At age 48, Charlize Theron is happy with how she looks, even though Hollywood has ridiculous beauty standards and people talk about how she looks.
“I love that my face is changing and getting older… The Oscar-winning actor told Allure in an interview that came out Friday, “People think I had a facelift.” “They asked, ‘What did she do to her face?'” I tell her, “Bitch, I’m just getting older!” It doesn’t mean the surgery was bad. That’s just how things are.
Theron told the outlet the truth about being a woman over 40 in Hollywood in honor of her decades-long partnership with Dior’s J’Adore perfume. “I’ve always thought it was weird that men age like fine wines and women like fresh flowers,” she said.
“I hate that idea and want to fight it, but I also believe that women should be able to age in a way that makes them feel good.” I believe we should fully understand how each of us is going through our own journey.
Theron also talked about how some of her past jobs made her physically hurt because she had to put on weight or do her own stunts. “I will never again say, ‘Yeah, I’ll gain 40 pounds,’ before making a movie.” “Because you can’t take it off, I will never do it again,” she said. Theron put on weight when she was 27 to play Aileen Wuornos, a convicted serial killer, in Monster, for which she won an Oscar.
“I lost 30 pounds in like one night.” “I only skipped three meals, and my weight went back to normal,” she said. “I remember a year into trying to lose the weight, I called my doctor and said, ‘I think I’m dying because I cannot lose this weight.'” Theron tried to make the same change at age 43 for her role as a new mother in 2018’s “Tully.”
He told her, “You’re over 40.” Don’t worry. She said, “Your metabolism isn’t what it used to be.” “That’s not what anyone wants to hear.”
However, Theron has been known to do some of her acting work for films like Mad Max: Fury Road and Atomic Blonde. Those days may be over, though. She said, “It bothers me that I make action films now and if I hurt myself, it takes a lot longer to heal than it did when I was in my 20s.”
“I miss my 25-year-old body more than my face. I could throw it against the wall and not hurt tomorrow.” I can’t walk when I go back to the gym after three days of not working out. I’m not able to use the bathroom. It’s all of those real times.”
If you want to learn more about how other popular people have changed because of plastic surgery, here are some more links: