logo
#

Latest news with #ConfessionsofaTeenageDramaQueen

Lindsay Lohan finally breaks silence on plastic surgery rumours
Lindsay Lohan finally breaks silence on plastic surgery rumours

Metro

time27-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Metro

Lindsay Lohan finally breaks silence on plastic surgery rumours

Lindsay Lohan, queen of 2000s teen cinema and reigning monarch of comebacks, has finally addressed the rumors swirling around her face. After dominating the early aughts in Freaky Friday, Mean Girls, and Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, Lohan took a break from Hollywood.. What followed was a well-documented rollercoaster of rehab stints, tabloid drama, and enough court appearances to qualify for frequent flyer miles at the Los Angeles County Courthouse. But now? She's back in a big way. Lohan is starring in Netflix rom-coms like Irish Wish, One Little Secret, as well as reuniting with Jamie Lee Curtis for the sequel to Freaky Friday. Perhaps most shockingly of all, she looks like she's barely aged since Cady Heron wore army pants and flip-flops. Naturally, the internet has thoughts. One plastic surgeon on TikTok estimated to cost as much as $300,000 (£238,314). That's not a glow-up – it's a GDP. But Lohan isn't having it. In a new interview with Elle, she brushed off the facelift accusations with a bewildered: 'I'm like, when? With what time? Where?' Her publicist chimed in to defend her, calling out the ridiculous double standards applied to women aging in public. Basically: people lose their minds if a woman looks different at 37, and somehow no one believes in the power of hydration anymore. So, what's the real secret behind Lindsay's fountain-of-youth? According to her, it's part Hogwarts potion, part Whole Foods shopping list. Every morning starts with a health elixir that includes 'carrot, ginger, lemon, olive oil, [and] apple.' Yes, olive oil. More Trending She's also really into pickled beets, chia seeds, green tea, eye patches, and dunking her face in ice water like she's prepping for a polar plunge. 'I'm into lasers,' she also told Elle. In short, Lohan's glow isn't the result of a surgeon's scalpel – it's a cocktail of root vegetables, spa tech, and the sheer power of not giving a damn. And really, isn't that the most iconic comeback energy of all? Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Legendary rock band thanked by grateful teen for 'saving parents lives' after shocking crash MORE: Shakira completely stacks it on stage after concerning health warning for her tour shows MORE: Jennifer Lopez slammed for 'desperate' stunt on stage at the American Music Awards

Lindsay Lohan Talks 'Freakier Friday', Motherhood, and Botox
Lindsay Lohan Talks 'Freakier Friday', Motherhood, and Botox

