Hannah Waddingham confronts her height insecurities, sexism in showbiz, and triumphs with Ted Lasso and Mission: Impossible, as she celebrates her grounded rise at 50.
Hannah Waddingham has never been shy about her height.
At about 5 ft 11, she often felt too tall in an industry that favoured petite women.
She recalls being called a “lanky freak,” even warned that her face “looked like one side had a stroke”, and frequently told she’d never work onscreen .
Yet at 50, that towering figure is now her power. Waddingham is a household name thanks to her Emmy win for Ted Lasso and high-profile roles in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning, The Fall Guy, and hosting Eurovision.
Her transformation is electric: once underestimated, now impossible to ignore.
In a candid interview, she admitted she’d battled “impostor syndrome” for years, even while striding Cannes red carpets and filming blockbuster scenes on aircraft carriers.
She credits Ted Lasso creator Jason Sudeikis for boosting her confidence.
Unlike others, he welcomed her on equal footing, even in heels, telling her: “I don’t care if she wears four-inch heels. Let’s do it”
Whether playing a naval admiral opposite Tom Cruise or adding her voice to animated hits, she refuses to shrink or be sidelined
Off screen, she continues paving the way for women over 40, challenging double standards: “A man just wears a suit, but a woman wears a power suit”.
She’s also fiercely honest about motherhood and burnout, finding strength in authenticity and tough self-care as her priorities evolve.
Hannah Waddingham proves that tall women belong center stage.
Her journey from bullied teen to Emmy icon shows how embracing your true shape and standing tall—can conquer the world.