Deborah Mailman
Deborah Jane Mailman AM (born 14 July 1972) is an Australian actress and singer of Bidjara Aboriginal and Māori (Ngāti Porou and Te Arawa) descent.[1] She gained prominence as the first Indigenous Australian actress to win the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her performance in the film Radiance (1998).[2] Mailman has earned multiple Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA) Awards and TV Week Logie Awards, including for her television roles as Kelly Lewis in The Secret Life of Us (2001–2005), in the miniseries Mabo (2012), and as Alex Irving in Total Control (2019–2024).[2][3] Her work often explores Indigenous Australian experiences, contributing to greater representation in Australian screen industries.[2]Early Life and Background
Childhood in Queensland
Deborah Mailman was born Deborah Jane Mailman on 14 July 1972 in Mount Isa, a remote mining town in north-western Queensland, Australia.[4][5] She grew up there as one of five children in a working-class family, with her father, Wally Mailman, employed as a rodeo rider, stockman, and later caretaker at the local rodeo grounds after the family settled following travels along the rodeo circuit.[6][7] Her mother, Jane, complemented the household's emphasis on hard work and resilience amid the town's rugged, outback environment.[8] Mailman's early years were shaped by the isolation and community dynamics of Mount Isa, where she and her siblings encountered minimal overt prejudice despite the region's socio-economic challenges.[9] She attended Barkly Highway State School for primary education, navigating typical childhood experiences in a small, resource-driven town centered around mining and stock work.[4] Personal challenges marked her formative period, including shyness and teasing at school around age six for her weight, which she later reflected on as influencing her self-perception in a family-oriented but demanding setting.[5] These elements fostered an early awareness of perseverance, drawn from her parents' rodeo-influenced lifestyle and the practical realities of regional Queensland life.[8]Indigenous Heritage and Family Influences
Deborah Mailman possesses documented Aboriginal ancestry from the Bidjara people of Queensland, alongside Māori heritage tracing to the Ngāti Porou and Te Arawa iwi of New Zealand.[10][11] This dual lineage stems directly from her parents, with her father's origins linked to the Bidjara region near Augathella.[12] Such genealogical ties reflect the diverse intermarriages common among Indigenous Australian families in remote areas like Mount Isa, where Mailman was born on July 14, 1972, as one of five children.[8] Her family's cultural environment emphasized oral traditions inherent to Bidjara practices, where storytelling served as a primary mechanism for preserving knowledge and identity amid historical disruptions.[12] Mailman has recounted in discussions how these familial narratives, passed down through generations, fostered her innate draw toward performative expression, viewing them as foundational to her engagement with story-based arts rather than formal training.[13] This influence is evident in her early exposure to Indigenous communicative forms, which prioritize spoken recounting over written records, a pattern corroborated by her reflections on heritage-driven creativity.[10]Education and Training
Formal Education
Deborah Mailman completed her early education at Barkly Highway State School in Mount Isa, Queensland, where she initially expressed interest in becoming a teacher.[4] [14] A pivotal conversation with a school teacher redirected her ambitions toward acting as a viable career path, prompting her at age 17 to audition for and relocate to Brisbane for postsecondary training in performing arts.[14] In Brisbane, Mailman attended the Queensland University of Technology's Academy of the Arts, graduating in 1992 with a Bachelor of Arts degree majoring in performing arts (drama).[4] [15] This program emphasized practical skill development in acting and performance techniques, providing hands-on training suited to immediate professional application rather than theoretical or advanced academic pursuits.[4] She did not pursue further formal degrees beyond this qualification. Following her graduation, Mailman engaged with the Kooemba Djarra Indigenous Performing Arts company in Brisbane, an affiliation that extended her university-acquired skills into collaborative theatre practice and early playwriting efforts, facilitating a seamless progression from structured education to professional creative output.[16] This involvement underscored the applied nature of her training, focusing on Indigenous storytelling and performance without additional institutional enrollment.[17]Entry into Performing Arts
