Julie T Wallace Nude

Julie T Wallace Nude




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Julie T Wallace Nude
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By Tim Oglethorpe for MailOnline Updated: 09:30 BST, 28 August 2008
Formidable: Julie T. Wallace gave hope to big girls in her role in She-Devil
As the eponymous anti-heroine in BBC1's The Life And Loves Of A She-Devil, Julie T. Wallace didn't so much spring to stardom as lurch into it.
After all, it's not easy to make a graceful entrance when you're over 6ft, hitting the scales at 16st and wielding a formidable 48in bust.
Add to that the wardrobe department's insistence on embellishing your face with hairy moles, a moustache, Satanic red eyes and teeth like ivory daggers, and you can see why Julie's claim to fame was that she's. . . well, a bit different.
The drama, based on Fay Weldon's best-selling novel was such a success it won four BAFTAs and a further five nominations, including one for Julie herself as best actress - remarkable when you consider this was almost her first TV role.
Her most enduring triumph, however, was the praise she received for giving hope to big girls.
'At last, someone has proved that you don't have to have a body like a stick insect or an hourglass to be a sex symbol', one women's magazine declared in a gloriously backhanded tribute.
'You can be overweight, hideously ugly, with hair like wire gauze and STILL be sexy.'
Twenty-one years on, with her She-Devil co-star Patricia Hodge still enjoying enduring screen and stage success, and Dennis Waterman (who played her unfaithful husband) entertaining 8.5million viewers in TV's New Tricks, what has happened to Julie?
Well, a lot of similarly 'hideously ugly' parts later - including an appearance in cinemas recently as an androgynous truck driver in the action movie Speed Racer - Julie, at 46, is reflecting on the consequences of defiantly remaining outside the usual actress stereotype.
'When casting directors want a big, butch woman for a role, they call me,' she says.
Breakthrough role: Julie in She-Devil
'The trouble is that these days - call it body fascism or simply size-ism - those parts are very few and far between.'
Apart from Speed Racer, she has hardly worked for the past two years.
'I have been through a ghastly time,' she says. 'It's been appalling.'
Ironically, she has never looked better. She is 4st lighter than when she first found fame, her clear skin is unlined and her blue eyes sparkle.
'I think there has been a narrow-mindedness by some directors. They think because I have played ugly roles I must be an ugly person.
'But my appearance means different things to different people. Some people think I'm beautiful, others think I am definitely not!
'But at the risk of sounding pretentious, I am a blank canvas and I can be painted in whichever way people want.'
Since She-Devil, she has played a spy who crushes a man to death with her DD-cup cleavage in the James Bond film The Living Daylights, a witch in Steve Coogan's comedy Dr Terrible's House Of Horrible, a 2,000-year-old demon who takes on two conmen in the BBC chiller The Love God, a deranged fan on stage in Stephen King's Misery, an Ugly Sister in pantomime ('Yes, I did need make-up,' she sighs, having heard the joke many times before) and a butch nurse in Joe Orton's Loot.
'I got those roles because I am big. Big is what I do,' she says.
'But ironically, after She-Devil, I went on a crash diet and lost 3st, only to be told to put it back on again for the TV Comic Strip series.'
The actress appears with Timothy Dalton, Camille Coduri and Janet McTeer in Hawks. She also appeared alongside the Welsh actor in the James Bond film The Living Daylights
She says, without a trace of bitterness, that she has lived with her perceived ugliness all her life.
Julie, who already towered over her classmates as a child growing up in Wales, recalls: 'I knew what it was like to be the girl who couldn't get a boyfriend.
'I was always the last one to be picked for anyone's team at school.
'I became the class clown to stop myself being picked on - I remember singing Mandy by Barry Manilow in physics class so that the girls who might have done the bullying laughed at me rather than hurt me.'
Julie's dad was the late actor Andrew Keir, best known for playing Professor Bernard Quatermass in the film version of Quatermass And The Pit.
Not that that was any consolation to Julie, who says she was 'chronically shy' from a young age.
Julie appearing in the play Steaming alongside Catherine Shipton and Jenny Eclair
'I remember almost dying with embarrassment when my father turned up at sports day.
'The other dads were dressed normally, with nothing more exotic than a box Brownie with which to photograph their child.
'Dad had on a silk cravat, a shirt that had several buttons undone, an eagle medallion on his chest and a state-of-the-art film camera.
'He stood out so he made me stand out even more than usual.'
She says she auditioned for She-Devil only because a friend rang her up and said: 'There's a part going that's just right for you: the BBC are looking for a 6ft 2in actress who is ugly and has four hairy moles.'
Despite the fact that her fake moles kept on falling off during the audition, she won the part of a wife hell-bent on revenge after her husband has an affair.
But a generation on, and the kind of roles which traded on Julie's looks seem to have vanished.
With a couple of teenagers to look after - Julie has an 18-year-old daughter and a 16-year-old son, but split up with their father nine years ago - and very little money coming in from her acting, how difficult has it got?
'Well, thankfully, I am Scottish by birth and that's made me a frugal person.
'But I won't pretend it's been easy, and I have had to cut my cloth according to my means.
'I am now, for example, a Lidl's and Primark shopper, rather than Sainsbury's and Marks & Spencer.'
She would love a regular role in EastEnders or Coronation Street and be able to buy a house as an investment for her children ('I live in a house that isn't mine, and I feel I need to buy somewhere of my own'), but not to the extent that she would resort to the sort of drastic cosmetic surgery that her She-Devil character did.
'Listen, I am what I am,' she says. 'I accept that I am perceived as odd, that I stand out from the crowd, but there isn't a lot I can do about that.
'I'm part of a family of big people. One of my brothers, Andrew, is 6ft 9in - he's officially a giant. He's a master builder and weighs 24st.
'I could reduce the size of my breasts, I could have all sorts of things done, but I don't want to be a false person, a plastic person.
'I had veneers put over my front teeth specifically for a part, and they looked so good I was tempted to have more work on my other teeth.
'But it would have been nothing but an exercise in vanity and a slippery slope.
'Some people, once they start on cosmetic surgery, find it difficult to stop.'
The actress's love life, since she broke up with her children's father, has been stop-start.
'And when men do come on to me, it tends to be guys of a certain generation who've had a few drinks and want to tell me about watching my character's sex scenes in She-Devil,' she says.
'I can't say I'm left feeling terribly flattered.
'But at least She-Devil is my legacy. I was fortunate enough to play one of the greatest parts, for a woman of my size and shape, that there has ever been on TV.'
No comments have so far been submitted. Why not be the first to send us your thoughts,
or debate this issue live on our message boards.


