Dear Life (TV series)

Australian television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dear Life (formerly titled Love Divided By Eleven) is a comedy drama television series written and directed by Robyn Butler and Wayne Hope. The series stars Brooke Satchwell and Eleanor Matsuura and premiered on 1 January 2026 on Stan.

Screenplay by
Directed by
  • Robyn Butler
  • Wayne Hope
Quick facts Genre, Screenplay by ...
Dear Life
GenreComedy drama
Screenplay by
Directed by
  • Robyn Butler
  • Wayne Hope
Starring
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of series1
No. of episodes6
Production
Executive producers
  • Robyn Butler
  • Wayne Hope
  • Greg Sitch
  • Caliah Scobie
  • Alicia Brown
ProducerMaryAnne Carroll
Production companyGristmill
Original release
NetworkStan
Release1 January 2026 (2026-01-01)
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Premise

A woman learns of the lives of people who have benefited from her recently deceased fiancé's organ donation.[1]

Cast and characters

Production

The series is written and directed by Robyn Butler and Wayne Hope.[2][3] The pair are a married couple, and Butler said that the idea for the storyline came from imagining the scenario if her husband Hope died.[2]

Gristmill is the producer, marking its first show for Stan. Executive producers are Butler, Hope and Greg Sitch, alongside Caliah Scobie and Alicia Brown, with MaryAnne Carroll the producer. Filming took place across Victoria with locations including Ballarat, Melbourne and Yarra Valley.[3][4]

The cast is led by Brooke Satchwell, and includes Eleanor Matsuura, Ryan Johnson, Ben Lawson, Annie Maynard, Daniel Henshall, Kerry Armstrong, Megan Smart, and Khisraw Jones-Shukoor.[5]

The series is described as "the kind of dramedy that isn't afraid to go all-out when it comes to the dark side of things".[6]

On 12 November 2025, Stan confirmed the series was retitled to Dear Life and would air on 1 January 2026.[7]

Broadcast

All six episodes of the series were streamed on Stan from 1 January 2026.[6]

Reception

Anthony Morris, writing for ScreenHub Australia, gave it 4 stars out of 5, writing "Its relatively unflinching look at the aftermath of trauma and the struggle to take even the smallest steps towards healing make it refreshingly authentic. As are the performances, which are excellent all around".[6]

David Michael Brown, writing for Flicks.com.au, said that the series "tackles its topic with intelligence, wit and style", and praised Satchwell's performance.[2]

Luke Buckmaster, writing in The Guardian, gave the show 2 stars out of 5, saying that Brooke Satchwell outshone her co-stars, and called the series "clunky", saying that the plotline "feels a little too 'everything is connected'".[8]

References

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