Mailman entered the professional performing arts scene shortly after graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in Acting from Queensland University of Technology's Academy of the Arts in 1992.[18] Her initial opportunities focused on Brisbane's local theatre landscape, where she honed foundational skills in performance and character interpretation through supporting roles.[2] A pivotal early role came in 1994, when she portrayed Katherina in La Boite Theatre's production of William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew, directed by David Megaritty.[19] This appearance marked one of her first credited professional stage engagements, providing practical experience in classical text delivery and ensemble dynamics within Queensland's independent theatre circuit.[19] By the mid-1990s, Mailman aligned with Kooemba Jdarra, a Brisbane-based Indigenous performing arts company established in 1993 to foster Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander storytelling.[17] There, she collaborated with director Wesley Enoch on The 7 Stages of Grieving, a solo performance piece she co-authored, which premiered in 1995 and explored themes of Indigenous grief through structured narrative vignettes.[17][20] This production, performed across local venues, demonstrated her emerging versatility in script development alongside acting, earning notice in regional Indigenous arts networks for its raw emotional authenticity and cultural specificity.[2] These foundational theatre experiences built her technical proficiency and laid groundwork for broader exposure, distinct from subsequent national or screen-based work.[2]Acting Career
Theatre Debut and Early Stage Work
Mailman's professional theatre debut occurred in 1994, when she portrayed Kate in La Boite Theatre's production of Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew, directed by Sue Rider and set in an Australian context. This production was recognized as a landmark for its inclusion of Indigenous actresses in lead roles, marking an early instance of culturally contextualized Shakespearean adaptation featuring Aboriginal performers.[19] In 1995, Mailman co-authored and originated the solo role in The 7 Stages of Grieving with Wesley Enoch for Kooemba Jdarra Indigenous Performing Arts, which premiered on 13 September at Brisbane's Metro Arts Theatre as part of the Warana Festival. The play, a one-woman show performed by Mailman, explores Aboriginal grief, resilience, and survival through fragmented vignettes drawing on personal and historical trauma, including responses to events like the 1993 murder of teenager Daniel Yock. Critics and theatre historians have described it as a ground-breaking work in Australian Indigenous theatre, emphasizing its innovative blend of storytelling, ritual, and political commentary, with subsequent national tours solidifying its status as a classic.[21][17] Mailman continued her association with Kooemba Jdarra through the 1997 revival of Louis Nowra's Radiance, produced in collaboration with Queensland Theatre Company, where she played the character Nona, a complex Indigenous woman navigating family secrets and terminal illness upon returning to her remote community. This stage role, predating the 1998 film adaptation, highlighted Mailman's ability to embody multifaceted Indigenous female experiences, contributing to the company's focus on authentic representations of Aboriginal narratives during the 1990s. Her early theatre involvement with Kooemba Jdarra, an Indigenous-led ensemble, provided rigorous training in ensemble dynamics and culturally specific performance techniques, fostering skills in emotional depth and physicality that later informed her screen transitions.[22]Breakthrough in Film
Mailman's film debut in Radiance (1998), directed by Rachel Perkins, established her as a leading Indigenous Australian actress. In the role of Nona, one of three estranged sisters reuniting on their Queensland family land following their father's death, she portrayed complex family dynamics, hidden secrets, and ties to ancestral dispossession.[23] The film, adapted from Louis Nowra's play, emphasized Aboriginal women's perspectives in a post-Mabo context, marking an early feature-length centering of such narratives in Australian cinema.[24] For Radiance, Mailman won the Australian Film Institute (AFI) Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role on November 8, 1998, becoming the first Aboriginal actress to achieve this distinction.[23] [25] This award, combined with the film's focus on Indigenous land and identity, elevated visibility for Aboriginal-led stories, challenging prior marginalization in mainstream productions by showcasing authentic, non-stereotypical portrayals.[2] Subsequent roles in 2012 reinforced her breakthrough status. As Gail, the protective manager in The Sapphires—a drama about an Indigenous Motown-style girl group entertaining troops during the Vietnam War—Mailman earned the Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA) Award for Best Lead Actress in a Feature Film on January 30, 2013.