Julie Fisher was born on 17 February 1972 to Thomas Fisher,[1] and was brought up in Sugar Grove, Illinois,[2] as one of five siblings. She went on to study computer science at Indiana University. Fisher moved to London to work for an internet-based company, and was working at a digital agency when she met Luke Montagu in 2003. She was a single mother at the time with two children,[3] and had assumed he was not interested in her.
When Luke Montagu suffered years of side effects from being removed from prescription medication by an addiction clinic (and was later awarded £1.35 million in compensation),[5] Julie Montagu began running yoga classes in nearby church halls in order to bring some money into the household. By that time, Luke was unable to continue in his position as director of the Met Film School so Julie became the sole supporter.[3]
According to a June 2020 magazine article, Julie Montagu is a "qualified yoga teacher, nutritionist and mindfulness guru".[3]
Career
Julie Montagu started a blog, called the "Flexi Foodie" and wrote a successful cookbook,[4]Superfoods: The Flexible Approach to Eating More Superfoods & Superfoods Superfast.[6] She founded the charity Council for Evidence-Based Psychiatry after Luke's recovery, based on their experiences.[7]
She was then offered a position on the reality television series Ladies of London as her husband was recovering. She later said of the series, "We thought long and hard before accepting as it offered financial support for a while. But it was not fun to do. I was expected to behave in a way I wasn't, like an It girl or socialite, when I'm not. They edit you... You have to go along with things or you get fired. But you know it was a job. I was acting". She celebrated when it was cancelled after three seasons.[4] In 2016, the couple took over the running of the Mapperton Estate.[6] By that time, Far from the Madding Crowd had recorded some scenes at the estate.[3]
The series brought financial stability which allowed the couple to invest further in the Mapperton Estate, turning an old stable block into a wedding venue. Julie also opened her own school of yoga on the grounds, but continues to practice yoga elsewhere, headlining an act at the Wanderlust yoga festival in Victoria Park, London.[4] During the lead-up to the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, Julie Montagu was interviewed on a number of occasions because she is a US citizen who married into British aristocracy;[8] she was also an on-site commentator on the wedding for the BBC.[9] She was also interviewed following such events as Markle's father responding to a letter his daughter had sent him,[10] and the royal couple's break from the monarchy in 2020.[11][12][13]
In a 2017 interview, the couple were working to increase the business: "by attracting more visitors and more weddings. At the moment we host 12 a year but we are hoping to build that up to 40". The cost of operating the Mapperton estate was £200,000 per annum at that time.[5] Because of the restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Luke estimated that they lost £200,000 that year.[14]
On 17 October 2021, Julie appeared on CNN’s documentary series, Diana.[17]
Since 2020, Julie Montagu has run the YouTube channel American Viscountess, being travelogue tours of British country houses, accenting interviews, history, customs and culture.[18]
Personal life
She is married to Luke Montagu, Viscount Hinchingbrooke, and has four children,[4] two of whom are from her first marriage and two with Luke.[6] She supported her husband through his recovery from a dependency of prescription drugs and now campaigns for greater awareness of the issue.[4]