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Exclusive: Naked snaps of Tina Hobley mean The Jump star qualifies as a hot mum
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The actress, who set pulses racing in Holby City, left a friend of her teenage daughter red-faced when he found the saucy shots on Google
She set pulses racing as flirty nurse Chrissie Williams, one of Holby City’s most popular and longest serving characters.
And, at the age of 44, devoted wife and parent Tina Hobley has lost none of that sex appeal... which can be awkward for her eldest daughter.
Isabella, 16, was particularly red-faced when a lad she fancied checked out some of Tina’s saucier shots online.
“There was one boy she was quite keen on and he’d Googled me and, of course, these pictures came up,” says Tina.
“They were a bit racy. Then Isabella gets really embarrassed because she has to introduce him to me.
“I remember her telling me that he looked me up and said something like: ‘Oh your mum looks very...’ Well, let’s just say he was very complimentary.
“I did meet him in the end actually. He was charming and slightly embarrassed I think. But I’m not embarrassed. My daughter knows it’s just what Mummy does. And I don’t regret anything.
“But I do look back and wonder why I did them. It was because someone, somewhere put me in front of a camera and told me to do those pictures. I’m quite a good girl so I do what I’m told to do.”
The mother-of-three will be going from risque to risky in the new series of The Jump , which starts tomorrow night.
Tina will take on a string of icy challenges in the Austrian Alps alongside 11 other celebrities. Her husband, PR director Oliver Wheeler, is flying out with their kids to show their support.
Once, Tina and Oli used to sneak away for a week and could enjoy being a couple. Now the kids go everywhere with them, is stealing those private moments more difficult?
“No, it’s easy. How does anyone cope? You just find ways,” she says. “Having our anniversary week away gave us a break from the kids but now they know what we’re up to. They’ve clicked on to our little secret.
“The kids want to come with us now and they’re so much fun we want to be with them all the time anyway.”
Tina split from her first husband and Isabella’s father, graphic designer Steve Wallington, in 2001, after three years of marriage.
She wed Oli five years later and had two more children, Olivia, seven, and five-year-old Orson. This year is the couple’s 10th anniversary.
“It has been 10 amazing years and he’s fantastic,” she says. “The secret? Marry your best friend, respect one another and let each other grow and change.”
Tina has had a substantial career change in recent years. After 12 years on BBC hospital drama Holby City she decided to pursue a greater range of roles and TV work.
But she admits it is harder now she is in her 40s because younger women still get the best jobs, particularly in her line of work.
She says: “I did a play last year, Dead Simple, where I was about 10 years older than my character was supposed to be. But luckily the producers didn’t mind that, probably because I was on stage.
“But if that was television – and I know they are making a TV version – I wouldn’t be playing the girlfriend in that story. I’d be playing the ex-wife or something like that.
“They don’t write as many roles for older women as they write for 20-something girls. TV shows like Doctor Foster don’t come along very often.”
She stops short of branding it ageist or sexist but Tina sounds irritated by the barriers older actresses face.
“It’s been there for ever and we’re not going to change it overnight,” she says. “You’ll quite happily cast a 50-year-old man with a 29-year-old girl but you wouldn’t do it the other way around.
“But then that’s life as well. There are lots of older men with younger women. It’s unusual to see it the other way around so I suppose they’re just writing about real life.”
On the plus side, Tina still has the good looks casting agents crave. But she insists she doesn’t have to work hard to stay in shape, even though, as an actress, there is pressure to look her best.
She says: “I’m not worried about that. If you start chasing everything and trying to keep up with it... I’d stop living. I love the acting but it’s only one part of my life, not all of it.”
Tina, who was born and raised in North London, played home-wrecking barmaid Samantha Failsworth in Coronation Street in 1996. It was one of her first acting jobs after drama school.
In 1999 she starred opposite Nick Berry , playing WPC Melanie Rush on BBC drama Harbour Lights and had a small role on ITV’s The Bill. She landed her career defining role on Holby in 2001, aged 29.
