
Credit: Fearne Cotton’s Happy Place
An announcement didn’t start the discussion about Joanna Page’s weight gain. It started quietly, as these things usually do, with strangers pointing out what they believed they saw in side-by-side photos and comments sections.
At least not publicly, it was never presented as cruelty. Curiosity over judgment. A query masquerading as worry. Doesn’t she look different?
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Joanna Louise Page |
| Date of Birth | March 23, 1977 |
| Age | 48 |
| Nationality | Welsh |
| Profession | Actress, presenter, author |
| Best Known For | Stacey Shipman in Gavin & Stacey |
| Public Discussion | Noticeable weight gain over recent years |
| Primary Cause | Underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism) |
| Diagnosis Period | Symptoms recognized years before formal diagnosis |
| Key Symptoms | Fatigue, feeling cold, slowed movement, weight gain |
| Medical Treatment | Lifelong daily thyroid hormone medication (levothyroxine) |
| Impact of Missed Medication | Rapid return of fatigue and physical symptoms |
| Related Health Factors | Low blood sugar; history of high sugar intake |
| Family Life Context | Mother of four children |
| Public Statements | Open about exhaustion, health struggles, and recovery |
| Media Reaction | Speculation followed by increased health awareness discussion |
| Current Condition | Managing condition, energy reportedly improved |
| External Reference | https://www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/health/nhs/ |
Page has been in the public eye long enough for her body to seem strangely familiar. Viewers have grown up with Stacey Shipman’s laugh, her tenderness, and her everydayness ever since Gavin & Stacey debuted in 2007. Physical change becomes something that people feel comfortable talking about because of this familiarity.
Most people were unaware of how gradual everything was.
Long before the weight gain became apparent, she talked about feeling exhausted. When others weren’t, it was cold. Slow in a manner that was inconsistent with her character. Days that came to an almost immediate end.
She once talked about how she had to sit down after loading the washing machine and stare into space, wondering why such a basic task had left her feeling so empty. That particular detail endures because it is commonplace and because illness frequently manifests itself in this way.
Gaining weight was just one of the symptoms. The public just happened to clock it first.
For years, Page believed that fatigue was a necessary component. Four kids. A career that doesn’t stop much. Being happy on cue is an invisible labor. Being a working mother quickly normalizes fatigue.
Her husband was the first to notice. He observed her constant coldness and the fact that the heating was left on while everyone else wore shorts. She eventually turned to a doctor as a result of those domestic details.
An underactive thyroid, which impacts mood, energy, metabolism, and yes, weight, was the diagnosis. Common, underdiagnosed, and incredibly unglamorous is hypothyroidism. It doesn’t show up in a big way. It takes hold.
Blood tests, daily medication, and the silent realization that this wasn’t a phase were all part of the treatment. She claims that when she missed the tablets, the symptoms returned with a vengeance, reminding her of how delicately balanced her body had become.
When she told me that she had once forgotten her medication and felt the fog return almost instantly, I paused.
Weight gain frequently turns into a morality tale in tabloids. Reduce your intake. Increase your movement. Put in more effort. Page’s experience revealed the hollowness of that script. Willpower has little influence when hormones are out of balance.
She has never offered an apology for the changes in her body. She has, if anything, sounded slightly perplexed by the amount of attention they got. The fatigue was the issue, not the weight gain.
Whenever she was interviewed on television or on radio, the topic of health always came up. habits of sugar. levels of energy. changes in lifestyle. With a mixture of horror and humor, she once acknowledged that she used to add eight sugars to her tea. Her co-stars responded as though she had admitted to a crime.
Because it fit a narrative that people wanted to hear, the moment went viral. Sugar causes weight gain. The case is closed.
Page has also discussed low blood sugar and the necessity of eating frequently to prevent fainting. The human body is not a neat equation. There are frequently overlaps between conditions. It makes sense to want to make them simpler, but this is untrue.
The speed at which a woman’s body becomes a shorthand for her character, discipline, or health is revealing. Page’s charm has always included her warmth on screen, but it also appears to permit criticism from the general public.
She doesn’t make a loud pushback. When questioned, she provides an explanation before continuing.
She sounds more stable in recent interviews. Not changed, not victorious, just more of herself. The drug is effective. The mist has cleared. Instead of flooding, energy returns in pockets.
Part of the point is that her body hasn’t reverted to its previous state.
In her case, gaining weight signified a time of illness rather than indulgence. Years of childbearing, caregiving, employment, and a condition that slowed everything—from movement to thought—coincided with it. It is unrealistic to expect physical stasis during that time.
It’s remarkable how little she now attempts to steer the story. She doesn’t position herself as an advocate for body positivity. Transformation is not what she sells. When it’s pertinent, she just speaks the truth.
The conversation has changed, if not completely stopped, because of that candor. Viewers continue to take note. Commenters continue to leave comments. However, there is less shock and less pressure to rationalize her body.
She is still very busy. fresh initiatives. podcasts. showcasing one’s work. a public life that goes on even though chronic illness necessitates a private recalibration.
In this situation, gaining weight becomes almost incidental. An outward sign of something much more disruptive occurring below. When a public figure permits that to happen, there’s a subtle sense of relief.

