The Peterborough Examiner

Anderson full of restoratio­n in new reality show

Actor takes on complete renovation of B.C. property, as well as personal healing

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

Model, actor and environmen­tal crusader Pamela Anderson is on a mission of rehabilita­tion.

Reached at her home in Ladysmith, B.C., she says the goal at hand is to overhaul the six-acre Vancouver Island property where she spent her earliest years and now hopes to establish a multi-generation­al haven for herself, her parents and her sons. It’s the focus of her new HGTV Canada reality show, “Pamela’s Garden of Eden,” which premiered Thursday.

At the same time, the Hollywood star says she’s been hit with a burst of introspect­ion: While on the property, she wrote a memoir due for release at the end of January and she is preparing to release a Netflix documentar­y about her life.

As much as the large-scale home renovation is a work in progress, “I’m a work in progress,” said Anderson. “Coming back here was really triggering,” she said of revisiting roots to a childhood she’s described as difficult.

“When I came home, I think I was not as happy as I normally am. … There’s certain things in your life that you just kind of push aside and it was just so healing for me to come home, and it took me a while to kind of grasp what I was putting myself through.” Further details about her early life and celebrity career will be revealed in the memoir and streaming project, she assures, acknowledg­ing the recent reset to small-town life is worlds away from the tabloid-grabbing exploits of her ’90s heyday.

“I’d never been on a plane before when I left this island. You know, I left the island and I went to Vancouver and then I moved to L.A., and then I went around the world and south of France for a year before I moved home,” said Anderson, who first rocketed to fame as a Playboy pin-up and “Baywatch” TV star.

Anderson says she bought the property about 30 years ago from her grandmothe­r, believing she “just needed some Canadian roots” and that she would move there one day. It would take longer than expected, she suggests in a first episode that briefly alludes to years of an “overwhelme­d” life in Los Angeles, a busy career and multiple highprofil­e marriages.

She said it was “gut-wrenching” at first to return to the sprawling waterfront property, which includes three buildings known as the roadhouse, the boathouse and the cabin.

These days, Anderson says she relishes the new creative chores that occupy her time — pottery and vegetable canning among them — while discoverin­g her personal design style. The show gives us a window into Anderson’s goofy side as she wisecracks with the crew, and her well-establishe­d love of nature.

It’s a far cry from the big-coiffed, bombshell version of Anderson that made her a beauty icon, she agreed. But it’s genuine, she added, and is in part an overture to her two adult sons who urged her to do the show because they saw a disconnect between her public persona and the woman they know.

“PAMELA’S GARDEN OF EDEN” AIRS THURSDAYS ON HGTV CANADA AND STREAMS FRIDAYS ON STACKTV. THE CANADIAN PRESS

 ?? ?? Pamela Anderson hopes to establish a multigener­ational haven for herself, parents and sons in her new show “Pamela’s Garden of Eden.”
Pamela Anderson hopes to establish a multigener­ational haven for herself, parents and sons in her new show “Pamela’s Garden of Eden.”

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