[26] The film's box office performance, reaching $5.6 million domestically by August 20, 2012, underscored audience demand for Indigenous-centered content, with its $1.96 million opening weekend reflecting broad commercial appeal.[27] In Mental, directed by P.J. Hogan, she played Sandra, a supporting character in a family comedy-drama, garnering an AACTA nomination for Best Supporting Actress.[28] These films empirically advanced Indigenous visibility through awards validation and financial metrics; Radiance pioneered lead Aboriginal female roles with critical acclaim, while The Sapphires' high earnings—among Australia's top-grossing local films—demonstrated market viability for stories of Indigenous resilience and talent, shifting industry norms toward inclusive casting without relying on tokenism.[2][29]Television Roles and Series Leads
Mailman's breakthrough in television came with her portrayal of Kelly Lewis in the urban drama The Secret Life of Us, which aired on Network Ten from 2001 to 2006 and spanned 86 episodes across four seasons. As a single lawyer grappling with romantic entanglements, career ambitions, and personal vulnerabilities in a Melbourne apartment block, her character arc highlighted themes of modern relationships and self-discovery, contributing to the series' appeal to young adult audiences through its serialized episodic format. The show drew consistent viewership in the 1–1.5 million range per episode during its peak, fostering long-term engagement via character-driven narratives that evolved over multiple years.[30][2] For this role, Mailman won the 2004 Logie Award for Most Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series, recognizing her nuanced depiction of emotional depth.[31][32] She later took on the recurring role of Cherie Butterfield in the ensemble comedy-drama Offspring, broadcast on Network Ten from 2010 to 2017 across seven seasons and 56 episodes. Portraying a resilient nurse and steadfast friend within a chaotic family structure, Mailman's character provided grounded support amid the series' focus on obstetrician Nina Proudman's life upheavals, with arcs emphasizing loyalty, humor, and relational tensions in episodic storylines. The program sustained audience loyalty, achieving ratings peaks of over 1.2 million viewers nationally for key episodes, which underscored its success in blending serialized family arcs with standalone comedic elements.[33][34] In Indigenous-centered television, Mailman played Bonita Mabo in the 2012 telemovie Mabo, a docudrama depicting the wife of land rights activist Eddie Koiki Mabo during his legal battle against terra nullius, spanning her character's endurance through family hardships and advocacy over decades. This single, extended narrative format allowed for a focused character study of resilience, earning her the 2013 Logie for Most Outstanding Actress.[35][2] She also starred as Lorraine in Redfern Now (2012–2013), an ABC anthology series examining Aboriginal family struggles in Sydney's Redfern, where her lead in select episodes traced arcs of grief, justice-seeking, and community bonds amid episodic tales of systemic challenges, differentiating TV's vignette-style depth from film by building cumulative viewer investment in recurring cultural themes.[36][2] Mailman led as Indigenous activist-turned-senator Alex Irving in the political thriller Total Control, which premiered on ABC in 2019 and concluded in 2024 after three seasons of six episodes each. Her portrayal navigated power dynamics, corruption, and identity conflicts in Australian politics, with the character's arc evolving from a viral heroics-driven appointment to Senate maneuvering and personal reckonings, praised for capturing tactical ambition in a serialized format that mirrored real-time policy intrigue and sustained critical acclaim with 100% Rotten Tomatoes approval for season one.[37][38] The series distinguished itself through Mailman's commanding presence in high-stakes episodes, driving viewer retention via escalating personal and institutional tensions rather than isolated film events.[39]Recent Film and TV Projects (2010s–2025)
In the 2010s, Mailman appeared in supporting roles across film and television, including as a police officer in the comedy sequel A Few Less Men (2017) and Pam in the musical Three Summers (2017).[40] She also voiced characters in animated features such as Blinky Bill's mother in Blinky Bill the Movie (2015).[16] These projects built on her established versatility, blending dramatic and lighter fare while maintaining a focus on Australian narratives. Transitioning into the 2020s, Mailman took lead roles in politically charged television, notably portraying Alex Irving, an ambitious Indigenous politician navigating power dynamics, in the ABC series Total Control across three seasons from 2019 to 2024.[41] The series, which explored themes of corruption and identity in Australian politics, culminated in her winning the Silver Logie for Best Lead Actress in a Drama at the 2024 Logie Awards for the final season.