logo
Major news for Aussie music legend

Major news for Aussie music legend

Perth Now01-07-2025
Australian music legend John Farnham has welcomed his first grandchild, becoming a grandparent after a recent battle with cancer.
Farnham's son, James Farnham and his partner his partner Dr Tessa Effendi announced the arrival of their first child on Tuesday evening.
The baby was named Jett John Farnham and arrived ahead of his expected due date. A photo of John Farnham with his son James. Posted by James. Supplied/Instagram Credit: Supplied
Farnham has become a first-time grandparent and said in a joint statement with his wife Jill: 'We are over the moon about the arrival of this perfectly beautiful little boy'.
'He's already filled our hearts with so much love and we're so proud and happy for James and Tessa. Welcome to the world, Jett!'
The baby boy was born on Wednesday June 18th at 5:26om at St Vincent's Private Hospital in Melbourne, weighing 3.176 Kgs.
The new parents said their newborn son is their 'whole world in one tiny, noisy, perfect package'.
'We're smitten, we're sleep-deprived, and we wouldn't have it any other way.' A photo of John Farnham with his son James. Posted by James. Supplied/Instagram Credit: Supplied
Farnham recently underwent jaw reconstruction surgery, which lasted 12 hours and required 26 doctors, after he was diagnosed with oral cancer in 2022.
The singer went through months of recovery following the intense operation.
Farnham has since been declared cancer free after the weeks of radiation therapy.
The singer is best known for his iconic Australia hit 'You're the Voice', which peaked at number 1 on the charts upon release and has been a mainstay on Australian radio.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations
The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations

The finished artwork, The Seeds of Flight, is open to the public. Completed in the past few months, it reflects his fascination with alternative flight methods. It also captures the dream of floating free from fossil fuels, batteries, lithium, solar panels, helium and hydrogen, which is the goal of Aerocene, the non-profit foundation he initiated. Inspired by Alexander Graham Bell's tetrahedral kite experiments, these sculptures don't just look like they can fly; earlier models have taken flight. The colours are those of the Australian bush, developed with Matt Poll, manager of Indigenous programs at the Australian Maritime Museum. Saraceno said it was an 'artwork that drifts along the rivers of the wind, suspended like stars and planets carrying constellations of life's seeds through the universe … it attempts to remind us that we are all on board this Mother Earth'. 'Together with spores, spiders, birds, eucalyptus trees, can humans also float freely, without lithium or fossil fuels? 'In the interest of the trillions of inhabitants who would like to keep journeying around the sun, might we choose orbits of solidarity over extraction?' Connecting science with art, Saraceno has brought together musicians, scientists, aerospace engineers, ballooning experts, physicists, kite makers and Indigenous elders to reimagine and reinvent our relationship with the air and the earth. Saraceno's interest in spiders resulted in major installations at Tasmania's MONA and Britain's Tate Modern, where his installation Web(s) of Life received rave reviews. As well as major exhibitions and installations, Saraceno has done an international space program at NASA's Ames Centre, studied with the Centre National d'Études Spatiales, Paris, and continues to work with the MIT Centre for Art, Science and Technology in Cambridge. Saraceno founded Arachnophilia, an interdisciplinary research community with MIT and the Max Planck Institute, and recorded the vibrations of spider webs. He then invited musicians to jam with the sounds, to unveil their hidden musicality. He also created the Spider Web Scan – a laser-supported tomographic method – to study the architecture of their webs. Aerocene has broken records for solar-powered flight. In January 2020, Aerocene Pacha piloted by Leticia Noemi Marqués set 32 records for solar-powered flights recognised by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. An interview with Saraceno is like being carried along a jet stream. Was he an artist or a scientist? 'I am a little bit of everything,' he said. Saraceno abhors the myth of the lone genius, detests Elon Musk's Starlink with its reliance on fossil fuels, and says the only way to change the world is through collaboration. Loading Single disciplines cannot solve problems such as climate change, global warming and inequality. 'So why don't we try to weave or work together in different ways?' Seeds of Flight, developed by Investa on behalf of Oxford Properties Group and Mitsubishi Estate Asia, took more than two years to design and produce following a 13-month selection process led by curator Barbara Flynn.