Elle

time27-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Elle

Lindsay Lohan Talks 'Freakier Friday', Motherhood, and Botox

Chris Colls Jacket, pants, boots, Isabel Marant. Ring, Van Cleef & Arpels. Without giving too much away, there's a scene in Freakier Friday , out August 8, where Lindsay Lohan, as her character Anna Coleman, rocks out onstage with her band, Pink Slip. Seeing Lohan nail her guitar solo (yes, that's actually her singing and playing), in a red lip, her signature-hued hair looking luscious and head-bang-worthy, her skin glowing as much as her sequined minidress, happiness washed over me. 'She's so back,' I thought, and thank God for that. There isn't much else that feels the same as it did 22 years ago, when Freaky Friday came out, but Lindsay Lohan has returned to the big screen, and it feels really good. Lohan was just 12 years old when she made her film debut in the 1998 remake of The Parent Trap . Five years later came Freaky Friday , followed by Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen ; Mean Girls ; Herbie: Fully Loaded ; and Just My Luck . But as we know now and should have known then, Hollywood is a tough place for child stars, and the abuse Lohan suffered in the tabloids left few surprised when she took time away from the industry. Chris Colls Faux fur coat, Roberto Cavalli. Tights, Falke. In the years that followed, Lohan would pop up in the press every now and then, seemingly living a fabulous, if understandably private, life largely abroad—she went viral dancing at a beach club in Mykonos; she married a finance executive and had a son, and they all made a home together in Dubai. Then, like she never left, Netflix brought her back into our lives with a trio of rom-coms. And now, with her first feature film since 2007, and her first-ever starring role in a television series on the way—the Hulu adaptation of Sophie Stava's page-turner Count My Lies —she's not just back, but thriving . In a wide-ranging conversation below with Saturday Night Live 's Chloe Fineman (who has a hilarious cameo in Freakier Friday as a kooky dance instructor), Lohan talks about relishing life as a mom, developing a skin care line (of course we made her share her secrets!), and how she manifested her return. Chris Colls Faux fur coat, Dolce & Gabbana. Ring, Van Cleef & Arpels. Tights, Falke. Slingbacks, Saint Laurent. Chloe Fineman: Are you excited to be giving the people exactly what they want? Lindsay Lohan: I'm excited. It feels surreal. I've never thought I would do a movie where there would be a sequel. It's something you don't really think about. And then when you get to do it, and bring a character that you knew so well back to life, in a sense, it's exciting. There's a comfort with it that you don't find in a new character. It's evolved. What are they like now? How can we shoot it? So it felt really special, and so did doing my first feature back with Disney again after not doing features for such a long time. It's a really nice thing. CF: You're coming home, in a way. LL: I know. I weirdly felt like that when I got to the lot. It felt really special, because I was 10 [when I auditioned for The Parent Trap ]; now I'm 38. And to be back there at this time and have a full life and be able to share it with my husband and my son, it definitely feels unique in a lot of ways, and it's nice. CF: There's truly something for everybody in this movie, and I just feel like you're bringing so much joy into the world. I got to see little bits of it, and I was like, 'This is exactly what we all want right now.' It's not cynical. It's… LL: It's easygoing. I feel like everything felt at ease when we were making it, and I feel that's the best way to describe how I felt when I watched it. It felt easy and fun, and fresh at the same time. There's not a lot bringing me to the movie theaters personally right now. [ Freakier Friday ] is a feel-good movie, which is what I want to give people. And it's fun. When I saw the second cut, I wanted to get up and dance at the end. I was like, 'Oh, this is cool. I like this song. I want people to do that.' 'When you bring a character back to life, in a sense, it's exciting. There's a comfort with are they like now?' CF: Well, you sing in this again. How was that? LL: It was good. Well, it was kind of nerve-racking at first, because I'm not singing as me. When I was doing [ Freaky Friday ], I was also recording an album, so it was part of my life at the time. In this movie, I was singing it as [my character] Anna, whereas before felt more like Lindsay singing. CF: And the band's back together for it? LL: Yes. The whole band came back. And it's so funny, because Christina Vidal [who plays Maddie] had just had a baby, and we were like, 'How weird is this? Are we still cool?' CF: No, you're cooler than cool. It's somehow more iconic; you guys look even better. LL: I feel like we live in a different world