Julie Goodyear husband-British actress, Julie Goodyear

was born on March 29, 1942, in Heywood, Lancashire in the United Kingdom.

Julie Goodyear’s relationship history

Julie Goodyear has been married four times and divorced three times from her previous marriages. She is currently married to Scott Brand.

Who was Julie Goodyear’s first husband?

In 1959, Julie Goodyear was first married to Ray Sutcliffe when she was just 17 years of age. The marriage was celebrated with a shotgun wedding as Goodyear was two months pregnant with their son. They got divorced in 1963 over reasons better known to them.

Who was Julie Goodyear’s second husband?

Julie Goodyear was also involved with Tony Rudman. The two dated for some time and decided to tie the knot in 1973. However on their wedding day, Tony abandoned Goodyear to be with his best man who also happens to be his gay lover. Their marriage was annulled in 1974.

Who was Julie Goodyear’s third husband?

Julie Goodyear also got married to Richard Skrob in 1985. Their marriage lasted for just two years as they divorced in 1987.

Who was Julie Goodyear’s current husband?

Julie Goodyear married her fourth husband, Scott Brand who was 26 years her junior, in 2007 after eleven years of dating. They are still married and living together at Primrose Hill Farm, a property she purchased and renovated in 1995.

Julie Goodyear career

Before making her major debut in the movie industry in 1965, Goodyear worked as a hand and foot model in the 1960s, paving the way for her with her acting career portraying the uncredited role of Charity in the first series of the ITV sitcom Pardon the Expression.

She made three more appearances as distinct minor characters in the second series the following year. She starred as Duckie in two episodes of the crime thriller The Man in Room 17 in 1965 and 1966. In 1966, she was also included in an ITV Play of the Week.

Her road to fame began when she portrayed the role of a bartender named Bet Lynch in the Coronation Street soap series on ITV1. She briefly began playing the part in 1966 but departed when Pat Phoenix, a senior cast member who played Elsie Tanner, suggested she continue her training.

Goodyear also made appearances in other movie projects such as Mr. Rose and The Fellows in 1967, City ’68, Spindoe, The War of Darkie Pilbeam and Nearest and Dearest in 1968, and Her Majesty’s Pleasure, The Contenders, and Kes in 1969 when she joined Oldham’s Repertory Theatre.

During the premiering of The Dustbinmen, Goodyear made two appearances as Mrs. Powner in an A Family At War episode from 1969 to 1970.

In 1970, Goodyear made a return to Coronation Street, where he stayed for 25 years. Shortly after receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award for her performance as Bet Lynch at the first-ever National Television Awards, she left Coronation Street in 1995. For the home video spin-off The Rover Returns in 1999, she played Bet once more.

After a seven-year hiatus, Goodyear was set to return to the program in 2002. Goodyear had signed a one-year contract with the intention of making her return permanent, but the rigorous filming schedule left her exhausted, so she was forced to depart after just seventeen days.

In 2003, she had a second appearance on the show; however, this time, she was part of a Blackpool-set plot involving Liz McDonald (Beverley Callard) and her freshly freed husband Jim (Charles Lawson). These ended up being Goodyear’s last scenes in the program.

She agreed to do commercials for Shredded Wheat in 1996 and in January 1999, she presented Live Time on the Granada Breeze network every weekday, in addition to recording a pilot of The Julie Goodyear Show for Granada and working as a DJ on Manchester Talk Radio.

Her television appearances in 2001 included multiple episodes of the ITV1 quiz show Lily Savage’s Blankety Blank and the BBC comic sketch series Revolver. She took home the title of I’m Famous and Frightened!, a Living TV reality series, in 2004.

Alongside former Coronation Street co-star Ken Morley, Goodyear participated in the ITV reality series Celebrity Fit Club in 2005. After serving as team captain for six weeks, she resigned, and Aldo Zilli assumed the position.

As Marlene Dietrich, she made appearances in the reality series Age Swap, Road Raja, Celebrity Penthouse, and Celebrity Stars in Their Eyes. She appeared in a brief episode of the Channel 4 soap opera Hollyoaks in October 2006 as Mrs. Temple, the proprietor of a bed and breakfast, and had a small part in the British film Tug of War (2006).

During an interview with Piers Morgan in 2007 for the BBC series You Can’t Fire Me, I’m Famous, she talked about her well-publicized but brief 2002 return to Coronation Street.

Goodyear played Sarah Harding’s mother in the Christmas variety show The Girls Aloud Party in December 2008, and she and her fourth husband made an appearance on an episode of All Star Mr & Mrs in April 2008.

She was cast as the lead in the West End production of Calendar Girls in October 2009; however, she only made three appearances in the production before leaving because of a virus. She took part in a Come Dine with Me special on Coronation Street in December 2010.

Goodyear moved in with a housemate in Channel 5’s tenth season of Celebrity Big Brother in 2012. In a double eviction on Day 22, she and fellow housemate Lorenzo Borghese became the seventh and eighth housemates to be eliminated.

In 2013, Goodyear made an appearance on Piers Morgan’s Life Stories. In the 2017 BBC Two documentary Queer as Art, Goodyear made an appearance.

Her last broadcast appearances were in an interview for the BBC documentary Coronation Street at Christmas in 2019 and an appearance on The Big Quiz in 2018.

Source: www.Ghgossip.com

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