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Holly Marie Combs > Press >
Celebrity Baby Blog
Actress Holly Marie Combs
is one of our favorite famous moms here at CBB, and
when she called us recently to share stories about
her sons, her new
Lifetime-TV pilot and the possibility of a
Charmed reunion, we couldn't have been more
excited! Read below for more on Holly's life as a
mom to Riley Edward, 23 months, and
Finley Arthur, 4 -- and her
terrifying battle with postpartum thyroiditis.
CBB: Hi Holly! What are
you up to?
Holly: I'm in Vancouver shooting
this pilot, Mistresses, for Lifetime, and
I'm without my kids for the first time! I've never
been away from them for this long. I made the
decision not to bring them: Riley came down with an
ear infection two days before we were supposed to
leave, so he couldn't fly, and I was very upset
about that. And Finley was just in so many
four-year-old activities, like summer school and
karate, that we couldn't take him out.
I was forced to come up here
without either one of them, and it's so weird to me!
My husband [David Donoho] sends me
pictures of them on the playground, and they look
years older to me even though I've only been gone a
matter of days!
How do you balance your
career with motherhood?
You never feel like you're 100
percent at either one. I don't ever feel like I'm
the best actress I can be or the best mother I can
be. My husband is very supportive -- he wants me to
work, but understands I also want to be with the
kids. I would consider leaving acting for
motherhood, I mean, we all want to be financially
secure and want our children to be secure forever.
But life passes you by, and it's really hard, at
ages 1 and 4, to pick them up and bring them on
location with me.
Would you support your
sons if they wanted to go into acting?
I would steer them away from that
career path. Personally, I have nothing to fall back
on, and that creates a weird ambition that you have
to be good at acting because you can't be good at
anything else. I wish I had gone for my degree --
that acting wasn't this be-all-and-end-all. If they
were interested in acting, I'd be sure they'd wait
until they were 18, then learn something else, as
well.
So how are your sons?
They're great! Finley is so
dramatic. I think it's somewhere genetically in our
blood! My grandmother said I used to throw temper
tantrums when I was little, too. When I delivered
Finley, he was instantly complaining. I could tell
from his cry -- he was thinking "It's too cold!" or
"It's too bright!" -- I was immediately comforting
him.
When Riley came out, he opened his
eyes and smiled at me, and I went, "Oh, where did
you come from?" He's the angel-sweet baby, whereas
Finley woke up all the time when he was little.
Riley sleeps through the night, luckily. My doctor
said, "If all babies were like Riley, people would
be having them every day."
Where did their names --
Finley and Riley -- come from?
My husband and I are both Irish,
and so are the boys' names. I learned of Finley from
an Internet print-out on Irish names. I thought it
was too different for my husband to like, so I never
really mentioned it to him. We were visiting with
Alyssa Milano's family -- they live
in my neighborhood -- and I decided to give David
the list, hoping he would see the name, and he did!
All of a sudden he suggested Finley -- I kind of
made it seem like it was his idea all along, haha!
Riley was a name I always wanted,
but David wasn't as into it, although he did end up
letting me choose the name anyway.
How do the boys interact?
Finley, as a baby, was so excited
to have a new baby. But once Riley turned 1, Finley
was like, "Wait a minute, this kid is taking my
toys! I'm sharing things I don't want to share with
him!" Now, though, he's past that point, and has
brotherly love. He's figuring out that he has a role
to play in this little one's life, which is
touching. He tries to pick Riley up, though, and I
discourage that!
They're boys, so they need to get
outside at least once or twice a day. We have
horses, so they turn them out before they ride
them...and sometimes, I feel like I have to turn my
children out before we play! There's lots of
ball-playing and soccer in this household.
Do you plan to have more
kids?
I go back and forth every day. One
day, I think it would be great, the next day, I'm
like, "Am I kidding? I'm so tired! These boys kick
my butt!" But I do want a big family -- I was an
only child, which inspired me to have a family in
the first place. When you go through life moments --
marriage, parental illness -- it's probably nice to
have someone there who's known you your whole life,
so you can go through those transitions with someone
who understands you. Life as an only child can be a
bit lonely, and when I had Finley, I decided that if
I could give him a big family, I wanted to as much
as possible.
Are there any products you
and your sons especially love?
Riley LOVES Elmo! In Vancouver the
other day, Elmo came on TV and I got so excited,
even though I was alone. I'll turn on the TV
sometimes when the boys are gone, and without even
realizing it I'll have a kids' show on the screen.