While on the Beeb drama, her character had a string of affairs with married medics, became pregnant after a one-night stand and fell in love with a gay doctor.
Tina eventually quit the show in 2013 but there were no hard feelings. “I had my kids all the way through Holby and the BBC was incredibly supportive,” she says.
“But you can’t do anything else when you work for those big shows, and I didn’t get into acting to do just one role.
“It was 12 years and I felt like I did all the storylines I could possibly do around a bed. I just wanted to shake things up and do as many things as possible.”
Part of her post-Holby career change is The Jump. Now in its third series, the Channel 4 show challenges a dozen famous faces to compete in various winter sports, ranging from the bobsleigh to speed skating.
After each round a celebrity is eliminated by taking on the live air jump. “It’s very dangerous,” Tina says.
“It’s proper extreme. But I’m not worried about getting injured, I could get injured crossing the road, though I wouldn’t want to get injured early so I miss any of the events.
“This is an incredible opportunity and I want to make the most of it.”
Tina has also had the chance to spend six weeks’ training in the Alps with an eclectic collection of fellow stars.
Celebs taking part this time are Made In Chelsea ’s Mark-Francis Vandelli, socialite Tamara Beckwith and EastEnders Sid Owen and Louisa Lytton.
Pop stars Sarah Harding and Brian McFadden , sporting greats Linford Christie, Beth Tweddle and Rebecca Adlington, and TOWIE ’s James “Arg” Argent, just about complete the line-up.
But the celebrity Tina sounds most excited about is US star Dean Cain, 49, best known for his role in 1990s hit series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman.
Tina recalls: “I grew up watching him on TV. I really wanted to be Lois Lane.
“Dean is very cool. The other day my son was off school and happened to be watching Spider-Man. So I said to him: ‘Do you want to speak to Superman?’ then handed the phone across to Dean and they had this really long chat.
“It’s a brilliant group on The Jump in general. Brian is hilarious and Linford is a real raconteur too.
“So we’ve been having lots of laughs, lots of singing around the fire and there has been plenty of wine flowing.”
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Bob Denver told us once about having the dressing room next to Tina Louise “I would go to my dressing room at lunchtime and try to take a nap except Tina was always bringing boyfriends to her dressing room. Once, she got very upset because I said I heard her having sex in the dressing room next to mine. I didn’t think that was very bad. It kind of struck me funny at lunch hour. So I pounded on the wall and nothing happened. I mean I couldn’t shut it down, the noise was so loud. She got very upset, not much of a sense of humor then…”
“After I published my book (Maynard, Gilligan and I) Tina was not too excited. She got a little upset about the dressing room story. I don’t know why (laughs). I didn’t think it was that bad. She went to my publisher and marched around screaming: “I never had sex on ‘Gilligan’s Island!’ ”
TIna and Dawn Welles (Ginger and Mary Ann) are the last surviving cast members of the iconic show.
Tina Louise
Birthdate February 11, 1934
Famous Years 1958 – 1967
Currently Known For Actress, Singer and Author
Famous For Gilligan’s Island
“My stepmother once said I was homely, and teased me. I don’t think I was ravishing, but I think I was pretty.” Marooned on a deserted island with The Skipper, Gilligan, Mary Ann and the rest of the crew on Gilligan’s Island, Tina Louise didn’t quite know what to expect from the television series especially after making her Hollywood debut in the 1958 drama God’s Little Acre, which earned her a Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year. Already known for her stunning beauty and signature red hair, Tina was one of Hollywood’s early movie stars with films like The Trap, The Hangman, For Those Who Think Young and Day of the Outlaw, so spending her days on an island where she wasn’t the star of the show certainly wasn’t her first choice when she landed the part of Ginger Grant on CBS’s newest comedy, Gilligan’s Island, in 1964. In fact, she remains grateful for the opportunity but doesn’t like to travel down memory lane especially if it means reliving her time on an uncharted island somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. Why not? Let’s find out. 
