Home and Away
Home and Away Spoilers: Dana Kidnapped After Revealing Bronte’s Scam
Next week on Home and Away in the UK, as a new River Boy settles into Summer Bay, will Felicity fall for Rory’s charm? Elsewhere, as Dana gets proof that Bronte is a fraud, Bronte takes drastic action to shut her up.
Last week saw Mali (Kyle Shilling) call his old mate Dean (Patrick O’Connor) to get him out of a sticky situation with the Allen siblings, who were looking for revenge on Iluka (Dion Williams).
Dean put him in touch with his former River Boy contacts, and the gang’s new leader Rory (Joshua Orpin) arrived with sidekick Dingo (JK Kazzi) to help out Mali as he met with Nat (Claire Lovering) and her brothers Campbell (John Harding) and Gordie (Brandon McClelland) for a good old-fashioned fist fight.
Next week, Rory decides to make the most of his trip down the coast as he takes in the sights and sounds of Summer Bay.
Rory’s first introduction to the bay’s residents comes when Kirby (Angelina Thomson) finds him checking out the boards at Mantaray Boards, after former owner Dean recommended the place. He’s looking to place an order, but with Mali out of action as he recovers from his beating, Kirby tells Rory that he’ll have to leave his contact details.
“You know, if you wanted my number, you could’ve just asked,” Rory quips as he flirts his way through the interaction, but Kirby makes her feelings known as she tells him, “Trust me, I’m good.”
It’s not long until he finds his next target, as he heads up for a drink at Salt. Spotting Kirby, Felicity (Jacqui Purvis) and Eden (Stephanie Panozzo) from the balcony, he lets out a loud wolf whistle.
Flick is disgusted by Rory’s old-fashioned flirting technique, calling it juvenile and rude, but Eden finds it amusing, pointing out that “he’s kinda hot.”
Flick is having none of it, and heads straight for the balcony where she asks Rory to apologise for his misogynistic wolf-whistle, but he tells her that the tactic clearly worked: “You couldn’t race up those stairs fast enough.”
Flick puts him in his place as she explains that she owns the place and came to put a stop to him using her restaurant as a pick-up spot, but it only spurs him on.
“So you’re the boss then,” he smiles. “I do like a woman in charge.”
After Rory makes it clear that he “wasn’t whistling at women,” just at Flick, Eden makes it her mission to set her friend up with the flirtatious River Boy.
She soon notices that Flick can’t keep her eye off the newcomer, and doesn’t believe Flick when she points out that keeping an eye on rowdy customers is just part of the job.
As the shift goes on and Flick continues to eye Rory up, Eden points out that she hasn’t seen her crush this hard in ages. But after Eden tells her she should go and put him out of his misery, Flick heads over and puts Rory in his place.
“I’m flattered, but it’s not gonna happen.”
Eden steps in to apologise, telling him that she tried her best, but Rory isn’t one to give up. Taking the pen from behind Eden’s ear, he writes his number down on a coaster before making his exit.
“In case she changes her mind.”
That evening, as Felicity and Eden finish up for the day, Eden gleefully hands Flick the coaster.
When she pushes her bestie on why she’s so reluctant to give Rory a call, Flick points out that her track record “doesn’t exactly scream success,” with the last guy she hooked up with being Tane’s (Ethan Browne) lawyer.
Yet the following day, after some encouragement from Cash (Nicholas Cartwright), Felicity gives into temptation and gives Rory a call.
Of course, Felicity has no idea that Rory is part of Mangrove River’s infamous gang, who brought endless trouble to Summer Bay for years.
Nor does she know that Cash has just received a life-changing phone call. Cash has been trying to get back into the police force after his disastrous move into private security, but he’s informed that there are no spaces in Yabbie Creek or Reefton Lakes – the only available vacancy is at Mangrove River, the infamous town that the River Boys call home.
With romance on the cards, and Cash on his way back to the police force, what could possibly go wrong with Felicity dating a River Boy?
Elsewhere next week, Dana (Ally Harris) continues her crusade against Bronte (Stefanie Caccamo).
Last week, Irene (Lynne McGranger) learnt that the diner’s insurers wouldn’t cover the insurance claims from Joseph (Paul Winchester) and Bronte, who were suing the diner after falling ill.
It was Irene herself who suggested that Bronte sue her business, believing it was an easy way for her to raise the funds for her ‘treatment’.
Leah (Ada Nicodemou) managed to convince Joseph to withdraw his claim, but while Bronte agreed to drop hers too, she emotionally blackmailed Irene as she explained that without the money for the clinical in Canada, she may as well give up.
