
Gina Yashere: I've never felt so free
Emma Pinch talks to comedian Gina Yashere about controlling a debilitating illness and starting a new life in LA
May 8 2008
By Emma Pinch,
Liverpool Daily Post[/align]
WATCHING her on-stage, tough, ballsy and funny enough to see off even the most determined heckler, she seems the last person to be bothered about the presence of a few extra pounds. But, just like the rest of us, Gina Yashere, stand-up comic and regular on BBC’s Mock the Week, feels the pressure to be slim, and in 10 months lost four stone, shrinking from a size 18 to a svelte size 12. She’s ditched the two litre tubs of Ben & Jerrys and is a poster girl for detoxing and colonic irrigation, she does step aerobics and dance classes and avoids wheat, sugar and tomato-based products.
What’s happened? The girl from Finsbury Park seems to have gone all LA on us. Which is actually appropriate because she’s upped sticks and moved there, and has no plans to return. She sold her four-bed London home and Mercedes for a one- bedroom "council flat in the sun" on the edge of a Californian freeway and a no-frills Toyota, which she delights in driving with the top down. She decided, as her American friends might say, to ditch the junk in her trunk weightwise, too, and declares that she feels "reborn".
"I’ve been overweight 10 years and my weight has yo-yoed," she explains. "I was a binge eater. When I got bored I would eat family-sized tubs of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream. When I knew I was going to America, I thought ‘This is it, you’re going to LA and you can’t be fat in LA’. It was either slim down and look normal or get really fat and play the fat roles. And Eddie Murphy is already wearing fat suits and doing fat roles, so there aren’t that many roles for fat women."
On her way back from a tour of Australia, she decided to detox and fast at a Thailand spa, and was so enthusiastic about the process she took pictures of the waste being flushed out of her body. "You fast for seven days and you do two colonic irrigations a day, and the great thing is that it just cleans out all the stuff that is slowing down your metabolism in your system. I lost a stone in a week. But the weight loss was just a side effect of the detox and healthy eating. It’s really about moderation and how I feel about myself."
After years of avoiding shopping, the former lift engineer is able to finally fit into clothes that were previously the preserve of her slimmer friends. "I’m not a big glamour puss, I’m just funkier. I can wear clothes I’ve always wanted to wear, like skinny jeans . . . I stocked up in Primark before I came over. Primark £12 skinny jeans. Love ‘em. But I know if I ever get in the movies I’ll only ever be the chubby best friend, even though I’m not chubby. I’m a size 12 and a size 12 in LA is still chubby. But I’m very happy with that. If I slim any more, my head will start looking big."
Being fat, she claims, didn’t just limit her choices of clothes. "I think it did hinder my career," she says. "At the end of the day, if you look on TV all you see is skinny, blonde women presenting all the TV shows and whatnot. As a comedian, it didn’t affect me at all in terms of live work, but I think it did affect my TV career. I just think I was overlooked for a lot of stuff, partly because there’s that whole tokenistic thing towards black comedians and actors on TV in England. So to be judged not only on your colour but on your sex and your size, that’s three counts against you. And basically I tried to get rid of one of the counts."
Moving to LA is a Victory Salute to those who passed over her for TV work. "When I got that visa, it was ‘OK, I’m going!’," she says. "I think my mum has realised I’m not settling down doing the whole husband three kids thing. It’s just not me. So I sold my house, threw a big party and said ‘Bye, I’m going to America’. I literally came here with two suitcases and started again. I had to buy furniture, TV, buy a whole new wardrobe. It’s been exhilarating. All I’ve had to do to my act is slow down my speech and enunciate a bit more so I’ve actually got posher. I’ve rewritten my intro because Americans think Black people are in America, Africa or the Caribbean and have no idea that there is a huge community of them in this country. Otherwise, they’d think I was an aborigine."
At 34, she says it was then or never to realise her dream in the States. Finding out four years ago that she was suf- fering from the same auto- immune disorder that kill- ed her aunt, focused her mind. "I woke up one day and I couldn’t open my fingers. It literally struck me overnight. It was kind of scary, but even at my illest a couple of years ago I was still performing, you would never have known. But then I’d go home and I’d have to get help to take my clothes off because I couldn’t lift my arms above my head. I was pretty much disabled."
In Thailand, she decided to stop taking the steroids. She takes "huge amounts" of fish oils, eats oily fish and has cut out "inflammatory" foods like tomatoes and wheat, and is managing to control the disease with just ibuprofen. "Now if you told me to kneel down on the floor and get back up it would take me 10 minutes because of my joints. But, I’m like ‘Well, it could have been worse, it could have been cancer’. I’m going to live my life to the fullest and do whatever the hell I want to do, because life is too short. I’ve always lived my life like that anyway, but now that’s made me even more so. I’ve never felt so free in my life."
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