She’s been suffering excruciating pain for the past decade, but Aussie actress Georgie Parker has finally transformed her life after undergoing major surgery.
The 53-year-old actress, who reached huge fame in Australia with roles including Lucy Gardiner in A Country Practice, Terri Sullivan in All Saints and Ruth ‘Roo’ Stewart in Home and Away, underwent a hip replacement in February this year after suffering osteoarthritis for more than a decade.
Now, speaking in an exclusive chat with Women’s Weekly, the star has revealed how the complex operation has finally rid her of pain – and given her back full movement of her body.
“It’s like I have a different body,” Georgie told the magazine. “I’ve got my body back from having a titanium hip. It was a big operation but four days later, I twisted my body to the left and I hadn’t been able to do that for 10 years.”
Georgie admitted that she has always been active and fidgety throughout her life, making the pain she felt before her operation even harder to deal with as she was forced to minimise her movements.
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“I was not that different from how I am now,” she added. “I was what you would probably term hyperactive. Now they might call me ADHD, but I’m not. I’m a mover. I need to move. I was an avid ballet dancer and I just charged through my life, with occasional bouts of deep daydreaming.”
She previously revealed the operation had been successful earlier this year and appearing on The Morning Show with Larry Emdur and Kylie Gillies at the time, the seven-time Logie winner opened up about the surgery that forced her to take nine weeks off from filming Home and Away.
Read more: ‘It was a bigger op than I thought’: Georgie Parker’s hip replacement at 53
She explained she hadn’t been able to cross her legs for 12 years, calling it a “miracle” that she was finally able to do so again.
“It was a big operation, it was bigger than I thought,” she revealed on the show. “But the relief was pretty immediate and I’m back to doing what I want to do, but I’m taking my time. It was a life-changing experience.”
Gillies told the former All Saints star she thought hip replacements were usually associated with people older than those in their 50s, and questioned the impact it had on her.
“I hid it as well as I could and I stayed as fit as I could,” Georgie said of her hip problems. “I’ve got scoliosis as well so I’m working with that, as well as the hip. Unfortunately, when the hip loses that movement, your whole body acts like a splint. So everything is compromised. You have to think about how you sit, you think about how you stand, you think about how you get up.”
Read more: Hip pain and how you can avoid it
The actress was diagnosed with the spinal condition scoliosis at the age of just 13 – ending her love of dancing and sport at a young age. She had to wear a Boston Brace made of fibreglass which completely covered her torso for three years.