[42] In 2023, Mailman starred as Sister Mum, an Indigenous nun aiding a young Aboriginal boy at a remote monastery, in Warwick Thornton's drama The New Boy, which premiered internationally in 2024 and addressed cultural clashes with Christianity in 1940s Australia.[43] The film received critical attention for its spiritual themes, with Mailman earning recognition for her supporting performance.[44] Mailman's 2024 Netflix miniseries Boy Swallows Universe featured her as Eli's school guidance counsellor, Poppy Birkbeck, in a coming-of-age story adapted from Trent Dalton's novel, set amid 1980s Brisbane suburbia and family dysfunction.[45] For this role, she secured the AACTA Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama at the 2025 ceremony, contributing to the series' sweep of six AACTA honors including Best Miniseries.[46] Looking to 2025, Mailman leads as Pansy, a mother seeking her stolen children amid 1930s wolfram mining exploitation, in Wolfram, Warwick Thornton's sequel to Sweet Country, which screened as the closing gala at the Adelaide Film Festival in October.[47] The film depicts Aboriginal children's escape from white masters across central Australia, emphasizing survival and reunion.[48]Advocacy and Public Positions
Promotion of Indigenous Representation
Mailman has actively promoted greater inclusion of Indigenous actors in Australian screen productions, emphasizing opportunities beyond culturally specific narratives to counter tokenistic portrayals. In a 2015 interview, she urged producers to cast Indigenous performers in non-Indigenous roles, arguing that this approach fosters broader integration rather than isolating representation within predefined ethnic confines.[49] She has similarly highlighted the need for diversity in mainstream content, expressing frustration at the limited scope of Indigenous appearances outside dedicated Indigenous projects.[50] Her involvement with the Kooemba Djarra Indigenous Performing Arts company, co-founded in 1993, has extended to creating platforms for emerging Indigenous talent through theatre productions. Mailman co-wrote and starred in the company's seminal work The 7 Stages of Grieving in 1995, which premiered groundbreaking Indigenous perspectives and toured extensively, influencing subsequent generations of performers.[15] This effort aligns with her broader influence, as evidenced by First Nations creatives crediting her performances with shaping their careers and inspiring authentic Indigenous storytelling in media.[51] Industry data reflects incremental progress in on-screen representation amid such advocacy, with Screen Australia's analysis showing First Nations main characters rising from 4.8% of roles in 2016 to 7.2% by 2021—exceeding the Indigenous proportion of Australia's population at 3.8%.[52][53] Mailman has acknowledged this trend, noting in 2021 that Australia is improving in featuring First Nations stories and characters, though she stresses the ongoing responsibility to ensure narratives resonate authentically with communities.[54]Engagement with Political Campaigns
Mailman voiced strong support for the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice to Parliament referendum, which proposed constitutionally enshrining an advisory body for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander issues to Parliament and the executive government.[55] The measure was defeated on October 14, 2023, with 60.06% of voters nationally rejecting it across all states, marking the first national referendum loss since 1999.[56] Following the result, Mailman described herself as "absolutely devastated," a sentiment persisting into December 2023 amid ongoing reflections on its implications for Indigenous representation.[57] Critics of the Voice, including constitutional experts and No campaign leaders, argued that its ambiguous wording failed to specify advisory limits, risking legal challenges and perpetuating race-based divisions in governance, which undermined broader reconciliation efforts by prioritizing symbolic over substantive policy reforms.[58] Empirical analyses of voting patterns revealed that concerns over potential divisiveness and insufficient detail on implementation—rather than outright opposition to Indigenous advancement—drove the rejection, with pre-referendum polls showing 55-60% skepticism tied to fears of entrenching racial separatism over unified national solutions.[59] This outcome highlighted public preference for evidence-based, non-constitutional approaches to Indigenous policy, such as targeted welfare and economic initiatives, over alterations perceived as structurally divisive. In the ABC political thriller Total Control (2019–2024), Mailman starred as Alex Irving, a cunning Indigenous political operative navigating power structures, with the series drawing parallels to real Indigenous policy debates including advisory mechanisms akin to the Voice.