I use
Weleda lotions with Riley too -- they're
all-natural and you can get them at Whole Foods.
They smell really good. We also use special diapers
with him, but it's almost time for him to start
potty training.
Ooh! Any tips on that?
For boys, it's almost easier
because you have "gizmos" that you can use, like
targets in the toilet. That makes it more like a
game. Finley was good about it, and I was always
just conscientious of leaving the situation up to
him. I'd check with him before we left the house,
and after he ate, so we didn't have a lot of
accidents that would give him a complex about the
whole thing. I tried to make it as easy as possible
for him. Boys like to be like their dads, so the
dads absolutely have to be involved in the process
because they have the same parts!
You've had some health
issues surrounding your pregnancies -- are you
willing to talk about them?
When I was 24 I had a fibroid the
size of a baseball. It was during the first season
of Charmed, and I had no idea if it was a
cancerous tumor or what. I had surgery to remove it;
luckily it wasn't cancer, or else they would've had
to remove everything -- organs included. I hadn't
really thought about having kids at the time, but
once the choice was almost taken away from me, it
was heavy.
I met my husband a year later, and
we were together for four years before we felt ready
to try for kids. I figured from my surgery and scar
tissues, I might have a rough time getting pregnant.
But we were really lucky, and it happened more
quickly than we thought. Because of that, though,
doctors have warned me about having a third child --
I've had two C-sections already, and with all the
scar tissue, it's a lot.
You also battled a
condition postpartum, right?
After my second pregnancy, I was
diagnosed with
postpartum thyroiditis. It's where your immune
system basically attacks you. When you're pregnant,
your immune system naturally slows down a bit so you
can carry the baby, then it amps back up after
pregnancy. Mine amped a little too much, and
attacked my thyroid.
People thought I had postpartum
depression. I was really tired and run down, so I
thought maybe it had to do with having little kids
and a job. But I was also suffering from hair loss,
dry skin and other symptoms. I knew something was
going on, but didn't know what it was. It actually
made me really sad -- I thought I wasn't keeping up
well with motherhood.
I finally had some blood tests,
and doctors realized what was really going on. I was
put on medication, and it took a year to get the
balance of medications jut right. It was tough. I'd
get muscle fatigue and cramps, so I wouldn't want to
be active, but the more you sleep, the worse the
condition gets. It's uncommon, but goes undiagnosed
quite often -- I know some women who have gone 12
years undiagnosed, and would put on weight and
suffer these symptoms, thinking it was just their
fault. I think every gynecologist should warn women
that this can happen, and test for the condition at
postpartum check-ups.
Thyroid disease runs in my family,
so I had my levels checked vigilantly during my
pregnancy, but never after, until I had the symptoms.
Luckily, most women recover in a year; unfortunately,
I did not, and will be on medication for the rest of
my life. It's funny, because I hadn't even taken an
aspirin throughout my pregnancy, so getting used to
these medications was tough.
Tell us about your current
project for Lifetime, Mistresses.
It's based
on the BBC show, and the pilot will air next
summer. It'll become a series if it gets picked up,
as a companion piece to the show
Army Wives. I play the mom of two young
boys, and it's funny because they're not MY boys --
it's weird to play someone else's mom! We have a
really good group of girls up here; they're all
dedicated and all sweet. I'm working with
Brooke Burns, who used to be married to
Julian McMahon, who worked on
Charmed. Last time I saw Brooke, her daughter
was a baby, and now
she's about 8 years old. There's nothing like
children to let you know the past has jumped time!
We swap mothering tips constantly -- we hang out
because all the other girls are single and engaged,
young and happening. We're the two moms on-set.
Speaking of Charmed,
is there a reunion in the works?
If the script was right, and all
the girls were available, we'd absolutely do one.
So you all still talk?
Yes! Rose [McGowan]
and I went to lunch after I had Riley, and she asked
if I was still working out regularly. I said, "Are
you kidding me?!" So Rose sent me her trainer! Only
a really good girlfriend would do that. She pointed
out my wrinkles, too; as you can see, she's almost
like a sister! Alyssa [Milano] lives in the
neighborhood, so I see her out a lot.
Shannen [Doherty] I speak
to every two or three months; we call to check up on
each other. It's nice -- we all spent a very large
chunk of our 20s together, and we basically grew up
together. We did have a good time on the show,
despite all the rumors.
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