With Irene still desperate to help Bronte raise the funds for her experimental treatment in Canada, she decided that would pay Bronte the $50,000 out of her own pocket.
Dana is the only one who suspects that Bronte is a fraud, and told Bronte that she’d make it her own personal crusade to prove that she was lying.
Next week, Dana finds that Bronte has come home with bags of new clothes – suspicious for a woman who’s busy asking strangers for donations. Harper (Jessica Redmayne) points out that Bronte can’t have anything to hide if she’s left the clothes lying around, but the guilty look on Dana’s face gives away that she found them snooping through Bronte’s room.
“I don’t think it’s crazy to worry about Irene,” Dana replies when Harper accuses her of crossing a line, adding that “she’s lying and I’m trying to prove it.”
Dana then heads to the Coffee Cart, where she fills Leah (Ada Nicodemou) in on Irene’s plans to pay Bronte out of her own money.
Leah does her best to talk Irene out of the idea, pointing out that starting over with a new mortgage is a risky decision at her stage of life, but Irene isn’t having any of it.
Irene gives Leah an impassioned speech as she points out that Bronte sees everything that she has – her beautiful home, her business – whilst facing death. “How do I look her in the eye and tell her that my possessions are more important than her life?”
Her speech wins Leah over, and she admits that Irene is right. She offers to pay half of the $50,000 herself, using her and Justin’s (James Stewart) savings, meaning Irene won’t need to borrow so much money from the bank.
After Irene and Leah leave, Dana confronts Bronte once again, telling her that she knows exactly what she’s doing – “getting Irene to remortgage her house as part of your scam. And that’s on top of the insurance, the need to travel for your treatment. Because you’re not sick. It’s all fake, yeah?”
Rather than defend herself, Bronte all but admits it as she tells Dana to “prove it.”
Having coaxed a half-confession out of Bronte, Dana tries to convince first Xander (Luke Van Os), then later Irene and Leah, that she’s discovered the truth, but none of them will give her the time of day.
Dana then tries with Rose (Kirsty Marillier), but Rose points out that she’s making a lot of serious accusations with no evidence, and tells her to come talk to her if she gets some – but until then, it’s time to let it go.
Obviously, Dana has no intention of doing so. She heads straight into work, where she looks up ‘Bronte Langford’ on the hospital’s record system.
“So now you want me to risk my medical licence?” Bree asks.
“No, I want you to do the right thing.”
“I hear you,” Bree says, “but you still don’t have enough proof that you can use.”
“Chase, listen. That problem I warned you about, it just got worse,” she tells the man on the other end. “We need to shut her up.”
It’s clear that they’re not here for a social call, and as Bronte tells her accomplice that it’s time to “get this done,” Chase grabs Dana’s phone, before the pair of them tape Dana’s arms and legs and drag her out.
Will Dana be able to raise the alarm before it’s too late?
Home and Away
“Home and Away Spoilers – Harper is Expecting Tane’s Baby”
The following week on Home and Away in the UK, Harper finds out she is expecting Tane’s child, and Irene tumbles out of the wagon due to Bronte’s deceit.
A startling discovery appears to be about to unravel Harper’s (Jessica Redmayne) strategy to keep her distance from Tane (Ethan Browne) starting next week.
The two had slept together on the eve of his sentencing back last month, believing he would be going to prison for abducting baby Poppy.
Tane was subsequently let off with a seven-year ICO (intensive correction order) to be served in the community, and as he was sent to the city for counselling, Harper began to realise that she had developed feelings for him.
Harper was pretty miffed by Tane’s nonchalent attitude towards their night of passion on his return, though he later reminded her that she had been the one who made it clear she didn’t want anything more than friendship.
But when Tane confirmed that he wasn’t in the right headspace for a relationship anyway, Harper chose to distance herself from Tane in the hope of getting over her feelings—a task made all the more difficult when she agreed to be the social worker on board with Tane’s youth program in order to secure its approval.
This week, Tane makes it his mission to teach program participant Perri (Cantona Stewart) about their joint Māori culture (apparently having forgotten about the other youths already).
When Perri turns up late to their session, Tane asks where his ‘mana’ is. Perri doesn’t know what that means, nor does he realise the significance of Tane’s taiaha, the ceremonial weapon that is an important part of Tane’s heritage.
After being scolded by Tane for waving his taiaha around like a lightsaber, Perri tells him to shove it—he doesn’t need lectures from him.