[39] Initially titled Black Bitch to evoke historical racial epithets faced by Indigenous women in politics, the name sparked backlash over perceived offensiveness, prompting a rename to Total Control before its Australian premiere in October 2019.[60] While praised for authentically depicting Indigenous agency amid institutional barriers, detractors noted the show's heightened intrigue and personal vendettas as amplifying sensationalism beyond the procedural realities of Australian politics, potentially overshadowing nuanced policy critiques.[39] Mailman has linked racism to entrenched barriers in Indigenous advancement, advocating for greater visibility in policy discourse through her roles and public statements.[61] However, the Voice's empirical failure underscores causal limitations of race-centric constitutional fixes, with post-referendum data indicating voter prioritization of practical outcomes—like closing socioeconomic gaps via non-divisive means—over identity-based institutions, as evidenced by consistent rejections of similar proposals historically.[58]Personal Life
Marriage and Children
Deborah Mailman is married to Matthew Coonan, an advertising executive, with whom she has two sons, Henry and Oliver.[62][63] The couple met around 2006 and married approximately six years prior to 2018.[64] Their first son, Henry, was born on the weekend of January 20–21, 2007.[65] Oliver was born several years later, around 2011.[66] The family resides on the south coast of New South Wales, prioritizing a stable and secluded home life.[67][62]Health and Private Matters
Mailman has publicly discussed her ongoing experiences with anxiety, describing it as a persistent challenge despite her professional success, including insecurities that affect her preparation for roles where she becomes "highly nervous, highly anxious, [and] really stressed."[67][6] She has also reflected on childhood difficulties, such as being teased for her weight in Mount Isa, which contributed to early shyness and self-image struggles.[5] In interviews, Mailman has characterized herself as an emotional individual prone to overthinking and quick to tear up, for instance, at advertisements for animal welfare organizations.[6][68] She has acknowledged possessing a temper, though she describes herself as more reserved in expressing it compared to some roles she portrays.[54] Following the defeat of the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice to Parliament referendum on October 14, 2023, Mailman expressed personal devastation, stating over two months later that she remained "absolutely devastated" by the outcome, which intensified her focus on Indigenous storytelling.[57][55] Mailman has cited family commitments as a key reason for prioritizing Australian-based work over pursuits in Hollywood, noting in a September 2024 interview that relocating abroad "doesn't feel like that's the path" given her domestic roots and obligations.[69][70]Awards and Recognition
AACTA Awards
Deborah Mailman has received numerous nominations and wins at the Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA) Awards, which recognize excellence in Australian screen production and evolved from the Australian Film Institute Awards. These honors underscore her consistent impact on both film and television performances, with a total of at least eight wins as of 2025, spanning lead and supporting roles.[71][72] Her breakthrough win came in 1998 for Radiance, where she earned Best Actress in a Leading Role—the first such honor for an Indigenous Australian actor.[73][23] Subsequent victories include Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama in 2018, marking her fifth AACTA Award overall at that point.[74] In 2019, she won Best Lead Actress in a Television Drama for Total Control, bringing her tally to six.[75][72] More recently, Mailman secured Best Supporting Actress in a Film for The New Boy in 2024 and Best Supporting Actress in a Drama for Boy Swallows Universe in 2025.[76][46] Notable nominations include Best Lead Actress for The Sapphires in 2012 and Best Supporting Actress for Paper Planes in the 5th AACTA Awards (2014).[77][78] These accolades highlight her versatility and enduring recognition within Australia's premier screen awards, which prioritize peer-voted excellence in acting and storytelling.| Year | Category | Work | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | Best Actress in a Leading Role | Radiance | Won[73] |
| 2012 | Best Lead Actress | The Sapphires | Nominated[77] |
| 2014 | Best Supporting Actress | Paper Planes | Nominated[78] |
| 2018 | Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama | Unspecified role | Won[74] |
| 2019 | Best Lead Actress in a Television Drama | Total Control | Won[75] |
| 2024 | Best Supporting Actress in Film | The New Boy | Won[76] |
| 2025 | Best Supporting Actress in a Drama | Boy Swallows Universe | Won[46] |
Logie Awards
