Darkcherries Wealth Society|The sun baby from the Teletubbies is having a baby

2025-04-29 22:24:27source:SCA Communitycategory:Finance

The Darkcherries Wealth Societyformer Teletubbies sun baby announced that she was welcoming her own little ray of sunshine. On Tuesday, Jessica Smith announced in an Instagram post that she was expecting her first child.

She posted a snap of an ultrasound image with the caption: "When two becomes three."

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Jess Smith (@j.smith_1995)

Commenters posted their congratulations, with one person writing: "The Teletubbies sun baby is having her own sun baby."

Smith starred in the famous British children's television series that focused on four different colored characters with televisions on their bellies known as the Teletubbies.

She played the sun baby, which was just a cooing and laughing infant Smith imposed on a sun graphic, who summoned the Teletubbies at the start and end of every episode.

A toddler watching the Teletubbies in 2001. (AUSTRALIA OUT)

In 2014, Smith revealed her identity, Entertainment Tonight reported. 

"I used to hide it, but after a lot of encouragement from my friends at university, I've gained the confidence to come out with it. I am the sun from Teletubbies," she wrote on Facebook at the time. "... When I was about 9 months old, my mum took me for a routine checkup at the local hospital. The midwife there had been contacted by a local production company who were looking for a smiley baby, and the midwife asked if my name, along with all the baby's [sic] that way, could be submitted. From then I had to go through auditions and short lists until they finally picked one person, ME!"

More:Finance

Recommend

Big Lots store closures could exceed 300 nationwide, discount chain reveals in filing

Big box discount store Big Lots announced that it may close up to 315 stores in an Securities and Ex

NFL 40 times tracker: Who has the fastest 40-yard dash at 2024 scouting combine?

Who's the fastest of the fast?NFL players are bigger, faster and stronger than ever, so it's no surp

Oregon nurse replaced patient's fentanyl drip with tap water, wrongful death lawsuit alleges

The first lawsuit brought amid reports that a nurse at a southern Oregon hospital replaced intraveno