Arabella Helen WeirMBE (born 6 December 1957)[1] is an American-born British comedian, actress and writer. She played roles in the comedy series The Fast Show, Posh Nosh and Two Doors Down, and has written several books, including Does My Bum Look Big in This? Weir has also written for The Independent and The Guardian and the latter's Weekend magazine.
Weir attended nursery school in Washington D.C., where her father was posted as a member of the British diplomatic corps. She later attended the Sacre Coeur Convent in Cairo, and the French Lycee in London.[7] Having spent many holidays in Scotland as a child, Weir describes herself as "culturally Scottish".[6] After her parents' divorce she initially lived with her mother, her two older brothers and her younger sister in the UK.[5] She has described her relationship with her mother as difficult, and in her comedy routine has exposed her mother's "cruel, snobby campaign to shame her into losing weight."[8] Weir's relationship with her mother later became the subject of her debut one-woman show, Does My Mum Loom Big in This?[5] At the age of nine she moved to Bahrain with her father while her brothers were at prep school and her younger sister stayed with their mother.[6]
Weir returned to London after passing the eleven-plus in Bahrain and her father was posted to New York.[5][7] She was a pupil at the Camden School for Girls,[9] where her mother was a teacher, and then studied drama at Middlesex Polytechnic.[5][7] As a teenager, she was a backing singer in the British pub rock band Bazooka Joe, whose bass player was Stuart Goddard, who later became famous as Adam Ant.[10][11]
In 1998, Weir published the international bestseller Does My Bum Look Big in This?, the title of which was a catchphrase of her character "Insecure Woman" in The Fast Show.[16] In 2000, she published her second novel Onwards and Upwards, followed by Stupid Cupid in 2002.
Weir performed with the original cast from The Fast Show (with the exception of Mark Williams) in six online-only episodes sponsored by the Fosters brand.[24]
Since 2016 she has been starring in the BBC Scotland sitcom Two Doors Down.[26][27] Weir's performance was criticised by Ben Arnold, commenting in The Guardian "her Scottish accent [is] still a work in progress, it would seem."[28] When Weir was asked about this comment on Richard Herring'sRHLSTP comedy podcast, she said she was doing specifically a Paisley accent on the show and that both her parents were from Scotland, which she considers her home. Weir added that Scottish actor David Tennant had responded to The Guardian's comment with the words "What the f*** are they on about, it's impeccable!", and that Ben Arnold (who himself is English) had later said to her he was sorry for making the comment.[29]
In June 2019, Weir premiered her debut one-woman show, Does My Mum Loom Big in This?, a comedic analysis of Weir's helter-skelter childhood and her difficult relationship with her late mother.[5] The show's title is a pun on Weir's bestselling novel Does My Bum Look Big in This? She took the show to the 2019 Edinburgh Festival.[30][31]
In 1995, Weir began a relationship with Jeremy Norton. They have two children, a daughter and a son.[34] They parted in 2013.[35][36]
Actor David Tennant is a close friend of Weir's and is godfather to her younger child.[37] They met while filming the six-part comedy drama Takin' Over the Asylum for BBC Scotland in 1994.[13] Shortly after, Tennant moved to London and lodged with Weir at her house in Crouch End for five years.[38]
She is a friend of Gordon Brown,[39] and headlined a rally for his think tank, Our Scottish Future, in Edinburgh on 1 June 2023.[40][41]
^Grice, Elizabeth (31 August 2021). "Arabella Weir interview: 'Mum told me: I can't f-----g bear the sight of you'". telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 7 January 2024. Alison Weir's humiliation of her daughter began when Arabella was a small child. "I wasn't even that fat," she says. "We're not talking of a morbidly-obese kid. But my mother was obsessed with fatness. She made me feel you aren't loveable or deserving if you're fat. She couldn't conceive of me doing well in life or making boys like me unless I was slim and pretty."