Underbelly: Vanishing Act

2022 - 4 - 3

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Image courtesy of "Tribunal Inquiry"

Underbelly: Vanishing Act: Kate Atkinson on the 'challenges' of ... (Tribunal Inquiry)

And ahead of the show's launch, Kate Atkinson has revealed exactly what it was like to play notorious conwoman Melissa Caddick – who infamously scammed 60 ...

Family: Her partner Anthony Koletti (pictured left) was believed to be unaware of Ms Caddick’s illegal conduct. We’ve taken these two life events, but we’ve extrapolated them into a story about bigger ideas.’ ‘The biggest challenge is to not feel pressured to give the audience what they want or who they think they know she is — none of us know,’ she said.

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Image courtesy of "Daily Mail"

Viewers voice their disapproval over Nine's 'cringeworthy' new ... (Daily Mail)

The highly anticipated premiere on Sunday detailed the life of notorious conwoman Melissa Caddick (played by Kate Atkinson) - who infamously scammed 60 clients ...

Family: Her partner Anthony Koletti (pictured left) was believed to be unaware of Caddick's illegal conduct. We've taken these two life events, but we've extrapolated them into a story about bigger ideas.' Challenge: 'The biggest challenge is to not feel pressured to give the audience what they want or who they think they know she is — none of us know,' Kate (pictured as Melissa) said 'The biggest challenge is to not feel pressured to give the audience what they want or who they think they know she is — none of us know,' she said. Pressure: The backlash comes after former Wentworth actress Kate told 9Entertainment on Sunday that while she was excited to play such an 'unique' character, the most challenging part is not worrying about fans' expectations. The backlash comes after former Wentworth actress Kate told 9Entertainment on Sunday that while she was excited to play such an 'unique' character, the most challenging part is not worrying about fans' expectations.

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Image courtesy of "Daily Mail"

Underbelly: Vanishing Act: How show stacks up to Melissa ... (Daily Mail)

Fact or Fiction? How crime drama Underbelly: Vanishing Act stacks up to the real life of fraudster Melissa Caddick. By Brett Lackey For Daily Mail Australia 11: ...

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Image courtesy of "The Sydney Morning Herald"

New Underbelly series tries to fill the gaps in Melissa Caddick's story ... (The Sydney Morning Herald)

The one thing you might know about the Melissa Caddick story is that we don't really know much about the Melissa Caddick story.

“And this is not a truth telling, this is not a documentary.”Underbelly: Vanishing Act, then, is about entertaining ideas – of who Caddick was and what her fate might have been.It’s also Australia’s first real foray into the booming scam culture genre – think shows like The Dropout, Inventing Anna, The Tinder Swindler, or Bad Vegan. By its very nature, it’s a highly speculative field, given the reluctance of its subjects to participate in the ever-increasing number of documentaries, podcasts, and think pieces about their crimes.And while Vanishing Act is up front about its use of creative licence, it – unlike some of the other scam shows – doesn’t really hold a mirror up to forces that enabled Caddick or help us understand what her sprawling deception says about us.What really sets the latest Underbelly offering apart from blockbusters is resolution – or, rather, a lack of one.In one way or another, we know how the stories of Elizabeth Holmes, Anna Sorokin (aka Anna Delvey), Shimon Hayut (aka Simon Leviev) and Sarma Melngailis end. From the get-go, Caddick is both subject and narrator and Vanishing Act attempts to draw out the motivations for her years-long fraud via an omnipresent voiceover.What emerges is a picture of a woman obsessed with value – of clothes, homes, cars and lavish international holidays.The final days of her run as part of the eastern suburbs’ elite is interspersed with flashbacks to her first (seemingly unhappy) marriage and her days as a budding fraudster.It also casts the narrative net wide, weaving in even the most far-fetched conspiracy theories about how she might have come undone, introducing a chainsaw-wielding crime figure in the form of Colin Friels’ George.“The biggest challenge is to not feel pressured to give the audience what they want or who they think they know she is — none of us know,” Atkinson has said. The one thing you might know about the Melissa Caddick story is that we don’t really know much about the Melissa Caddick story.At least, not about what happened after she walked out of her $6.2 million Dover Heights home early on the morning of November 12, 2020.How much do we really know about Melissa Caddick? The missing woman is played by Kate Atkinson, pictured, in the new Underbelly.And that’s where Underbelly: Vanishing Act, a new two-part series airing on Nine (which publishes this masthead), aims to fill in the gaps: agreed facts blend with pure speculation to create a wild – and at times quite wacky – whodunnit.The unlicensed financial adviser vanished amid an investigation into a Ponzi scheme she ran for over a decade, during which she defrauded dozens of friends, family members and business associates out of tens of millions of dollars.Around four months after the scheme was exposed, her heavily decomposed foot washed up on Bournda Beach on the NSW South Coast, some 400 kilometres from where she was last seen.Speculation and conspiracy theories about Caddick’s fate exploded following the gruesome discovery, with some suggesting she’d taken her own life to avoid the investigation’s fallout. New Underbelly series tries to fill the gaps in Melissa Caddick’s story, but raises more questions, register or subscribe to save articles for later. Other theories posited that something far more sinister was at play, and some have even gone so far as to suggest Caddick cut off her foot to throw police and Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) investigators off her scent.After DNA from Caddick’s toothbrush and family samples was matched to that of the foot, she was presumed dead – but the fact is, we may never know Melissa Caddick’s fate. We’re working to restore it.

