Jane Seymour is setting the record straight about her personal history with plastic surgery.
The Somewhere in Time actress, 73, revealed that when she was 40, she was told she had “bulging eyes” and encouraged to do something about it.
And “to set the record straight, because people were getting it wrong, they tried to do something under my eyes when I was 40 because photographers kept saying I had bulging eyes,” he said. People.
“The doctor told me it’s actually a muscle, so I can’t do anything about it,” he explained.
Jane got cheeky, adding that she’s had “a pretty good career considering the bulging eye” and said she never wants to “do anything permanent.”
Jane Seymour is setting the record straight about her personal history with plastic surgery; photographed in 2020
The Somewhere in Time actress, 73, revealed that when she was 40, she was told she had ‘bulging eyes’ and encouraged to do something about it, as seen here in 2020.
But she’s not against plastic surgery, she just doesn’t feel it’s the right decision for her personally.
“I’ve played a lot of incredible roles, recently two women with Alzheimer’s with very emotional scenes, and if you’re going to be that emotional, you need every muscle in your face,” Seymour said.
“So I have nothing against people doing whatever they want, but for me personally, it doesn’t help my craft, unless I’m playing someone who’s had Botox, in which case, I’d get over it.”
And she has one beauty tip everyone can follow: smile.
“The best facelift is a smile,” he said. “If you want to look young, smile from ear to ear.”
Previously, the Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman star said she avoids plastic surgery in favor of “temporary enhancements” as she wants her face to remain natural and expressive for her work as an actress.
‘I’m a temporary improvement person, rather than a permanent improvement person. If I need eyelashes, I stick them on. If I need more hair, I put it up.
‘Because I’m an actress, I’m sometimes asked to play roles much younger than me and then, on the same show, much older than me, so I keep my face moving.
‘That’s why I don’t do the things that a lot of people do because I’m a blank canvas. “I’m an actress,” Jane explained.
“I want to be able to play every emotion possible because it would be like having a stringed instrument and removing some of the strings or making them numb.”
The British-American beauty has also been very vocal about ageism in Hollywood.
And “to set the record straight, because people were getting it wrong, they tried to do something under my eyes when I was 40 because photographers kept saying I had bulging eyes,” she told People, seen in 1995.
“The doctor told me it’s actually a muscle, so I can’t do anything about it,” he explained in the 1979 photo.
Jane got cheeky, adding that she’s had “a pretty good career considering the bulging eye” and says she never wants to “do anything permanent,” in the 1985 photo.
But she’s not against plastic surgery, she just doesn’t feel it’s the right decision for her personally.
“I’ve played a lot of incredible roles, recently two women with Alzheimer’s with very emotional scenes, and if you’re going to be that emotional, you need every muscle in your face,” Seymour said.
“So I have nothing against people doing whatever they want, but for me personally, it doesn’t help my craft, unless I’m playing someone who’s had Botox, in which case, I’d get over it.”
In an interview with Hello! magazine said: ‘The world is against aging. We hate getting older. We look at aging and say, “Oh no, there’s a wrinkle, oh my God. Get rid of it. Gray hair. No. Scary!”
“While you can look at it from the other side and say, actually, I have time in my life now to do the things that I really want to do,” he explained. Maybe now I can become the person I want to be.
‘Menopause is a taboo topic, no one wants to talk about aging, especially women because they do everything possible to look 20 or 30 years younger.
“So the last thing they want to do is talk about it and there’s always been this thing that when you turn 50 you won’t have babies anymore, so now you’re a bit useless.” You’re undecided, you’re done.’