PAGE SIX MAGAZINE: Jamie-Lynn Sigler says "I'm Glad We Didn't Have Children"
Margi Conklin, Editor in Chief of Page Six Magazine, tells CoverAwards exclusively: “This Sunday, Sopranos star Jamie-Lynn Sigler shows us her intimate side with an under-the-sheets cover shoot and a revealing interview about her past loves including ex-husband A.J DiScala and ex-boyfriend Scott Sartiano.”
Of her first marriage she says: ‘I was living in an idealistic dream world. I was like, I have a successful show and this handsome man, and I’m 22 and I’m getting married and may have a baby next year! Now, I see that I was in a cloud for all those years. I don’t regret it—I mean, who wants to look back at 27 and be a divorcee, but I wouldn’t take it back. Man, am I glad we didn’t have children. I have learned so much in the past few years that will make me a better mom one day.’”
For more on the Page Six Magazine interview with Jamie-Lynn Sigler, make the jump!
In this week’s Page Six Magazine – Jamie-Lynn Sigler, who spent a long time giving in to the demands of her husband, her handlers and her anorexia, reveals how now, at 27, the Sopranos actress is single and living it up all on her own.
On dating:
“I’ve always been a serial monogamist. I’m not a good dater. It takes a lot for me to even want to kiss someone. I can’t just go out and make out with people. I have to have a connection, and those are rare for me.”
On being pictured and linked in gossip columns with Entourage’s Jerry Ferrara:
“[Jerry] is a very special person, and I’ll leave it there.”
On her battle with anorexia:
“I was a perfectionist, and things didn’t feel like they were all under my control. I started getting hips and my body was changing. My first boyfriend broke up with me. This was my way of making sense of the world. People look at [anorexia] as a vain thing, but it’s an addiction. It sent me into a depression for a long time.”
On living like any other girl in their post-college early twenties (despite the fact she is 27):
“I’m having a second twenties. It’s a little like a do-over, but I never did [these things] in the first place. In my early twenties, with all of the people I had in my life, I was often misguided and misled. I was told what I needed to be in every given moment – what I should and shouldn’t say. It was such a weird thing when I was 21 or 22 and just getting into the world. I think I deserve to form my own life now.”
For more on Jamie-Lynn Sigler, check out this week’s issue of Page Six Magazine, free inside the Sunday edition of the New York Post and online on Monday here. . For a preview of this week’s issue, click here.









