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Actress Lisa George has opened up about her incredible weight loss transformation as well as her eye surgery worth £8,000, while posing for a new photoshoot.
The former Coronation Street star, 55, couldn’t look further away from her Weatherfield character as she showed off her slimmer frame and remarkably youthful appearance.
Lisa revealed how the saggy skin that was once around her eyes left her feeling ‘so down’ so she went under the knife and had an £8k upper blepharoplasty and a brow lift.
The procedure removed her sagging skin that has left her eyes opening up much more and given her newfound confidence.
Speaking about how she felt before her appearance, Lisa said: ‘Every time I squinted or smiled, my top lid would cover my whole eye. I’d look like I was frowning, and it’d make me feel so down.’
Lisa added to Closer magazine that because her Corrie character Beth Tinker, who she played for 13 years, would wear so much eyeshadow, it would all collect in her creases and she dreaded close up shots.
Actress Lisa George has opened up about her incredible weight loss transformation as well as her eye surgery worth £8,000, while posing for a new photoshoot
The actress now plans to undergo a lower face lift to combat her hanging chin as she refuses to ‘grow old gracefully with great big bin bags’.
Meanwhile, Lisa’s incredible weight loss comes after she was plagued with stomach issues and diagnosed with type2 diabetes.
She faced cruel trolling for her size and recalled how one decorator told her ‘you look massive on telly’ and she felt ‘so ashamed’ after piling on the pounds after going through menopause.
To date, she has lost a whopping three stone after being placed on a low-FODMAP diet, which is extremely restrictive.
Lisa explained: ‘As soon as I got to my fifties and menopause hit, I just piled it on.
‘Eventually I saw an endocrinologist for my stomach issues, and I was put a on a low-FODMAP diet which was restrictive, but it told me what my body was having a reaction to.’
The star added: ‘The weight just fell off. I was so mad with myself that I hadn’t started getting my weight under control earlier.’
Lisa previously revealed how she was diagnosed with a genetic eye condition that could see her go blind.
She has NAION – non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy – which causes sudden vision loss in one eye.
In an exclusive interview with Daily Mail, Lisa previously shared her fears of her disability could mean she may never be able to work in acting again after suffering two separate incidents that have left her visually impaired in both eyes.
Speaking in 2024, she explained: ‘I always think there are people far worse off than you, and I’m just grateful I can still see but we don’t know what could happen in the future.’
Lisa suffered her first eye ‘incident’ in 2016 when the heavy knot at the end of a piece of rope caught her right eye while gardening.
A few days later the sight in her right eye completely went and she ended up scraping the side of her car while driving down a narrow country lane.
The actress faced cruel trolling for her size and recalled how she was told ‘you look massive on telly’ and she felt ‘so ashamed’ after piling on the pounds after menopause (pictured in 2017)
Lisa revealed how the saggy skin that was once around her eyes left her feeling ‘so down’ so she went under the knife and had an £8k upper blepharoplasty and a brow lift
She was later told that she had lost part of the sight at the bottom of her right eye and unfortunately it would never come back.
Over the next six years Lisa saw a number of eye specialists, both privately and within the NHS, as she desperately tried to find out what was going on with that right eye.
She said: ‘Luckily my left eye was really good with 20/20 vision and the only thing I struggled with after that first incident was being able to read.
‘Corrie were great, they printed my scripts in a bigger font to make it easier but I just wasn’t getting any explanation as to what had happened.
‘I had scans, dye put into my eyeball, but the doctors were split as to whether it was the trauma from the rope or something else that had caused the haemorrhage at the back of my eye.’


















