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Acting royalty Helen Mirren at 80 - 'Don't ever tell me to grow old gracefully!'

Acting royalty Helen Mirren at 80 - 'Don't ever tell me to grow old gracefully!'

Yahoo3 days ago
Dame Helen Mirren is as fearless, feisty and adventurous as ever. And as she celebrates her 80th birthday today, 26 July, she can certainly rest in the knowledge that she remains one of Britain's most ageless actors - one who has always pushed tirelessly against the idea of how long a woman can remain 'relevant' - particularly on-screen.
The national treasure, who has played a whole host of iconic roles, from Detective Jane Tennison in the television series Prime Suspect to her Oscar-winning turn as Queen Elizabeth II in 2006 film The Queen reveals the secrets to her 40-year relationship with husband director Taylor Hackford. She also reveals she never plans a thing when it comes to the future - and why, as she prepares to celebrate her milestone birthday, the last thing she wants to hear is that she looks 'good for her age' or worse, that she's 'ageing gracefully'...
How is your approach to ageing gracefully helping you with turning 80?
I am not ageing gracefully at all! I hate that term - it sounds like you have to be elegant and accepting, and, no, I am not. I am ageing with fun, with commitment but not gracefully. Who cares about graceful? We just do grow older, there's no way you can escape that. You have to grow up with your own body, your own face and the way it changes. It's not always easy but it is inevitable. You have to learn to accept it.
How do you feel when someone says you look good for your age?
Insulted (laughs). You look good for your age is patronising. I hate that kind of comment. Be prepared, if you use that phrase, to be dissed in a major way!
You've often credited the 1950s Canadian Air Force program for keeping you looking so fit and healthy...
That's true. I have to admit, I don't do it so much now, and I should get back into it. It is a great way to get fit. You just do what they tell you to do. You start very low and you think, 'Oh, this is just much too easy.' And if it is, then you start making it more difficult for yourself. Then you go, 'Oh my God, no, this is really difficult.' It can be quite challenging, but it works. It's great.'
What are your top tips to keep looking and feeling good?
It's as important to make the inside of you, as healthy as the outside of you. I always go everywhere with my vitamins. That is probably the most important thing in my beauty bag, actually. What you eat, what you drink, what you don't smoke, really makes a massive difference to your skin, especially as you progress through life. It's incredibly important to feed the inside of your skin, as much as the outside of your skin.'
How has your relationship with beauty and image changed over the years?
The majority of us are not beautiful. There are beautiful people who walk on this planet, and we can all see them and appreciate them, but the majority of us are not beautiful like that. But, we can put on style, we can put on swagger, we can put on confidence, we can put on wit and charm, and lots of other things that are just as attractive as sheer beauty. So, I think in a way, that word - beauty - it alienates people. It did for me, for many years, I have to say.
Is there anything you've learned about beauty that you wish you'd known when you were younger?
Yes, to let go of the concept of beauty. Think of confidence. Think swagger. Enjoy beauty where you see it, absolutely, but let go of it for yourself. Don't let it influence your thinking in any way. I remember being in my thirties and being told, if I used this cream, I could look like I was a teenager again, with absolutely no marks of any living whatsoever. That annoyed me. Luckily, we have gone way beyond that.
Where does your own confidence and swagger come from?
It took a while and I'm still working on it. I was very, very insecure as a young person. My body was the wrong shape. I was very insecure around people. The most important thing is to remember that probably everybody feels the same.'
You play many strong, ferocious characters on-screen. Are you anything like them in real-life?
I wouldn't say I'm ferocious. I'm a total wimp. I'm not a confrontational person at all. I can be argumentative sometimes - more so when I was younger. I would defend positions that I thought were correct. I have always been a feminist, and argumentative but, I don't think I am ferocious. Maybe people would have a different idea of me, I don't know.
How do you look back on your career up to now?
Yes, well, you know, I think I was brave. I have to say, as a young actress, I think I was courageous. I was. And keen to break down attitudes that I thought were old-fashioned, or retrograde, or just wrong, you know. So, I relished having roles. That is the great thing about drama, is that it can do that, without being lecturing because it is entertaining at the same time. It can really change people's attitudes about things.'
Have you always been at ease with being in the spotlight?
No, not at all. A lot of actors become actors because they are shy, in a way. They find being themselves quite difficult, so it is much easier to become someone else. I think that was the case with me, to a certain extent, certainly when I started.'
Your next film is The Thursday Murder Club. What can you tell us about that?
It's based on the extremely successful Thursday books. It's with a some beloved fellow British actors and it's a very British subject. I'm really excited about it.
Do you still feel British - though you're a big Hollywood star, live in America and have an American husband?
I do. I'm very proud to be British and it's funny because even in America I seem to be surrounded by Brits. It's full of them! The world has become so much smaller.
You and your husband have been together for 40 years and married for more almost 30. What's your secret?
I think it helps that we're both in the same business. We understand what we each go through and the demands on your time. But the main thing is trust. As long as you trust and respect each other, and are not jealous of each other, then it works. We came into the relationship already very grown-up, so all of that crap was out of the way. And it's not such a bad thing to be separated for two or three weeks from time to time. That's fine, as long as you trust each other and really look forward to seeing each other again.
Finally, what are your plans for this next chapter of your life?
I have no idea. You know, when I was 20, I didn't know what my twenties would be like. I didn't know what my thirties would be like... I still have no idea and that's the adventure. Life is an adventure. I don't plan anything. I don't expect anything. I will just allow life to come and hit me, the way it always has.
READ MORE: Dermalogica's four-piece anti-ageing skincare bundle is now £31 for a limited time
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All of that really struck home with me, though I'm admittedly a sucker for this kind of story (please watch Shrinking on Apple TV). I enjoy being able to root for heroes even when they're flawed, especially when I can relate to their shortcomings. There's a scene where Happy sees his kids cheering for him on the sidelines and in Happy's mind they transform from the adults they are now, to the little kids they used to be. I admit, without shame, that this really struck a chord. I may have shed a tear or two. I was a teenager when I first watched Happy Gilmore. Now I'm a middle-aged man with teenagers of my own. My youngest is the age I was when the first movie came out. Happy's 'happy place' used to be Victoria in lingerie holding two pitchers of beer. But now Victoria is gone and he doesn't drink. He needs to replace that happy place with a new one: Watching silly videos on his phone while on the toilet; a pretty nurse with good cholesterol results; medium-sized pants that fit. This is what it's like as you get older. New joys and new priorities. Being proud of your kids as they grow up, but missing the children they once were. Missing your own youth, also, your old loves, long lost passions and ambitions that have fizzled out. A sadder version of this movie would have Johnny Cash singing over it, 'What have I become, my sweetest friend? Everyone I know goes away in the end.' But this is not a sad movie. It's a happy movie. It's right there in the title. And most of the people Happy knew are here still, and more besides. Happy struggles with his drinking problem, his grief, the disappointments life stacks on our shoulders, but he overcomes it all. This is a sports movie, a comeback movie. A movie about a plucky, irreverent underdog who wins everyone over in the end and learns to forgive himself for good measure. It's incredibly stupid at times, almost certainly relies too much on callbacks to the original, and is about as lowbrow as they come. But I don't care. It's still great. A worthy sequel that honors the original. Happy Gilmore 2 is cheesy and silly and fun and hopeful. Better yet, it made me feel something, which is more than I can say for a lot of what Hollywood churns out these days. Here's my video review: What did you think of Happy Gilmore 2?

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