now, where women make it such a point, especially in motherhood, to make time for ourselves. We make it important. But also, once you have one kid, you're like, 'Oh, my kid needs a kid to play with.' CF: Is that where you are right now? LL: I'm like, 'He needs a friend.' CF: You grew up with a bunch of siblings, so you're like, 'Oh. I get it.' LL: Yeah, there's nothing like that. Also, I don't know if it's selfish—but I'm like, 'I need more than one kid to take care of me when I'm older.' Chris Colls Faux fur coat, Dolce & Gabbana. Ring, Van Cleef & Arpels. Tights, Falke. Slingbacks, Saint Laurent. Chris Colls Coat, dress, Balmain. CF: Aside from doing a few things here and there, you got back into acting in what, the last four or five years? What has that transition been like? LL: It was really Netflix. And I was manifesting it. During COVID, I was like, 'I want to work with Netflix.' I kept writing it in my journal and saying it. And then that's what happened. I was like, 'Oh, it'd be nice to do three films with them, and then see where that goes. And then I definitely want to do my first feature back with Disney.' So I manifested that, and I'm manifesting this movie now. CF: Wow! So you write stuff down. I literally have a journal next to me right now. LL: Mine's in my bedroom. Every morning, I write in it. Sometimes at night, to check in. CF: Do you say it out loud? LL: That's more for the morning. I do it in the shower because that's my space. CF: Yeah, you're like, [ Flashing jazz hands ] 'Netflix. Netflix. Netflix.' [ Laughs ] I remember when I saw your movies on Netflix—first of all, it's nostalgic and we're all rooting for you.…But you are just so magnetic, and the movies are so watchable. Chris Colls Faux fur coat, Elisabetta Franchi. Bodysuit, Khaite. Tights, Falke. Heels, Giuseppe Zanotti. LL: I always want to make movies like that—things that make people happy and bring people together. I love making movies for that reason—for people to escape and find something that they can take into their own life and realize everything's going to be okay. But with Netflix, I was like, 'Okay, now we need to be thinking about other stuff.' I can't do movies like these forever. CF: It was so special for me to get to shoot a movie in L.A. Did you feel that at all? LL: Yeah. For the crew, they're so excited to be working here, where they go back home to their families. That's the difference you feel here. It's nice. I made it home every night, except for one, to tuck my son in. And it shows in the film—when you're happy behind the scenes, that comes through. And now, the film is such an homage to California after the fires, because we shot a lot in the Palisades and in Malibu. Even the house—the original Freaky Friday house—unfortunately, is gone. So I think it'll be a really nice love letter. CF: You and Jamie Lee Curtis have such magical chemistry. When she found out you were going to be a mom, did she give you any advice? LL: We're both very family-oriented people. We always talk about that, and one of the other big things [she's taught me] is to always take care of yourself first. Because without that, how can you do everything for everyone else? CF: What does that look like for you? LL: I love having a routine, and I like schedules. So, my morning routine: Waking up, writing in my journal, sipping my green tea, breakfast with my son. And then Pilates, making sure I go. 'I always want to make movies like that—things that make people happy and bring people together.' CF: When you're in Dubai versus New York or L.A., do you try to keep that same routine? LL: I try. It's hard in L.A. Even taking my son to the park in L.A., I get stressed. I'm like, 'Are there cameras?' In New York, there's no worry; no one bothers us. Everyone has their own thing going on. There's a different kind of energy in New York. I'd rather have downtime in New York than I would in L.A. But the nice thing about L.A. is, I like space [and you get that here]. But I'm thinking as I'm saying this, the funny thing is, in Dubai I get all of those things. I get the privacy, I get the peace, I get the space. I don't have to worry there; I feel safe. CF: That's everything. So you're there half the year? LL: We're based there, but last year, we were there less than half the year. I want to spend more time there. It is nice to have a balance. But my husband and I are always like, 'Okay, we have until he's five.' CF: And then? LL: Everything . Well, we have to figure out where he's going to go to school. That's the main thing. CF: Has that been such a change, having to take care of another person? LL: Yeah, because, I mean, it's the most important thing—my husband, my son, and me. It's all about balance and, as I said, routine. Especially when you have a kid, routine is the most important thing. And whatever their routine is, I've got to live by that. Chris Colls Faux fur coat, Roberto