The Australian Women's Weekly

Rebecca Gibney “I’m very much for the sisterhood”

It’s a bracingly cold, blustery day as The Weekly arrives for our shoot on the foreshore of Queenstown’s Lake Wakatipu. Ominous dark clouds loom, rain threatens and the wind whips bitingly through the thickest of coats and jumpers.

To be fair, we shouldn’t be surprised. The entire week’s weather has been similarly grim – we are in the depths of a New Zealand winter, after all. As the photographer scurries off in search of a more protected spot, our cover star appears on the horizon, hair and make-up picture perfect, dressed and ready to go.

It’s then that the miracle occurs: the clouds part, revealing a stunning blue sky. The sun – matched only by the brightness of Rebecca Gibney’s beaming smile – emerges and the day, it seems, is saved. Maybe we shouldn’t be surprised by this either. Rebecca is a determinedly glass-half-full kind of woman; a firm believer that putting out positive energy will attract the same in return.

And even if the sun hadn’t come out, says her good friend, actress and radio presenter Jane Kennedy, “Rebecca would have made lemonade out of it anyway.”

This is a key part of the 55-year-old’s personality, as we’ll learn both on set today and also later from several of Rebecca’s loved ones, who offer a deeper insight into just what makes the popular star tick. And it’s certainly not hard to find people willing to talk.

“Genuine”. “Selfless”. “Generous”. “Joyful”. “Loyal”. These are just a few of the glowing adjectives friends and colleagues use to describe the woman who has endeared herself to TV viewers for four decades, since making her at the age of 16.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Australian Women's Weekly

The Australian Women's Weekly1 min read
Rhythm Of Life
Eurovision 2024 Australia’s Eurovision entry, Electric Fields, will drop a musical love bomb on Sweden when they perform in Malmö this month. At a time when the world seems irreparably torn, the Adelaide duo’s euphoric dance anthem, One Milkali (One
The Australian Women's Weekly10 min read
Not Without My Son
Lynda Holden grew up running from the Welfare. She knew how to keep perfectly still in the bush, holding her breath, pressed into hollow logs and wet leaves, as the white men parted bushes looking for Aboriginal children. And she knew that at midnigh
The Australian Women's Weekly1 min readForeign Language Studies
Word Maker
22 SMART 30 TERRIFIC 50+ BRILLIANT! How many words of four letters or more can you make using the letters given here? Each one must include the central letter and you should have at least one nine-letter word in your total. Avoid plurals, proper nou

Related