Alison Brahe, the ‘It Girl’ of the ’90s, looked remarkably youthful while attending a health and wellness event in Sydney on Wednesday.
Alison, 53, who is married to actor and TV presenter Cameron Daddo, was one of Australia’s top models in the 80’s and 90’s.
She appeared several times on the cover of the teenage magazine Dolly.
The mother-of-three was a guest at a product launch for Swiish, the lifestyle brand owned by former Channel Seven host Sally Obermeder.
The new product is called Peri + Meno Relief and helps women with menopausal symptoms.
The It girl of the 1990s, Alison Brahe (left), looked remarkably youthful as she attended a health and wellness event in Sydney on Wednesday
Alison, 53, was one of Australia’s top models in the 80s and 90s. She has appeared several times on the cover of teenage magazine Dolly (pictured here).
Alison looked chic in gray high-waisted pants, a brown ribbed undershirt and belted.
She wore her long blonde hair loose and opted for a natural looking dewy makeup with a touch of foundation and mascara.
The Separate Bedrooms podcast host was pictured at the media wall alongside Kylie Gillies, co-host of Seven’s The Morning Show.
Kylie paired white trousers with a knitted jumper, while Swiss owner Sally wore a powder blue suit.
The mother-of-three was a guest at a product launch for Swiish, the lifestyle brand of former Channel Seven host Sally Obermeder (centre right).
Swiish’s new product is Peri + Meno Relief, which helps women with menopausal symptoms
After moving to the United States with husband Cameron in 1992, Alison gave up her modeling career to focus on raising her family.
She told Whimn in 2019 that she didn’t enjoy modeling in America as much as she did in Australia and that she had no regrets about leaving it all behind.
“I decided that I really didn’t want to do it there.” “It really wasn’t fun,” she said.
Kylie Gillies, co-host of Seven’s The Morning Show, was a guest at the product launch
“All my friends and people I knew in Australia – the photographers and make-up artists – were gone.”
“So I walked in, didn’t know anyone, and I was like, ‘This doesn’t feel good at all.’
Alison and Cameron have previously spoken about the difficulties they faced after moving to America and admitted they were struggling financially.
Though Cameron landed a string of roles on projects like Aaron Spelling’s Models Inc. and F/X: The Series, by the mid-2000s he was broke and struggling to make money.
Eventually, things got so bad that Cameron’s friends left groceries on his doorstep just so he could feed his wife and their three children.
After moving to the United States with husband Cameron Daddo (left) in 1992, Alison gave up her modeling career to focus on raising her family
“Cam still struggles with the fact that she feels a lot of fear or shame about it,” Alison previously told Stellar magazine.
Cameron also spoke about this challenging time in an interview with the No Filter podcast in 2017.
“Several times it was very tense for a while,” he said.
“Then something would open up and all of a sudden you forget that there was a moment where we had $100 in the bank because now we’re fine.”
Alison recently shared how menopause led to physical insecurity.
She told Whimn in 2019 that she didn’t enjoy modeling in America as much as she did in Australia and that she had no regrets about leaving it all behind. (Pictured: Alison on the cover of Dolly Magazine)
She told Body+Soul that she had gained some weight and feared that her husband would no longer find her body attractive.
“For example, I know that Cam’s love language is physical. “It’s about what he wants and needs and how he feels safe with me,” she said.
“Most of the dislike of my body shape had to do with what I thought Cam wanted or what Cam liked.” He once told me that he didn’t give a damn if I gained weight and that he loved me as a person.’
Over time Alison accepted her new body shape but still has difficult periods where she feels less confident.
“There are days when I’m like, ‘You’re just a cute little 52-year-old with a big belly,’ and then I’ll put on a pair of jeans and I’m like, ‘Oh god, I look like I’m six months old .” Pregnant, I can’t take it. I still go back and forth with it,” she said.
Alison recently shared how menopause led to physical insecurity