Tane later tells Perri that he’ll will never get anywhere if he doesn’t respect his own culture, but Perri points out that he doesn’t know anything about that side of his family. His Māori mum died when Perri was quite young, and his father is a true-blue Australian.
When Perri spends the night on the beach, in an attempt to avoid a job that his father had asked him to carry out, Tane encourages him to respect his father by going home and talking to him.
He later comes to regret this when Perri returns with several burns, revealing that his father had deliberately held a cigarette against his arm.
Perri admits that his father was ordering him to go and steal some tools, exactly the sort of caper that landed Perri in juvie in the first place. For the first time, Perri had refused, and this was the result.
Tane is proud of Perri for standing up for himself, and calls Harper in so Perri can discuss matters with a professional.
Perri is concerned that Harper will call the authorities, but she points out she legally isn’t allowed to without his say so, as he’s over 16.
Tane offers Perri a bed at the farmhouse, and later explains to Harper that seeing how Perri is being mistreated is killing him inside, but assures her that he’s learnt his lesson when it comes to how he reacts. It’s only been six weeks since he was facing prison, and he’s learnt a lot in that time.
Harper has a sudden realisation as Tane mentions the timeframe, something which may explain why she’s been feeling a little off-colour…
Later that day, Harper returns home with a pregnancy test, and checking the coast is clear, heads to the bathroom.
After a tense wait, there’s a result—Harper is pregnant!
Elsewhere in the Beach House, Irene (Lynne McGranger) is struggling in the aftermath of Bronte’s (Stefanie Caccamo) scam, and it’s paining her to see how it has affected her nearest and dearest.
Dana (Ally Harris) was initially the only one to see through Bronte’s lies that she was suffering from a terminal autoimmune disease, and found herself at odds with both Irene and boyfriend Xander (Luke Van Os) as she tried to prove it.
When Dana started to become a liability, Bronte and her accomplice Chase (Joshua Mehmet) kidnapped her, getting her out of the way as Irene and Leah (Ada Nicodemou) worked to raise $100,000 for Bronte to attend a clinical trial in Canada.
Thankfully, Xander finally started to realise that something was amiss when Bronte claimed Dana was on a silent retreat, and teaming up with John (Shane Withington) and Bree (Juliet Godwin), the three went to the police.
When John and Xander later spotted Bronte driving Irene’s car, they followed her to where Dana was being held captive.
With Dana safe, and Bronte and Chase locked up, Irene was mortified to realise she had been taken for a ride.
Although Dana managed to forgive Irene pretty quickly, she’s struggling to forgive Xander, pointing out that he had trusted a complete stranger over his own girlfriend.
Next week, Dana continues to ignore Xander’s messages, and when he tells her that she at least owes him a conversation, she angrily replies that she owes him nothing!
John witnesses the outburst and later heads over to the Beach House to check up on Dana, pointing out that several of them were at fault so she shouldn’t be focusing all her anger on Xander.
Irene in the meantime is on edge, feeling completely responsible for ripping apart Dana and Xander’s relationship, as well as putting her friends in danger.
When Leah, Marilyn (Emily Symons) and John later talk about Bronte being the one to blame, Irene snaps that they should stop letting her off the hook.
That evening, Irene implores Dana to give Xander another chance—they’ve all suffered enough from what Bronte did, she shouldn’t let ruin her relationship too.
The conversation is interrupted by John and Leah, who insist on taking Irene out for dinner at Salt. Irene isn’t feeling it, but is convinced when John points out that he’s paying.
However, as they wait at the bar, recovering alcoholic Irene can’t take her eyes off the barman as he pours out a glass of whisky for John.
Later that night, Irene returns home, having bought herself a bottle of whisky.
She unscrews the cap and is about to pour herself a glass before she thinks better of it.
Rushing to find a pamphlet in her kitchen drawer, a shaken Irene calls an alcohol helpline.
“I’m a second away from fallin’ off the wagon,” she tells them. “I am really hopin’ that you can talk me out of it!”
The next morning the helpline rings back, and Irene is able to confirm that whilst it was a long night, she managed to get through without touching a drop of alcohol.
Irene hastily rings off when John then turns up, worried that Irene hasn’t turned up for her shift at the diner.
“I slept in, big deal,” a frustrated Irene tells him, and as she tried to get rid of him so she can get ready, John insists on helping by making her breakfast.
But as Irene tucks into her toast, John inadvertently manages to upset her, by telling her just how much Xander is suffering at the moment as a result of Dana’s hurt.
An emotional Irene asks John to leave, and once he’s gone, she pulls out the whisky from its hiding place.