We are no longer accepting comments on this article.
Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group






Wednesday, Jun 29th 2022
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By Tim Oglethorpe for MailOnline Updated: 09:30 BST, 28 August 2008
Formidable: Julie T. Wallace gave hope to big girls in her role in She-Devil
As the eponymous anti-heroine in BBC1's The Life And Loves Of A She-Devil, Julie T. Wallace didn't so much spring to stardom as lurch into it.
After all, it's not easy to make a graceful entrance when you're over 6ft, hitting the scales at 16st and wielding a formidable 48in bust.
Add to that the wardrobe department's insistence on embellishing your face with hairy moles, a moustache, Satanic red eyes and teeth like ivory daggers, and you can see why Julie's claim to fame was that she's. . . well, a bit different.
The drama, based on Fay Weldon's best-selling novel was such a success it won four BAFTAs and a further five nominations, including one for Julie herself as best actress - remarkable when you consider this was almost her first TV role.
Her most enduring triumph, however, was the praise she received for giving hope to big girls.
'At last, someone has proved that you don't have to have a body like a stick insect or an hourglass to be a sex symbol', one women's magazine declared in a gloriously backhanded tribute.
'You can be overweight, hideously ugly, with hair like wire gauze and STILL be sexy.'
Twenty-one years on, with her She-Devil co-star Patricia Hodge still enjoying enduring screen and stage success, and Dennis Waterman (who played her unfaithful husband) entertaining 8.5million viewers in TV's New Tricks, what has happened to Julie?
Well, a lot of similarly 'hideously ugly' parts later - including an appearance in cinemas recently as an androgynous truck driver in the action movie Speed Racer - Julie, at 46, is reflecting on the consequences of defiantly remaining outside the usual actress stereotype.
'When casting directors want a big, butch woman for a role, they call me,' she says.
Breakthrough role: Julie in She-Devil
'The trouble is that these days - call it body fascism or simply size-ism - those parts are very few and far between.'
Apart from Speed Racer, she has hardly worked for the past two years.
'I have been through a ghastly time,' she says. 'It's been appalling.'
Ironically, she has never looked better. She is 4st lighter than when she first found fame, her clear skin is unlined and her blue eyes sparkle.
'I think there has been a narrow-mindedness by some directors. They think because I have played ugly roles I must be an ugly person.
'But my appearance means different things to different people. Some people think I'm beautiful, others think I am definitely not!
'But at the risk of sounding pretentious, I am a blank canvas and I can be painted in whichever way people want.'
Since She-Devil, she has played a spy who crushes a man to death with her DD-cup cleavage in the James Bond film The Living Daylights, a witch in Steve Coogan's comedy Dr Terrible's House Of Horrible, a 2,000-year-old demon who takes on two conmen in the BBC chiller The Love God, a deranged fan on stage in Stephen King's Misery, an Ugly Sister in pantomime ('Yes, I did need make-up,' she sighs, having heard the joke many times before) and a butch nurse in Joe Orton's Loot.
'I got those roles because I am big. Big is what I do,' she says.
'But ironically, after She-Devil, I went on a crash diet and lost 3st, only to be told to put it back on again for the TV Comic Strip series.'
The actress appears with Timothy Dalton, Camille Coduri and Janet McTeer in Hawks. She also appeared alongside the Welsh actor in the James Bond film The Living Daylights
She says, without a trace of bitterness, that she has lived with her perceived ugliness all her life.