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Image courtesy of "TV Blackbox"

Sunday Ratings | MAFS and UNDERBELLY deliver Nine a massive ... (TV Blackbox)

Married At First Sight (1,140,000) wins the night easily again with its penultimate episode, and delivers the best numbers it has seen all season…another ...

A repeat of Harrow (37,000) completes the evening of drama. The penultimate episode of Australian Survivor (464,000) does much needed and slightly better business than last week. Note: Program performance and ranking information subject to change when not based on final program logs. New and repeat eps of FBI (216,000; 126,000) don’t do much other than mark time. Crime Investigation Australia (193,000) isn’t really doing anything sizeable in the later evening, and slips on last week. The First 48 (101,000)

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Image courtesy of "Crikey"

MAFS effect boosts Underbelly's return (Crikey)

More than a million viewers stayed on Nine after MAFS for the latest chapter in the Underbelly true-crime saga.

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Image courtesy of "Nine"

Why Kate Atkinson's role in Underbelly: Vanishing Act wasn't what ... (Nine)

When it comes to playing Melissa Caddick, Kate Atkinson admitted she underestimated the role in Underbelly:...

she said. Is she narrating it from the grave? Is she out there somewhere?

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Image courtesy of "NEWS.com.au"

'Painful': New Channel 9 show panned (NEWS.com.au)

The latest season of Underbelly has been trashed with fans claiming it was “painfully slow” and questioned why Melissa Caddick narrated the loss of her ...

I need to make all the money that I can.” Stream the news you want, when you want with Flash. 25+ news channels in 1 place. At this time police declared she had died. New to Flash? Try 1 month free. Channel 9 has had huge success with Underbelly in the past - but the latest instalment, which aired last night, has fans fuming. Channel 9 has had huge success with Underbelly in the past - but the latest instalment, which aired last night, has fans fuming.

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Image courtesy of "TV Tonight"

MAFS & Underbelly double act scores for Nine | TV Tonight (TV Tonight)

Underbelly: Vanishing Act debuted to 719,000 metro viewers – set to climb with further BVOD numbers it may end up as one of the year's biggest local dramas. It ...

On SBS it was SBS World News (161,000 / 104,000), Meeting Gorbachev (94,000) and Back To The Titanic (75,000). ABC News was 583,000 then Compass (158,000) and Killing Eve (67,000). It was boosted by the ideal lead-in with MAFS at 1.14m for the final dinner party, easily doubling Dancing with the Stars: All Stars (564,000), Australian Survivor (464,000) and Grand Designs: NZ (350,000).

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