The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations
The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations

The finished artwork, The Seeds of Flight, is open to the public. Completed in the past few months, it reflects his fascination with alternative flight methods. It also captures the dream of floating free from fossil fuels, batteries, lithium, solar panels, helium and hydrogen, which is the goal of Aerocene, the non-profit foundation he initiated. Inspired by Alexander Graham Bell's tetrahedral kite experiments, these sculptures don't just look like they can fly; earlier models have taken flight. The colours are those of the Australian bush, developed with Matt Poll, manager of Indigenous programs at the Australian Maritime Museum. Saraceno said it was an 'artwork that drifts along the rivers of the wind, suspended like stars and planets carrying constellations of life's seeds through the universe … it attempts to remind us that we are all on board this Mother Earth'. 'Together with spores, spiders, birds, eucalyptus trees, can humans also float freely, without lithium or fossil fuels? 'In the interest of the trillions of inhabitants who would like to keep journeying around the sun, might we choose orbits of solidarity over extraction?' Connecting science with art, Saraceno has brought together musicians, scientists, aerospace engineers, ballooning experts, physicists, kite makers and Indigenous elders to reimagine and reinvent our relationship with the air and the earth. Saraceno's interest in spiders resulted in major installations at Tasmania's MONA and Britain's Tate Modern, where his installation Web(s) of Life received rave reviews. As well as major exhibitions and installations, Saraceno has done an international space program at NASA's Ames Centre, studied with the Centre National d'Études Spatiales, Paris, and continues to work with the MIT Centre for Art, Science and Technology in Cambridge. Saraceno founded Arachnophilia, an interdisciplinary research community with MIT and the Max Planck Institute, and recorded the vibrations of spider webs. He then invited musicians to jam with the sounds, to unveil their hidden musicality. He also created the Spider Web Scan – a laser-supported tomographic method – to study the architecture of their webs. Aerocene has broken records for solar-powered flight. In January 2020, Aerocene Pacha piloted by Leticia Noemi Marqués set 32 records for solar-powered flights recognised by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. An interview with Saraceno is like being carried along a jet stream. Was he an artist or a scientist? 'I am a little bit of everything,' he said. Saraceno abhors the myth of the lone genius, detests Elon Musk's Starlink with its reliance on fossil fuels, and says the only way to change the world is through collaboration. Loading Single disciplines cannot solve problems such as climate change, global warming and inequality. 'So why don't we try to weave or work together in different ways?' Seeds of Flight, developed by Investa on behalf of Oxford Properties Group and Mitsubishi Estate Asia, took more than two years to design and produce following a 13-month selection process led by curator Barbara Flynn.

‘It was really liberating': Bump's teen mum is all grown up in courtroom drama
‘It was really liberating': Bump's teen mum is all grown up in courtroom drama

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘It was really liberating': Bump's teen mum is all grown up in courtroom drama