Pouring out a large glass, Irene knocks it back, falling off the wagon for the first time in 9 years…
Although early fans of the show will remember Irene back in 1991-1992 as an alcoholic, abusive mother to kids Nathan (David Dixon), Finlay (Tina Thomsen), and Damian (Matt Doran), she was played by Jacqy Phillips during those times.
Lynne McGranger took over the role when a newly sober Irene returned to Summer Bay permanently in January 1993, and it would be 16 years before she ever had to play the character as inebriated.
That’s not to say there hadn’t been some close calls during that time.
In 1995, Irene found herself outcast after taking the side of Dodge (Kelly Dale) on his unwelcome return to town.
Irene was left with egg on her face when it turned out that not only had Dodge faked his death to frame Steven Matheson (Adam Willits), who Irene had vilified following Dodge’s disappearance, but he was also responsible for killing her own estranged husband Murdoch (Tom Richards).
With recently moved-in housemate Marilyn (Emily Symons) unaware of the ‘no alcohol’ rule in Irene’s house, she had bought a bottle of wine to put in a casserole, and promised Selina (Tempany Deckert) that she’d get rid of the leftover.
However, when Irene subsequently found the open bottle on the kitchen shelf, she fought against temptation.
In 1998, Irene was at a particularly low ebb after being fired from Summer Bay High as Don Fisher’s (Norman Coburn) secretary. Having previously left the Bayside Diner, when she felt she didn’t fit in with the new youthful revamp, Irene was left unemployed for the first time in years and struggling for money.
Tearfully sitting down with a bottle of wine as she flicked through her family album, Irene poured out a glass and immediately knocked it over onto photos of grandson Paul, which thankfully brought her to her senses.
It wasn’t until 2009 that we saw Lynne’s Irene fall off the wagon for the first time, following a particularly traumatic event. Having gone away on a sailing trip with boyfriend Lou De Bono (David Roberts), the yacht was found drifting several weeks later 100km off the coast.
As Angelo (Luke Jacobz) and fellow police approached, a paranoid and intoxicated Irene shot at them, wounding an officer.
It transpired that Lou had disappeared from the boat one evening whilst Irene slept. Terrified that whoever got Lou would come back for her, and unable to work the radio, Irene had taken to drink after several days stranded at sea.
With no explanation for what had occurred, Irene was held on remand on suspicion of murder as well as for wounding an officer, with Lou’s embittered ex-wife Donna (Suzie McKenzie) paying a prison officer to slip booze into Irene’s cell in an attempt to further discredit her.
Irene was released when forensic evidence on the boat determined that there was a third person present, but her drinking continued
Things came to a head when Annie (Charlotte Best) found Irene’s hidden bottle of gin and poured it down the sink, only for Irene to slap her across the face.
This was the wake-up call Irene needed to seek help, and she attended AA meetings. It was revealed the following year that Lou had been killed in an altercation with people traffickers Derrick Quaid (John Atkinson) and Hugo Austin (Bernard Curry).
Irene remained sober for a further six years, until 2015 when a troubled Olivia Fraser-Richards (Raechelle Banno) returned to Summer Bay to live with her. After it was discovered she was cutting herself, Olivia admitted to Irene that a family friend had been abusing her back in London.
The revelation brought up painful memories for Irene, and she went on to admit to Olivia and Leah (Ada Nicodemou) that she too had been abused by her Uncle Pete when she was only 14 years old.
There was a bigger secret that Irene continued to struggle with though, to the point where she bought a bottle of vodka and drowned her sorrows.
When Leah later caught Irene weeping on the kitchen floor, having smashed the bottle and cut her hand, she applied pressure to the wound using a nearby baby blanket. Irene was horrified when she realised, and lashed out at Leah.
She subsequently revealed that she had given birth as the result of her Uncle Pete’s abuse, and the child had been taken into care. Irene hadn’t even been able to hold her baby, and she never knew what became of them.
Although her secret had been shared, Irene continued to drink and made no attempt to hide it, with the effects of her relapse far more widely felt in the community this time around.
She drunkenly called Olivia a leech, whilst even a talking to from Alf who poured her grog down the sink didn’t make any difference.
After she made a show of herself at Zac (Charlie Clausen) and Leah’s wedding, Chris (Johnny Ruffo) took Irene home where she then slapped him for attempting to take away her hip flask.
Again, it was this moment of violence that brought Irene to her senses, and as she spoke with Leah (still in her wedding dress), Irene resolved that she needed to put her demons to rest by finding out what had happened to her baby.