Deborah Mailman has received numerous nominations for Logie Awards over her career, demonstrating sustained recognition in television drama categories spanning multiple decades. Her nominations include appearances in the Most Outstanding Actress category for roles in series such as The Secret Life of Us (2002) and other dramas, reflecting industry acknowledgment of her performances in ensemble and lead capacities.[79][2] Mailman secured four wins in the Most Outstanding Actress category prior to recent changes in award structures, with victories in 2002 and 2004 for her portrayal of Kelly in The Secret Life of Us, a series that drew significant viewership as a staple of early 2000s Australian broadcasting. She won again in 2013 for her role as Bonita Mabo in the telemovie Mabo, and in 2016 for Lorraine in Redfern Now: Promise Me. In 2024, she claimed the Best Lead Actress in a Drama award for Alex Irving in Total Control, marking her fifth win in peer-evaluated excellence categories and bringing her total Logie tally to six. These jury-selected honors, distinct from public-voted popularity metrics, prioritize professional assessment of dramatic depth and execution over broad audience metrics.[42][80][2][81][82][83]| Year | Category | Work |
|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Most Outstanding Actress | The Secret Life of Us[80] |
| 2004 | Most Outstanding Actress | The Secret Life of Us[2][84] |
| 2013 | Most Outstanding Actress | Mabo[85] |
| 2016 | Most Outstanding Actress | Redfern Now: Promise Me[82] |
| 2024 | Best Lead Actress in a Drama | Total Control[42] |
Other Notable Honors and Nominations
Mailman was named NAIDOC Person of the Year in 2003, recognizing her prominent role in advancing Indigenous representation through stage, film, and television performances.[86][87] At the 2012 Deadly Awards, which celebrate Indigenous achievements in arts and entertainment, she won Female Actor of the Year for portraying Bonita Mabo in the telemovie Mabo.[88][89] In 2017, Mailman received the Chauvel Award from the Gold Coast Film Festival, becoming the first Indigenous honoree for sustained contributions to Australian cinema and television over two decades.[90][91] The Film Critics Circle of Australia has honored her work with the Best Actress - Female award in 1999 for Radiance, alongside later nominations such as Best Supporting Actress in 2011 for Bran Nue Dae and in 2024 for The New Boy.[92] For her theatre contributions, Mailman earned a 2005 Helpmann Award nomination for Best Female Actor in a Play, highlighting excellence in Australian live performance.[79] She has also received Equity Awards, including in 2018 for Cleverman and 2019 for Mystery Road, acknowledging standout ensemble contributions in television drama.[79]Filmography
Feature Films
Radiance (1998), directed by Rachel Perkins, featured Mailman in the lead role of Cressy, a woman returning to her Queensland hometown for her mother's funeral, marking her screen debut.[2]Rabbit-Proof Fence (2002), directed by Phillip Noyce, cast Mailman as Daisy Kadibil, the mother of protagonist Molly Craig in this historical drama about Aboriginal girls escaping government custody.
Bran Nue Dae (2009), a musical comedy directed by Christopher Winter and Stephen Johnson, had Mailman portraying Roxanne, the mother of the lead character.[93]
Mental (2012), directed by P.J. Hogan, included Mailman as Coral, a character in this comedy about a family's eccentric nanny.
The Sapphires (2012), directed by Wayne Blair, starred Mailman as Gail, the eldest of four Aboriginal sisters forming a 1960s Motown-style singing group.[94]
Paper Planes (2014), directed by Robert Connolly, featured Mailman in a supporting role as Diane, in this family adventure about a boy's paper plane competition.
Blinky Bill the Movie (2015), an animated feature directed by Deanne Lamb, had Mailman voicing the character Cinders.
Oddball (2015), directed by Stuart McKenzie, cast Mailman as Mimi, in the true-story comedy about a dog protecting penguins.
Three Summers (2017), directed by Ben Elton, included Mailman in the ensemble of this musical comedy set at a winery festival.
2067 (2020), a science fiction film directed by Seth Larney, starred Mailman as Regina Jackson, a key figure in a dystopian future mission.[95]
H Is for Happiness (2021), directed by John Sheedy, featured Mailman as Honey, in this coming-of-age story.[96]
The New Boy (2023), directed by Warwick Thornton, had Mailman as Sister Mum, a supporting role in the drama about an Aboriginal boy at a remote monastery.[43][97]
Scarygirl (2023), an animated feature directed by Michael Spare, included Mailman's voice as Treedweller.[98]
Runt (2024), directed by John Sheedy, cast Mailman as Bernadette Box in this family adventure about a dog.
Wolfram (2025), directed by Warwick Thornton, stars Mailman as Pansy, a mother in this Australian Western sequel to Sweet Country, set in 1930s Central Australia.[48][40]
Kangaroo (2025), directed by Kate Woods, features Mailman in a role in this family comedy about a disgraced TV presenter.[99]