Born as Tina Blacker in New York City on February 11, 1934, Tina’s mother was a fashion model and her father owned a candy store in Brooklyn. Her parents divorced when she was four years old and, between the ages of five and eight, she attended a private preparatory school. “They didn’t beat me, just slapped me once,” Tina later admitted when asked about her time at school. “It was just a miserable place. And I don’t think any child could really be happy between five and eight away from their parents, do you? …They took away my dolls at night. Why? It was a very confining atmosphere, not a particularly happy time.”
Eventually returning home, Tina’s life drastically changed in her teens after her mother married a wealthy doctor and climbed the social ladder in the Big Apple. Wanting to fit in with the other girls at Scarborough High School in Westchester, Tina added “Louise” to her name as she focused her talents on dancing, singing and acting at 17 years old. She studied at the Actors Studio and was called “New York Society’s No. 1 Debutante” in The Sunday Mirror in the early 1950s before appearing on the covers of magazines like Playboy, Modern Man and Adam, Sir! as an iconic pinup girl.
While Tina welcomed the modeling gigs, she struggled to find her footing as an actress when Columbia Pictures stepped in to help and advertised on her behalf, which earned her a series of roles in Broadway productions like Two’s Company, The Fifth Season and John Murray Anderson’s Almanac. She appeared in live television dramas like Appointment with Adventure and Studio One before making her feature film debut in the 1958 flick, God’s Little Acre. The film was exactly what she needed to boost her career as the National Art Council named her “The World’s Most Beautiful Redhead” and she took home a Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year. 
Looking back on the role during an interview with Forbes magazine in 2015, Tina didn’t shy away from claiming that the film was the highlight of her career. “My favorite experience was my first film, God’s Little Acre, directed by Anthony Mann,” she said. “I came from the stage and had never done a movie. It was months of going for auditions, my partner not showing up, sitting in the lobby of the Warwick Hotel for an hour before finding out that I actually had to call up. The producer read with me, which was fabulous because it was a scene with Ty Ty, the father…Later, I kept reading about all the well-known actresses in California that could have the part. But I got the screen test, and the role!”
Tina Louise is best-known for playing movie star Ginger Grant on “Gilligan’s Island,” a role she largely tried to distance herself from after the show wrapped. She refused to sign on for any of the revivals that the rest of the cast particpated in. She’s recently acted in films like “The Happy Ending” and “The Stepford Wives.” Here, the star is seen on June 14, 2018, stepping out for movie screening in NYC.
Thrilled with the success of God’s Little Acre, Tina went on to study under the legendary Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio where she further developed her talents and learned to deeply relax as an actress. “Lee Strasberg was important,” Tina told Esquire. “He’d pick up your arm and see if—and how—it would drop to determine the level of relaxation in your body and spirit. He’d say, ‘Make a sound.’ Some people would start to laugh and that would sometimes turn to tears. You didn’t have to be said—it all came from deep relaxation.”
This, in part, laid the groundwork for why Tina was so frustrated by what producers expected of her on Gilligan’s Island after she landed the part in 1964 when the producers’ first choice, Jayne Mansfield, turned the opportunity down. Leaving Broadway to devote herself entirely to what she believed and was promised to be a starring role, Tina didn’t have a great first impression of the situational comedy and was unfazed by working with stars like Bob Denver, Dawn Wells and Alan Hale, Jr. “I learned a lot from Lee [Strasberg] about deep relaxation to get at something you were working toward,” she told Esquire. “And then I found myself on Gilligan’s Island, where somebody’s telling you, ‘Go to the right.’ ‘Go to the left.’ That was an adjustment.”


The Life & Times of Hollywood
STORIES FROM CLASSIC HOLLYWOOD



Powered by Nevler .


