stars shock Dreams

Emmerdale Kerry star's life – co-star fiancé, health woes and weight loss transformation

Reading now: 356
www.dailystar.co.uk

Emmerdale since 2012. Having entertained viewers with a slew of memorable storylines including that deadly fire that killed Frank, Laura, 37, took a break from TV to welcome her first child with her co-star fiancé Mark Jordon.The actress' real life is much more settled as the famous duo raise their family in a stunning countryside home close to Yorkshire.From shocking hair loss struggles, on-set romance and tackling her sugar addiction, Daily Star has taken a look inside the life of soap star away from the cameras.After landing her dream job as Kerry Wyatt on the ITV soap, Laura has opened up about dealing with hair loss over the last 20 years and discussed how it has affected herself image.Laura said she has suffered with hair loss since 16, when she started using a pill to "control her horrendous periods".Sharing her journey with OK!

magazine, the soap star shared that doctors never told her that certain pills are testosterone-heavy and attack hair follicles, which can make hair thinner and fall out.She revealed: “I have suffered hair loss on and off since 16, when I started using synthetic hormones to control my horrendous periods."What they never told me was certain pills are testosterone-heavy and attack hair follicles, making hair get thinner and weaker, then fall out."After years of ups and downs, falling out, growing back and so on, I reached a peak.

I got my dream job playing Kerry Wyatt on Emmerdale and – boom – my hair was falling out in clumps. Thanks, universe, great timing!"Having found friendship with fellow Emmerdale actor Mark Jordon, who plays Daz Spencer on the soap, Laura has spoken out about the pair’s sizzling on-set chemistry that led to a romance in 2015.Having joined the cast just two years after.

Read more on dailystar.co.uk
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Doug Ford - Housing affordability in Ontario has eroded faster than any province amid COVID-19: report - globalnews.ca - Britain - Canada - county Ontario - city Columbia, Britain
globalnews.ca
90%
707
Housing affordability in Ontario has eroded faster than any province amid COVID-19: report
Housing affordability in Ontario has eroded at a rate not seen in half a century over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, a new report suggests, while home prices skyrocketed by 44 per cent across Doug Ford’s premiership.The new report by Generation Squeeze found that with current home prices, a new homebuyer would have to work full-time for nearly 22 years to save up enough money for a 20 per cent down payment on a home — up from 15 years in late 2019.“Ontario has just completely lost control of housing,” said Paul Kershaw, an associate professor at the University of British Columbia and the founder of Generation Squeeze, which studies housing affordability and standard of living across Canada.“We’ve never seen anything like this before in any province at any time in the last 50 years.” ‘I’ll never be able to afford property’: Housing costs key issue for Ontario voters The report, citing Canadian Real Estate Association data, found the average price for a home in Ontario rose to $871,688 by 2021, up 44 per cent from the inflation-adjusted price in 2018 — the year Ford was sworn in as premier.Meanwhile, wages have stagnated, particularly for the typical 25-to-34-year-old, which the report argues has led to “lost work” for those trying to save for a down payment.Over the first two years of the pandemic, Kershaw says those young Ontario residents have lost the value of six years of work that would otherwise be put toward home ownership.
DMCA