Cathy Alessi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cathy Alessi
Neighbours character
Portrayed by Elspeth Ballantyne
Duration 1992–93
First appearance 29 July 1992
Last appearance 4 August 1993
Introduced by Don Battye
Classification Former, regular
Profile
Occupation Coffee Shop owner and manager (1992–94)
Home Sydney

Catherine "Cathy" Alessi is a fictional character from the Australian soap opera Neighbours, played by Elspeth Ballantyne. She made her first screen appearance during the episode broadcast on 29 July 1992 and remained until her departure on 4 August 1993.

Casting

The Alessi family were introduced in 1992 following the announced departures of several regular characters. The family were the first "truly ethnic" group to be introduced into the cast.[1] Following her stint as Meg Morris in Prisoner, Ballantyne took eight years off of television to concentrate on theatre work.[2] She then received the role of Cathy Alessi and revealed she could not turn it down.[2] Ballantyne told David Nicholls of Inside Soap "I had a wry smile on my face when I read about the character of Cathy Alessi. She has two teenage sons, one just out of school and one still in school, and that's a very similar situation to my own."[2] Ballantyne's character became popular with viewers in Australia and the actress said Cathy had some good storylines coming up, so she hoped she would becomes as popular as Meg.[2] Within a year, the entire Alessi family had left, leaving only Rick (Dan Falzon) behind.[3]

Storylines

Cathy was born to Irish parents and she married her childhood sweetheart, Benito Alessi (George Spartels), when she was sixteen as she had fallen pregnant. Cathy's Catholic parents forced her to put her daughter up for adoption. Cathy and Benito went on to have two sons, Marco (Felice Arena) and Rick (Dan Falzon), but Cathy did not forget or forgive herself for giving her baby away.

Benito's niece, Christina (Gayle Blakeney), and her husband leave Number 22 Ramsay Street to him and Cathy. They move in and settle down well in the community. Cathy takes over the Coffee Shop lease from Madge Bishop (Anne Charleston) and employs a pregnant Phoebe Bright (Simone Robertson) to help out. Phoebe's pregnancy makes Cathy's regrets over giving her daughter away resurface and she tells Benito that she wants to try for a baby. Benito is initially against the idea as he had a vasectomy after Rick was born. However, he decides to get it reversed. Cathy is devastated to learn from the doctors that she is not able to carry a child to full term due to her age. Phoebe asks Cathy to be godmother to her daughter, Hope.

Cathy's spaghetti sauce recipe catches the eye of a sauce manufacturer and they ask Cathy to sell the ingredients to them. She initially refuses to consider the offer as the recipe had been passed down from Mama Alessi in Italy. The manufacturer also wants to add extra flavourings, which Cathy believes would ruin the taste, but she agrees to the deal as the money is too good to turn down. Marco and Rick are told about their older sister and Marco finds her. Lindsay agrees to meet Cathy and Benito, but only if Marco does not tell them she is their daughter. He brings her to the house and Cathy and Benito believe she is Marco's girlfriend. They are shocked when Marco reveals that Lindsay is their daughter. Cathy meets Lindsey, but she becomes upset when Lindsay tells her that she wants to get on with her life. Cathy gives her some knitted booties that she had kept and Lindsay agrees to keep in touch.

Benito is offered a job in Sydney and Cathy leaves the Coffee Shop in the hands of Phoebe and her husband, Stephen (Lochie Daddo). Cathy is not happy that Rick wants to stay behind, but she gives him her blessing. When Phoebe and Stephen leave town, Rick takes over the Coffee Shop until Cathy comes back to terminate the lease. Cathy tries to persuade Rick to come to Sydney with her, but she eventually arranges for Lou Carpenter (Tom Oliver) to take Rick in.

Reception

A writer for the BBC's Neighbours website said that Cathy's most notable moment was "Meeting her adopted daughter."[4]

References

  1. "I'm not your usual Aussie surfer type!". Inside Soap (Attic Futura (UK) Ltd) (9): 37. May 1993. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Nicholls, David (February 1993). "It's a long way from cell block H". Inside Soap (Attic Futura (UK) Ltd) (6): 46. 
  3. Mercado, Andrew (2004). Super Aussie soaps: behind the scenes of Australia's best loved TV shows. Pluto Press Australia. p. 218. ISBN 1-86403-191-3. 
  4. "Character: Cathy Alessi". BBC. Archived from the original on 15 August 2004. Retrieved 23 February 2011. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.