The Australian Women's Weekly

JESSICA ROWE: on anxiety, love and botox

- PHOTOGRAPH­Y by ALANA LANDSBERRY • STYLING by REBECCA RAC

Jessica Rowe has always hidden behind a mask, but in her 49th year the TV star is aching for honesty. In a no-holds-barred interview she talks to Juliet Rieden about her ongoing battle with anxiety, why she left Studio 10, soulmate Peter Overton and her botox habit.

“Ineed wholemeal flour and tuna and what else?” a slightly harassed looking Peter Overton asks his wife as he gathers his car keys so that he and daughter Giselle can head off to shop for what most would consider a rather bizarre birthday celebratio­n. Violet the cat is turning two and later, I’m told, there will be a party. Peter’s job is to oversee the baking of a fishy tuna cake for the felines – there are two other cats, Alfie and Daisy, in the Overton household who are also invited – and purchase cat-related party parapherna­lia for the human guests.

All this makes perfect sense to Jessica, her two daughters – 12-yearold Allegra and nine-going-on-10year-old Giselle – and patriarch Peter. Although later, Giselle is a little perturbed to discover that Violet isn’t actually turning two for another 10 days!

Welcome to the zany, messy, love-filled universe of Jessica Rowe. It’s a world where intentions are always turbo-charged but behind the seeming glamour of this marriage of two well-known TV presenters, nothing is perfect.

Since Jessica abruptly left Network Ten’s Studio 10 morning show halfway through last year to concentrat­e on family life, she has also been busy penning a sort of memoir. In true Jessica style it’s a star-shaped peg in the round hole of autobiogra­phies, revealing the private heartache as well as the hilarious antics behind Jessica’s attempts at cooking and homemaking; plus some recipes you may – or may not – want to try at home.

Diary of a Crap Housewife takes its moniker from Jess’s hugely popular Instagram account, where each day 100,000 followers witness her charred dinners. Yet amid the book’s selfdeprec­ating humour, Jessica is searingly honest about some dark, dark times. And as we sit down to talk, I quickly realise this tome is a vital part of the “new place” Jessica has found herself in.

“I’ll be 49 in June and I feel I’ve got nothing to lose any more. I am more comfortabl­e with who I am, so I really don’t care as much what people think ... It’s a good time for me to write a book,” says Jessica, as Peter and Giselle leave us for their errands.

“When I wrote my first book with my mum, called The Best of Times, The Worst of Times about Mum’s bipolar illness, I remember my publisher saying, ‘can you explain more, can you peel it back?’ And as a younger woman that was hard for me to do. Now if anything I overshare,” she laughs.

Through her social media presence and now this book, Jessica has developed a personal mantra which is all about embracing shortcomin­gs, and it’s no surprise that her message is chiming clear as a bell with women all over the nation. “I now wear my so-called ‘failings’ and ‘flaws’ like badges of honour, as I’ve discovered the enormous power that comes from being vulnerable,” she writes. “Part of that vulnerabil­ity has meant letting go of the apron strings tied around the airbrushed image of what a family is ‘supposed’ to look like.”

At its core, that family comprises husband Peter Overton, 52, the seasoned Nine Network news host, their two daughters Giselle and Allegra, and of course, the three cats. On the surface the foursome looks pretty splendid, especially all dressed up in The Weekly’s photo shoot. But Jessica is now eager to reveal that behind the mask, it hasn’t always been peaches and cream. “When I was much younger, it was all about projecting a particular image. But as I’ve got older I have become far more honest,” she admits. “You can’t be fabulous at everything and it’s okay not to be.”

Jessica is not just talking about her dodgy evening meals here – which, for the record, have driven Pete to relying on a delivery service – or the patronisin­gly dubbed “juggle” that modern women are supposed to crave and master. This goes much deeper.

It’s about holding herself together as a mother, a wife, a TV presenter, a human being. It’s about trying to find the joy in life, when you’re plagued by feelings of anxiety. And then it’s about having the guts to let down your guard and, “support other women by telling your story”.

The smile on Jessica’s face that greets me today is the result of hard work, family love and a courage to face her demons. There have been

“My daughters needed me more than ever.”

times in the past and very recently when every day has been a struggle, and admitting that has given Jessica a new set of wings. Jessica is optimistic by nature. Always has been. On any given day you’ll find her chatting and snorting with laugher. She’s also fiercely ambitious.

But when Jessica chose to quit Studio 10, she confesses she was in a rough place. “I could feel at the end of each show on most days I would be close to tears. I’d feel that behind my eyes and was just about keeping it together. And I thought, ‘why am I doing this to myself?’”

On screen she was feisty, passionate and looked as if she was having fun. But appearance­s deceive. “I knew that I was heading down, I knew that my anxiety was there, that I was getting depressed and that if I didn’t make a change I’d start to falter.”

Jessica was rightly concerned. She had experience­d something similar before, when postnatal depression seemingly came out of nowhere and floored her, following the birth of Allegra. But this was different. “It wasn’t the job per se. It’s the best job I’ve ever had in telly. I absolutely loved it! But I knew I needed to make a change. I was putting myself out there every day and I could never do things by halves.”

Meanwhile, mother guilt was eating away at Jessica’s heart. Allegra had been setting her alarm so she could wake up early to catch some quality time with her mum before she headed off to work, accessible to the nation, but not to her two girls. “Now my daughters were getting older, I realised they needed me more than ever. I couldn’t ignore my life’s greatest work – being the best mother for them.”

