I was suicidal & £100k in debt after losing my dream CBeebies job but I recreated the topless shot as I don’t regret it
FORMER CBeebies star Sarah-Jane Honeywell, 47, has stripped naked on her roof – recreating the saucy snap that got her fired 10 years ago.
Admitting she has no regret for laying naked next to some prop peas in a campaign for Peta she took to Instagram and wrote: “It’s 10 years to the day that a picture was taken that changed the projection of my life completely.”
Sarah-Jane added: “There is so much speculation about how ‘this picture’ got me fired from CBeebies but the truth is there was already a producer that hated me & wanted to get rid of me.
“This picture merely lit the match to a bonfire that had already been built for me.
“Im so grateful though & I now know, even when life doesn’t go the way you want it to, things can turn out better than you wished for anyway.
“Without that bonfire I would never have met my husband @aydencallaghan I would never have had my two children, my boys, Phoenix and Indiana Fox whom I live for &… I would never have known real happiness.”
She went on: “I will always be impulsive (I either do or do nothing, there is no in between for me).”
As a bubbly CBeebies TV presenter once idolised by millions of young kids, Sarah Jane was axed from the job she adored in 2011, and despite no longer living in regret spiralled into a crippling depression that almost saw her take her own life.
Mum-of-two Sarah-Jane, first began hosting CBeebies shows like Higgledy House and Mighty Mites in 2002, alongside co-star Justin Fletcher, AKA Mr Tumble.
“It was the job of my dreams,” she says. “I had so much fun every day, just trying to make kids laugh.”
But in November 2011, she took part in a promo campaign for PETA, which saw her posing topless on a huge plate of food in London’s Trafalgar Square.
“At the time, I was on a filming break from CBeebies, so didn’t think I needed to clear it with them. It was just a bit of fun – and I wasn’t even paid to do it.”
But the resulting photo caused a stir, and when further shots of her wearing a skimpy vest and pouring Diet Coke over her boobs appeared in the press, she discovered she’d been sacked.
“The BBC was asked to comment on the pictures, and they simply said I no longer worked for them. That was how I found out.
“There was never a phone call or a single conversation with my bosses – despite me having worked there for 10 years. I was completely devastated that the career I loved was over.”
Even Sarah-Jane’s co-star Justin froze her out. “I called and left him a message but to this day he’s never responded.
“We were the best of mates, so that really hurt. I do understand it though, because as a children’s presenter he needs to protect his own image.”
Sarah-Jane also got bombarded with online abuse. “There was even a Facebook group called ‘I hate Sarah-Jane Honeywell.’ Dads tended to be quite supportive, but mums were cruel.”
She was also vilified over a story which reported her occasional use of cocaine in her youth – well before her TV days.
“I basically spoke out to warn kids not to do drugs, but it led to more people sticking the knife in.”
As work dried up, Sarah-Jane fell into debt and over the next three years, racked up £100,000 on her credit card.
The BBC was asked to comment on the pictures, and they simply said I no longer worked for them. That was how I found out.
Sarah-Jane Honeywell
“I had to move into my parents’ garage, and was at my wits end. I woke up most days feeling like I couldn’t breathe.”
One bright spot came when she met former Hollyoaks actor Ayden Callaghan, 39, on the set of a minor British film in early 2013. But when the pair got engaged in late 2014, the trolling intensified.
“I’m seven years older than Ayden, and his fans on social media called me a skanky old druggie, questioning why he was with me. It was hateful.”
In March 2015, Sarah-Jane finally hit rock bottom.
“I was three months’ pregnant so had recently come off Prozac, which gave me horrendous withdrawal symptoms. I was crying all the time – often in my sleep.
“While Ayden was working I’d get in the car, drive somewhere and just sob for hours.”
One day, while waiting to take a train into Liverpool, she considered ending it all.
“As I stood on the platform, I felt really dizzy and my legs were shaking. I had a really strong compulsion to jump in front of an oncoming train. It was that kind of urge you sometimes get with vertigo, and I thought that if I jumped, all the pain would stop.
“I wasn’t thinking logically about the effect it would have on Ayden or my family – I just wanted to stop feeling as if my heart was being ripped out.”
Crucially, it was Sarah-Jane’s pregnancy that drew her back from the edge.
“I’d only had a scan a few days before, and the thought of the life inside me saved me,” she says. “I went and sat on a wall and calmed myself down, and then walked home. I was badly shaken, but I decided to start counselling and get myself well.”
Her and Ayden’s first son, Phoenix, now five, was born in August 2015, and the pair married in September 2016.
“Ayden is amazing, and was such a rock throughout everything. He helped me clear my debts, and put up with all the times I was a total psychopath. I definitely wouldn’t have survived without him.”
In January 2018, they welcomed the arrival of their second son, Indiana, now three.
The family live in Lincoln, where Sarah-Jane runs the Curious Theatre School.
YOU'RE NOT ALONE
EVERY 90 minutes in the UK a life is lost to suicide.
It doesn’t discriminate, touching the lives of people in every corner of society – from the homeless and unemployed to builders and doctors, reality stars and footballers.
It’s the biggest killer of people under the age of 35, more deadly than cancer and car crashes.
Yet it’s rarely spoken of, a taboo that threatens to continue its deadly rampage unless we all stop and take notice, now.
That is why The Sun launched the You’re Not Alone campaign.
The aim is that by sharing practical advice, raising awareness and breaking down the barriers people face when talking about their mental health, we can all do our bit to help save lives.
Let’s all vow to ask for help when we need it, and listen out for others… You’re Not Alone.
If you, or anyone you know, needs help dealing with mental health problems, the following organisations provide support:
- CALM, , 0800 585 858
- Heads Together,
- Mind, , 0300 123 3393
- Papyrus,, 0800 068 41 41
- Samaritans, , 116 123
She is also planning to launch a charity to help underprivileged kids attend drama school, and eventually hopes to get back into TV.
“I’d love to do more acting or presenting – or take part in Dancing on Ice. Our kids don’t watch CBeebies though – they don’t even know it exists!”
In an age of escalating online abuse and cancel culture, Sarah-Jane still believes she was treated unfairly – but when approached by The Sun, the BBC declined to comment.
“I don’t understand why, as a woman, you can lose your job for posing in your knickers,” Sarah-Jane says. “How many male stars have abused their partners or taken drugs, but are still presenting? The world can be very unforgiving if you’re a female in the public eye.”
Despite this, she has no regrets. “Looking back, I’m so much wiser, and I’m happy at last.
“Though I made loads of mistakes and have only myself to blame, my husband and kids are all that matter to me these days.”
Follow @, @ and visit for more information
For more real life stories, this woman ditched the UK to live with her chocolate-farming toyboy in Peru – she’d known him 10 days but says it’s true love.
And this woman who dumped husband for Egyptian toyboy 20 YEARS her junior was devastated after he pocketed £1.5k of cash & calls her ‘old & fat’.
Plus this woman fell in love with a stranger she met online in lockdown – he moved 10k miles to be with her but dumped her 3 WEEKS later.