The show features the children of some of the franchise's most iconic reality mums, and they're putting their parents to shame, shouting their way through their own chaotic episodes. There are characters being called 'dirt poor' because they don't get a $10k allowance from their parents, arguments over who should foot the $14k bill for a nightclub booth, and a full-blown spat over . . . something I've already forgotten (but felt very important at the time). And yet, it's all set against an iconic New York backdrop, has flashes of genuine friendship and surprising glimmers of growth. Sick or not, it's the kind of show that lets you switch your brain off — and sometimes, that's exactly what you need. Get well soon Clare! This creepy horror is currently streaming on Binge. Credit: Universal Pictures Australia / TheWest While we're talking nepo babies, this vampire horror featuring Lily-Rose Depp (daughter of Johnny Depp and singer-model Vanessa Paradis) and Bill Skarsgard (son of actor Stellan Skarsgard) is dropping on Binge. This is one you'll want to watch at full health, phone face down with all the lights on. Everyone's favourite angry chef is back with Gordon Ramsay's Secret Service. Credit: Supplied Back bef or e there was streaming and we had to hope something decent was on TV or that our pocket money could cover a new release at the video shop, it was always a great day when you stumbled across a Gordon Ramsay show. Whether he was calling someone an idiot sandwich, saving a restaurant that didn't particularly appreciate his style of tough love or making rising chefs reconsider their career path, it was nothing if not entertaining. It's fair to say he's softened a little over the years, so it will be interesting to see how spicy his new series is. This time Ramsay sends an insider undercover at a struggling restaurant who squirrels out information back to him. What could go wrong except for, well, everything. Ingrid (Sally Phillips), Austin (Michael Theo) and Julian (Ben Miller) are all back for season two of Austin. Credit: Supplied For viewing that feels like a warm hug, it's hard to go past this lovely show starring Michael Theo, Sally Phillips, Ben Miller and Perth's Claire Lovering. Season two picks back up on Austin's Game Of Scones: Doing Britain On The Spectrum (my book club would read that!) snapped up by a publisher before the newfound fame goes to his head. Can't wait to jump in the back seat with Claudia Karvan and Steph Tisdell for Great Australian Road Trips. Credit: Supplied There is nothing like a road trip to really get to know someone — the good, the bad and the 'let me out here please' — though we can't imagine there will be any of the latter between the hosts of this new series. Claudia Karvan joins Steph Tisdell while Melissa Leong is in the driver's seat with Nazeem Hussain as they take on some of Australia's best drives, including the Great Barrier Reef Drive in Queensland to Kangaroo Island in South Australia.

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