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60 Minutes: Sept 9

Toni Collette is everywhere right now, and this Sunday she's on 60 Minutes, talking up her new role in the movie Mental.

Toni Collette is everywhere right now, and this Sunday she’s on 60 Minutes, talking up her new role in the movie Mental.

Walking Tall
We all want to fit in. That’s just the way we’re wired. But for the young man you’ll meet on Sunday night, blending into the crowd is an impossible dream. Igor is dangerously tall – 8 foot – and getting bigger by the day. While the first thing you notice about Igor is undoubtedly his height, spend some time with him and you realise he’s also charming, funny, complex and heartbreakingly lonely. He also has the biggest smile you’ll ever see – you just have to find a way to coax it out of him.
Reporter: Michael Usher
Producer: Phil Goyen

Kidnapped!
It’s the kidnap capital of the world – a city where someone is snatched off the street every three hours. In Sao Paulo, just walking outside your front door can be dangerous. Not even children are safe. The men and women who track down and rescue the hostages are members of Brazil’s crack anti-kidnapping unit. Allison Langdon joined these courageous men and women for one incredibly intense week. At times, Allison felt like she had wandered onto the set of a Hollywood action movie – except on this beat the bad guys and the bullets are real.
Reporter: Allison Langdon
Producer: Steven Burling

Mental as Anything
She’s a chick from the ‘burbs – a down-to-earth Aussie sheila who’s risen to the top in Hollywood.Toni Collette got her start in that wonderfully odd little Australian movie “Muriel’s Wedding”. Her role as the dumpy, wedding-obsessed Muriel from Porpoise Spit set her on the road to international stardom. Of course, it didn’t hurt that she also happened to be blessed with bucket loads of talent. In the eighteen years since, Toni has won a Golden Globe and an Emmy as well as been nominated for an Oscar. Now she’s come full circle playing Shaz in the new Australian Film “Mental.” It’s another quirky local comedy. And it’s taken her back to the place she loves best – home.
Reporter: Charles Wooley
Producer: Sandra Cleary

Saint Catherine
In Africa, she’s considered a saint. And having seen her at work, we’re not about to disagree. Dr Catherine Hamlin has devoted her life to healing the broken bodies of Ethiopian girls who have been forced into marriage and then get pregnant at far too young an age. But today this gentle woman is angry – angry with the Australian charity that has collected millions in her name. She accuses the charity of not passing the donations on. It’s a 15-million-dollar rift that threatens a lifetime’s work.
Reporter: Tara Brown
Producer: Stephen Taylor

Sunday, September 9 at 7.30pm on Nine

3 Responses

  1. It’s really quite amazing that she not only faked appendicitis to fool doctors when she was 11…but that she also went through with the operation! If she explains why tonight, I’d welcome knowing why she did it. Glad it didn’t turn into full blown Munchausen. I mean, many kids like to act or to play make-believe at a convincing level but that’s up there close to spooky.

  2. I will be watching just for the story on Toni Collette, the woman is a national treasure! An amazing talent whose humility almost matches her talent, some of the Hollywood elite could take a leaf outta her book.

  3. Re:the final story,Saint Catherine.I often wonder where the money people donate to charities,goes.Does it go to some corrupt government,does it go to some unscrupulous operators.How is money accounted for when it’s passed on?How do people know where it’s going and who it’s going to?Are the right people receiving it?

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