Just as Nathalie Morris was preparing to shed the skin of the character that made her a star – teenage mum Oly, from Claudia Karvan and Kelsey Munro 's Stan* family saga Bump, which ended last year after five seasons – a gift from the anti-typecasting gods arrived. As charismatic clubber Jazmyn Tanner, part of the ensemble of jurors in the third season of The Twelve, the Australian adaptation of Belgian courtroom drama De twaalf, Morris' metamorphosis is complete. Physically, she is unrecognisable, the familiar honey blonde swish and furrowed brow replaced by burgundy choppy layers and a wicked smirk. Morris relished Jazmyn's storyline that delves into the darkness of fast and intense female friendships, in parallel with a fictitious 1968 double-murder cold case. 'It was really liberating,' Morris says. 'I love Oly, and I think that she's a very complicated and three-dimensional character, but she's become like second skin. Sometimes I feel like I'm not acting any more. I always joke with Claudia, 'Are we doing our job, or are we just being ourselves at this point?' So it was really great to step into a character that did feel like I was exercising some muscles. It was a very creative experience.' Loading The 28-year-old actor, who in 2023 was named as an international rising star by the Casting Guild of Australia, joins a stellar cast that includes Sam Neill, reprising his role as defence lawyer Brett Colby, Danielle Cormack as the prosecutor, William Zappa as the accused, Sarah Peirse as his wife, and Eryn Jean Norvill as a recently slain true-crime author. Among the actors playing jury members are Ewen Leslie, Paul Tassone, Phoenix Raei and Bessie Holland. 'There were really great, funny, intelligent cast members in that jury,' Morris says. 'And we spent so much time together – all of those court days. Every witness was essentially two days' filming. So if you count the number of witnesses in the show, we were in that courtroom for a month, just sitting there together, observing.' Just like a real jury, the actors were left to crime-solve by themselves, only finding out the identity of the killer as close as possible to filming. Having never done jury duty in real life, Morris says she would one day 'love to', though she does not indulge in the popular fascination with true crime. She didn't even follow closely the recent headline-grabbing Erin Patterson mushroom murder trial. 'I'm a very sensitive person and I get quite disheartened with the media portrayal of people and the sensationalised drama of it all,' Morris says. 'But I do find it fascinating that a group of people that are randomly selected have to decide on the fate of a person or of a case … It's such an incredible idea for a show [such as The Twelve ] to centre around these people that have to come together with all of their different existing prejudices and backgrounds and hash things out. It's such an interesting way into understanding the society that we live in.' Loading With New Zealand actress Hanah Tayeb, who plays more reserved jury member Gretel, with whom Jazmyn quickly forms a destructive bond, Morris enjoyed 'unpacking' their characters' intense relationship. 'I got invested in that dynamic between Gretel and Jazmyn,' she says. 'What we're exploring between with them as friends is narcissistic personality traits … In the rehearsal process, we were all sharing about different relationships that we've had or observed, and different versions of Jazmyn that we've all had in our lives, or versions of Gretel. I've definitely had people come into my life that I've really admired and been drawn to and felt like I wanted to latch on to for some sort of personal transformation. And I think I've been that for other people at different times.' Having taken the unusual step for an aspiring Australian actor and undergone training in New Zealand, at acclaimed Wellington drama school Toi Whakaari and then getting her start on iconic Kiwi soap Shortland Street, Morris was right at home with The Twelve: Cape Rock Killer' s Kiwi cast (Neill, Peirse, Cormack). 'I loved my time at Toi, and I think that New Zealand is a really creative place, like Tasmania,' she says. 'Smaller places end up being so much more innovative because they have less money, but so much heart. I'm seeing more and more New Zealanders across a lot of different casts. Even on Bump we had Arlo Green. I think that New Zealanders are very grounded and there's a connection to culture there that is a little bit stronger than in Australia.' Loading Having experienced the buzz of the writers' room when she penned an episode of Bump (the series has just wrapped its apparently final incarnation, a Christmas movie), Morris is keen to explore a holistically creative path in the industry. 'I've had a really good role model in Claudia [Karvan], in terms of how she works,' Morris says. 'Her heart and her mind are very much in the right place. In this industry, especially when you're so young, it's such a big world, and you come out of school, and you really have no idea … I've learnt the things that I want to prioritise, and the way I want to engage with writers and directors, and how I want to work because Bump was such a collaborative show. I like to be involved in that storytelling process. It really is where my interest lies.' She hopes one day to collaborate with her partner, Safe Home director Stevie Cruz-Martin, who, before the couple met, directed two episodes of the second local season of The Twelve. 'Stevie's on her path at the moment, and I'm on mine, and one day we will definitely do something together. She's such a phenomenal director that I would be honoured to be directed by her. I would definitely one day love to work with her, and I think she feels the same way.'

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