Rachael Carpani is gone, and the world is reeling.
The beloved McLeod’s Daughters star, whose warmth lit up screens across continents, has died at just 45. Her family says she “passed away peacefully” after a long, private fight with chronic illness.
She was the kind of actress people felt they knew. From her early days in Sydney’s Hills district to becoming Jodi Fountain McLeod, Rachael Carpani built a bond with audiences rooted in honesty and heart. On McLeod’s Daughters she didn’t just play resilience and vulnerability; she lived them, carrying long shooting days and emotionally heavy storylines with quiet discipline and grace.
Off-screen, colleagues remember a woman who never confused fame with worth. She mentored younger actors, listened more than she spoke, and brought a steady kindness to every set. Her leap to the United States, with roles in NCIS: Los Angeles, The Glades, and Against the Wall, showed the same courage that defined her private battle with illness. Even as her health declined, she kept working, advocating gently for those living with chronic conditions. Her legacy is more than a filmography; it is the courage to stay soft in a hard world, and the reminder that real strength can exist far from the spotlight.