Julie, who already towered over her classmates as a child growing up in Wales, recalls: 'I knew what it was like to be the girl who couldn't get a boyfriend.
'I was always the last one to be picked for anyone's team at school.
'I became the class clown to stop myself being picked on - I remember singing Mandy by Barry Manilow in physics class so that the girls who might have done the bullying laughed at me rather than hurt me.'
Julie's dad was the late actor Andrew Keir, best known for playing Professor Bernard Quatermass in the film version of Quatermass And The Pit.
Not that that was any consolation to Julie, who says she was 'chronically shy' from a young age.
Julie appearing in the play Steaming alongside Catherine Shipton and Jenny Eclair
'I remember almost dying with embarrassment when my father turned up at sports day.
'The other dads were dressed normally, with nothing more exotic than a box Brownie with which to photograph their child.
'Dad had on a silk cravat, a shirt that had several buttons undone, an eagle medallion on his chest and a state-of-the-art film camera.
'He stood out so he made me stand out even more than usual.'
She says she auditioned for She-Devil only because a friend rang her up and said: 'There's a part going that's just right for you: the BBC are looking for a 6ft 2in actress who is ugly and has four hairy moles.'
Despite the fact that her fake moles kept on falling off during the audition, she won the part of a wife hell-bent on revenge after her husband has an affair.
But a generation on, and the kind of roles which traded on Julie's looks seem to have vanished.
With a couple of teenagers to look after - Julie has an 18-year-old daughter and a 16-year-old son, but split up with their father nine years ago - and very little money coming in from her acting, how difficult has it got?
'Well, thankfully, I am Scottish by birth and that's made me a frugal person.
'But I won't pretend it's been easy, and I have had to cut my cloth according to my means.
'I am now, for example, a Lidl's and Primark shopper, rather than Sainsbury's and Marks & Spencer.'
She would love a regular role in EastEnders or Coronation Street and be able to buy a house as an investment for her children ('I live in a house that isn't mine, and I feel I need to buy somewhere of my own'), but not to the extent that she would resort to the sort of drastic cosmetic surgery that her She-Devil character did.
'Listen, I am what I am,' she says. 'I accept that I am perceived as odd, that I stand out from the crowd, but there isn't a lot I can do about that.
'I'm part of a family of big people. One of my brothers, Andrew, is 6ft 9in - he's officially a giant. He's a master builder and weighs 24st.
'I could reduce the size of my breasts, I could have all sorts of things done, but I don't want to be a false person, a plastic person.
'I had veneers put over my front teeth specifically for a part, and they looked so good I was tempted to have more work on my other teeth.
'But it would have been nothing but an exercise in vanity and a slippery slope.
'Some people, once they start on cosmetic surgery, find it difficult to stop.'
The actress's love life, since she broke up with her children's father, has been stop-start.
'And when men do come on to me, it tends to be guys of a certain generation who've had a few drinks and want to tell me about watching my character's sex scenes in She-Devil,' she says.
'I can't say I'm left feeling terribly flattered.
'But at least She-Devil is my legacy. I was fortunate enough to play one of the greatest parts, for a woman of my size and shape, that there has ever been on TV.'
No comments have so far been submitted. Why not be the first to send us your thoughts,
or debate this issue live on our message boards.


We are no longer accepting comments on this article.
Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

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