Born into a family of scientists in New Zealand and raised in Australia, Pamela Stephenson seemed destined for a conventional life of academic achievement. Instead, a devastating sexual assault at 16, followed by her parents expelling her from home after discovering the resulting infection, shattered her foundations. She rebuilt herself through performance: NIDA training, early Australian theatre, then a daring leap to the UK. There she exploded into public consciousness on Not the Nine O’Clock News, redefining what a woman could be in sketch comedy, then crossed into film with Mel Brooks and Superman III, and onto the fierce stage of Saturday Night Live.
Behind the glamour, she quietly began a second revolution. She fell in love with Billy Connolly, built a family, and then walked away from the center of showbusiness to study the very thing she’d been navigating all along: human behavior. Earning a PhD in clinical psychology, co-founding the Los Angeles Sexuality Centre, writing bestselling books on mental health, sexuality, and her own past, she transformed fame into insight and trauma into service. Today, as Lady Connolly, her legacy lives not just in iconic sketches, but in the countless readers and clients who found clarity, courage, and compassion in her work.