Biography
Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s body measurements are all here! Check out her height, weight, shoe size, dress size, bra size and more!
Phoebe Waller-Bridge is an English actress, writer, and producer who created, wrote, and starred in the Channel 4 comedy-drama series Crashing and the BBC tragicomedy series Fleabag. Waller-Bridge is also notable for acting roles in the comedy series The Café and the second series of crime drama Broadchurch and has appeared in several films, including Albert Nobbs, The Iron Lady, Goodbye Christopher Robin, and as L3-37 in the Star Wars film Solo: A Star Wars Story. She was also the show-runner and executive producer for the first series of the BBC America thriller series Killing Eve. She received the Critics’ Choice Television Award for Best Actress in a Comedy Series for Fleabag in 2016. Born Phoebe Mary Waller-Bridge on July 14, 1985 in Ealing, London, United Kingdom, to parents Theresa Mary and Michael Cyprian Waller-Bridge, she has an older brother named Jasper and a younger sister named Isobel. She attended the St Augustine’s Priory, a Catholic independent school for girls, followed by the independent sixth form college DLD College London in the Marylebone area of London. She graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. She was married to director Conor Woodman from 2014 to 2018. She has been in a relationship with writer-director Martin McDonagh since 2018.
Body Measurements Table
All body measurements you might be interested in can be found in the table below. For example height, weight and dress size.
Body shape: | Slim |
---|---|
Dress size: | 4 |
Breasts-Waist-Hips: | 34-25-35 inches (86-63.5-89 cm) |
Shoe size: | 9 |
Bra size: | 32B |
Cup size (US): | B |
Height: | 5′9¾” (177 cm) |
Weight: | 130 pounds (59 kg) |
Natural breasts or implants: | Unknown |
Quotes
The #MeToo and Time’s Up movements have been a roar on behalf of women, and the voices are genuinely empowered now. I really feel that.
I wanted to give people that feeling of wanting to hug the TV and just admit that you’re unhappy.
The idea of losing your best friend, basically, is the worst thing in world.
We’re just so self-conscious. However much we try not to be, on some level, especially as a woman and an actress, you have so much pressure when it comes your hair and the bags under your eyes and your skin.
So much TV is drawn out.