COPYRIGHT 2020 By TheLifeandTimesofHollywood.com


The Life & Times of Hollywood
STORIES FROM CLASSIC HOLLYWOOD

More stories to check out before you go
Bob Denver told us once about having the dressing room next to Tina Louise “I would go to my dressing room at lunchtime and try to take a nap except Tina was always bringing boyfriends to her dressing room. Once, she got very upset because I said I heard her having sex in the dressing room next to mine. I didn’t think that was very bad. It kind of struck me funny at lunch hour. So I pounded on the wall and nothing happened. I mean I couldn’t shut it down, the noise was so loud. She got very upset, not much of a sense of humor then…”
“After I published my book (Maynard, Gilligan and I) Tina was not too excited. She got a little upset about the dressing room story. I don’t know why (laughs). I didn’t think it was that bad. She went to my publisher and marched around screaming: “I never had sex on ‘Gilligan’s Island!’ ”
TIna and Dawn Welles (Ginger and Mary Ann) are the last surviving cast members of the iconic show.
Tina Louise
Birthdate February 11, 1934
Famous Years 1958 – 1967
Currently Known For Actress, Singer and Author
Famous For Gilligan’s Island
“My stepmother once said I was homely, and teased me. I don’t think I was ravishing, but I think I was pretty.” Marooned on a deserted island with The Skipper, Gilligan, Mary Ann and the rest of the crew on Gilligan’s Island, Tina Louise didn’t quite know what to expect from the television series especially after making her Hollywood debut in the 1958 drama God’s Little Acre, which earned her a Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year. Already known for her stunning beauty and signature red hair, Tina was one of Hollywood’s early movie stars with films like The Trap, The Hangman, For Those Who Think Young and Day of the Outlaw, so spending her days on an island where she wasn’t the star of the show certainly wasn’t her first choice when she landed the part of Ginger Grant on CBS’s newest comedy, Gilligan’s Island, in 1964. In fact, she remains grateful for the opportunity but doesn’t like to travel down memory lane especially if it means reliving her time on an uncharted island somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. Why not? Let’s find out. 
Born as Tina Blacker in New York City on February 11, 1934, Tina’s mother was a fashion model and her father owned a candy store in Brooklyn. Her parents divorced when she was four years old and, between the ages of five and eight, she attended a private preparatory school. “They didn’t beat me, just slapped me once,” Tina later admitted when asked about her time at school. “It was just a miserable place. And I don’t think any child could really be happy between five and eight away from their parents, do you? …They took away my dolls at night. Why? It was a very confining atmosphere, not a particularly happy time.”
Eventually returning home, Tina’s life drastically changed in her teens after her mother married a wealthy doctor and climbed the social ladder in the Big Apple. Wanting to fit in with the other girls at Scarborough High School in Westchester, Tina added “Louise” to her name as she focused her talents on dancing, singing and acting at 17 years old. She studied at the Actors Studio and was called “New York Society’s No. 1 Debutante” in The Sunday Mirror in the early 1950s before appearing on the covers of magazines like Playboy, Modern Man and Adam, Sir! as an iconic pinup girl.
While Tina welcomed the modeling gigs, she struggled to find her footing as an actress when Columbia Pictures stepped in to help and advertised on her behalf, which earned her a series of roles in Broadway productions like Two’s Company, The Fifth Season and John Murray Anderson’s Almanac. She appeared in live television dramas like Appointment with Adventure and Studio One before making her feature film debut in the 1958 flick, God’s Little Acre. The film was exactly what she needed to boost her career as the National Art Council named her “The World’s Most Beautiful Redhead” and she took home a Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year. 
Looking back on the role during an interview with Forbes magazine in 2015, Tina didn’t shy away from claiming that the film was the highlight of her career. “My favorite experience was my first film, God’s Little Acre, directed by Anthony Mann,” she said. “I came from the stage and had never done a movie. It was months of going for auditions, my partner not showing up, sitting in the lobby of the Warwick Hotel for an hour before finding out that I actually had to call up. The producer read with me, which was fabulous because it was a scene with Ty Ty, the father…Later, I kept reading about all the well-known actresses in California that could have the part. But I got the screen test, and the role!”
Tina Louise is best-known for playing movie star Ginger Grant on “Gilligan’s Island,” a role she largely tried to distance herself from after the show wrapped. She refused to sign on for any of the revivals that the rest of the cast particpated in. She’s recently acted in films like “The Happy Ending” and “The Stepford Wives.” Here, th
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