Peter was completely supportive of his wife’s decision. “She talks to me openly and the only thing that matters is happiness,” he tells me later. “It’s been a game changer for our family and especially for Allegra. Both girls needed

Mum and we could do it. A lot of families can’t and we know we’re lucky in that regard.”

Jessica Rowe first met Peter Overton in the early 1990s when, as a wannabe TV journalist, she was hanging around the newsroom on work experience. “What I remember most was just how kind he was. Peter was a sports reporter and it was when [boxer] Kostya Tszyu first arrived back in Australia. I have not the remotest interest in boxing, but it was lovely out in the news car with him; he introduced the crew, what was involved in making a TV news story.”

Peter’s memories are hazier, but he says, “I have this vision of her in a pair of denim overalls; a pretty tomboy.”

Fast forward a few years and the two crossed paths at the Logies. “Peter had just started working for 60 Minutes. He said,

‘can I get you a champagne’, and we had a really nice chat. I was dating someone else at the time that wasn’t going terribly well, but I remember when I was talking to Peter, thinking, why can’t I meet a nice man like that?” recalls Jessica.

“Then a few months later, not surprising­ly, my relationsh­ip broke up and I was pouring out my heart to a good friend of mine, sports reporter Tony Peters. I said, I'm never going to meet anyone nice. He used to call me ‘Bombshell’, and he said ‘Bombshell, this is ridiculous, there’s got to be someone you like who seems nice’. I said, you know who I did meet recently who seemed really lovely – Peter Overton. He went, right, I know him, I'm ringing him.

Peter remembers the call. “Tony Peters rang me up and prompted me to ask

her out. I said, ‘I don’t want to ask anyone out, mate, I’ve just started at 60 Minutes, that’s my focus’. But he kept poking so I said, ‘righto, tell her to ring me and if she rings me in 10 minutes and asks me out I’ll go to dinner’. And she did. I actually remember the desk I was sitting at and I remember picking up my phone and hearing this nervous voice say: ‘It’s Jessica Rowe, Peter’ – and I remember saying, ‘I like your style.’ We went out to dinner on a Sunday night in Balmain and I went away the next day for 60 Minutes, and we’ve been together ever since.”

Jessica was smitten from the start, but it took a while for Pete to catch up. “He did propose in the end but I was far more serious sooner than he was. We joke now, we go to Avoca Beach [where Pete’s family has a house] on the NSW Central Coast with the girls and we laugh: I remember years ago walking that beach with Petey and saying to him, what is going on, I need to know, I'm of an age where I know what I want, but if it’s not what you want I can’t keep waiting.”

“I’d come out of a marriage,” pleads Pete, who recalls spouting some rubbish about needing his space. “Now we walk along in the same spot with our two beautiful girls ... I remember

I was in Melbourne, and we were packing up to get a plane back to Sydney, and I had this light bulb moment. I thought, she is the one!”

Filled with urgency at last, Peter secretly commission­ed a ring from Jessica’s favourite jeweller, Stefano Canturi, and started to plan his proposal when Jess’s mum called.

“She wanted me to help her carry a computer down her spiral staircase, so I thought I’d stir her up a bit. She opened the door and I said, ‘It’s seven o'clock on a Saturday morning, I have got better things to be doing.’ She was horrified – then I said, ‘I've got to go

“As she got out of the shower, I asked her to marry me.”

and pick up your daughter’s engagement ring.’ Bang! She gave me a big hug.

“Then I went to ask Jessica’s father who was beside himself, and he said, ‘when are you going to ask her?’.

I said, ‘next Saturday, so you’re not allowed to say a word’. He said, ‘you’re going to have to ask her now because I won’t be able to keep that secret.’

So I went back to her apartment and as she got out of the shower, I asked her to marry me.”

Wrapped in a towel, Jess immediatel­y said yes.

They became TV’s golden couple, vivacious, charming and perfectly matched. They hoped to start a family, which was when Jessica hit her first roadblock. “It was very hard initially,” she tells me. “I felt like a failure because there was that part of me that had just assumed as a woman I’d have no problems having a baby. That was part of my make-up and who I was. Then there’s that part of you that thinks if I can’t have a baby, what does that mean for me and how I’d envisaged my life?”

By this time Jessica had started as co-host on the Today show at the Nine Network, where she was receiving a tsunami of criticism from outside and within the network. Now the couple was sharing the same workplace.

“It was very hard,” says Peter.

“I had a high-profile job and I’m watching my wife being whacked from pillar to post. I’m travelling overseas, I’m reading it, hearing it, it was relentless and really unfair.”

Jessica just put her head down and kept going, but was aware how much it hurt Peter. “I think when you love someone you want to fix it. It was tougher for Petey because he couldn’t reconcile what some of his colleagues were doing to me. I remember him saying, ‘I'm going to quit,’ and for once I was the more sensible one and said, no, you can’t. You love your job ... we cannot blow up two careers at the same time, for my honour – for want of a better word. Let’s be smart.”

Rather than crumble, Peter and Jessica decided to grab life with both hands and embark on IVF treatment. “We used to quietly drive to the IVF clinic,” says Peter, “and I remember going in for our first appointmen­t and there was a big noticeboar­d with all the photos of the parents and their newborns. I just moved one couple

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