That would end up being a whole other ordeal the following year, with her son revealed to be Mick Jennings (Kristian Schmid).
With Irene now facing her third relapse over the space of 15 years, will she be strong enough to pull herself through once again?
Home and Away
“Home and Away’s John Palmer Actor Hid Relationship with Co-Star for Years”
Both at home and away Star of John Palmer Shane Withington first dated co-star of A Country Practice Anne Tenney in the 1980s, but the couple from TV remained secretive about their relationship for years.
Both Shane Withington and his co-star declined to disclose their relationship to others.
Renowned for his role as John Palmer in Home and Away, the 65-year-old got to know Anne Tenney while working on the set of A Country Practice in the 1980s. On the Australian soap drama, their characters, Brendan and Molly Jones, later tied the knot.
But what fans didn’t know is that their love translated off-screen. And they kept their relationship so secret that even their on-screen daughter Emily Nicol was oblivious to their romance.
Shane opened up about why they tried to keep their relationship on the down low, admitting it was due to fears of “cheapening” their love. Speaking to Starts at 60, the actor explained: “We kept it under our hats, no one really knew.
“We didn’t want the media to get a hold of it. We kept it a secret for years, we didn’t want to cheapen our relationship by doing a magazine cover saying ‘we found love on a soap opera!’”
He added: “We valued our relationship more than that, it’s a private thing and we’ve kept it that way ever since.” Fans of the show were left devastated when Molly died in 1985 following a battle with leukaemia.
Shane’s character on Home and Away has also had his fair share of heartache. He fell in love and married Gina Palmer (Sonia Todd), but she died suddenly from a brain aneurysm in 2013.
John found love again with Marilyn Chambers (Emily Symons), but the couple split in 2020. His attention has now been focused on the Surf Club, and it’s anonymous donor.
The Club recently received a huge donation from an unknown party, with Roo (Georgie Parker) and John going head-to-head to uncover the person’s identity. During Monday’s episode (March 25) of the Channel 5 soap, Roo suggested they hold off using the money until they found out what this person wanted.
But John insisted they should spend the money as soon as possible. Trying to broker peace between the two, Irene (Lynne McGranger) suggested they let the committee decide. But to Roo’s despair, every vote went John’s way.
Home and Away
“Home and Away’s Tane Star Nearly Gave Up Acting After Becoming a Father at 16”
Both at home and away After having a daughter at the age of sixteen, Tane Parata actor Ethan Browne nearly gave up acting, acknowledging that it was “frowned upon” in his village.
At sixteen, Ethan Browne of Home and Away gave up acting to become a parent.
Although he began playing Tane Parata in 2020, the actor’s professional path nearly took a very other turn. Ethan chose to become a civil engineer instead of an actor when his daughter Aaylah was born.
The soap star relocated to Australia to pursue acting studies almost ten years after leaving New Zealand. Before enrolling at Sydney’s National Institute of Dramatic Arts, he lived briefly in Brisbane.
Shortly after he graduated, Ethan signed a three-year contract with Home and Away, his first major acting credit. While he achieved his dream of becoming an actor, relocating to Australia meant he was separated from Aaylah, 15, during Covid-19.
With restrictions meaning he couldn’t travel, Ethan didn’t see his daughter in person for around one year. In December 2020, he was finally able to catch his flight and documented their reunion on Instagram.
In the emotional video, Ethan hugged his daughter and kissed her on the head as he expressed how difficult the distance was for them in the caption.
He began: “Surprising my daughter after almost a year apart. A moment I have dreamed and fantasised about for so long.
“I can’t articulate how tough this stretch has been. It’s indescribable and incomprehensible. COVID has taken away our ability to travel freely, and physically be with our loved ones.”
Ethan went on to share his gratitude at being able to reunite with his child, adding: “But love transcends the physical, and the distance and lost time has only strengthened our bond. We’re here and now, and our hearts are full again.
“To the parents who have been separated from their children because of this year’s events, and to those who can’t see their loved ones at Christmas, I send you all my love and strength. To my daughter, you are my entire heart. #Myangel #mylove #mylife.”
Ethan was initially sceptical about revisiting his dream of acting, admitting it wasn’t a career that was pursued by those in his hometown of Wairoa, New Zealand. “I grew up in a small country town that was dominated by rugby culture. Acting wasn’t the thing a man would do,” he previously told the Daily Telegraph.
He added: “I wanted to do it in high school but it was frowned upon by the boys, that sort of culture, it wasn’t the tough masculine thing to do. I waited until I was in Australia and no one knew me to actually give it a go just quietly.”