Cavalli. Tights, Falke. CF: What does he think about you being an actress? LL: I don't think he really knows yet. In my trailer, one day I was watching the original guitar scene and practicing movements, and he was there and he was like, 'Mama,' pointing at the screen. CF: Are you excited to get to do more dramatic work with your TV series, Count My Lies ? LL: Yeah, I am. I love the book. But when I was reading it, I had to put it down for a day because I was like, 'I'm stressed now.' But I liked that. It's going to be nice to do something different. I was talking to the writers and showrunners yesterday and told them, 'I don't know if you realize, but this is the first time where I don't have to have a romantic interest, where I don't have to kiss someone at the end of the movie.' Which is so refreshing—to not have to be that girl for once. CF: Any other acting projects you'd like to take on? LL: I would love to find a dark comedy like Mean Girls . That kind of meaty, good, funny movie—a smart comedy. Not a rom-com, just a straightforward funny movie. I'm excited to be doing this drama. I'd love to work with some dream directors. CF: Like who? Let's start manifesting this. LL: Maybe Quentin Tarantino. Also, I'd love to work with Julianne Moore—I don't know why I've never played her daughter. Maybe now I'd be her younger sister. I'd also love to work with Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. Maybe something Sopranos -y, since I am Italian. CF: Anything other than acting in your future? LL: I am developing my own line. Chris Colls Faux fur coat, Ludovic de Saint Sernin. Bodysuit, tights, Fleur du Mal. Heels, Balenciaga. Chris Colls Jacket, Khaite. Camisole, pants, Zadig & Voltaire. CF: Fashion? LL: More along the beauty line. It's taking a long time because I'm very specific, because I'm crazy about my skin and health. CF: Oh my God, I'm so excited. I am that person. I got a facial last week in New York with an aesthetician who claims she's never done Botox. And you obviously have skin of dreams, so honey, whatever you're selling, I'm buying. LL: Everyone does Botox. CF: Last night at dinner, I was with somebody, and they're like, 'I've never had it.' And I was like, 'What? Are you kidding?' LL: Who are you? It's like, 'You lie.' ELLE: I have to say, Lindsay, I've been staring at your skin this whole time. You look amazing. Can you tell us your secrets? LL: Oh, God, I don't even know how to answer that. I drink this juice every morning. It's like carrot, ginger, lemon, olive oil, apple. I also drink a lot of green tea, a lot of water. I'm a big pickled beets person, so I put them in almost everything. My skin care is very specific. I'm trying out some serums now that I'm doing—I'm testing them. Also, I'm a big believer in ice-cold water on your face when you wake up. I drink lemon juice a lot; I also put tons of chia seeds in my water. Eye patches, I do every morning. I'm into lasers. CF: Me too. They're life-changing. LL: There's a new at-home one I saw that Julianne Moore was using that looked really good. It's good for around your mouth. I've heard it all. CF: I just kind of show up and say, 'Salmon sperm, whatever—just put it on. I don't care.' LL: I've heard that it's not really real. CF: Also, Fraxel changed my life, but it is intense. Chris Colls Faux fur jacket, gown, David Koma. Ring, Van Cleef & Arpels. LL: Did I do Fraxel? I don't think so. I did Morpheus8 once, and then I realized my skin is so thin that I can't be doing that. My skin changed after having my son. It got really sensitive. That's what really made me change my whole routine and diet and everything. I did blood tests, and I was like, 'I want to know everything I'm allergic to.' So I cut everything out, and that's kind of when everything started to change for me. CF: Really? So much to look forward to. LL: Yeah, my skin got even more sensitive after him. It doesn't happen to everyone. But I'm glad it happened to me, because it made me aware of how to take care of my skin long term. CF: I feel like in the media, there's the awful portrayal of motherhood, and you're like the complete opposite. You're radiant, you've had a glow-up, you're thriving—the world is obsessed. What a great inspiration for all of us. LOHAN'S PUBLICIST: Yeah, but you know what the problem is with you being beautiful women—the second she looks any different, they assume she had her face lifted at 37 or 38, that she ripped apart this or that. It's so mean. LL: I'm like, when? With what time? Where? LOHAN'S PUBLICIST: Yeah, I tried to figure that out, Linds, in the last three years, when you had time to do anything, because I know your schedule. So the haters can hate and be jealous. It just sucks that that's where they go with women in today's world. Women can't just look good to look good and change their lifestyle to be more healthy. LL: You just have to do it and ignore everyone else. CF: It's always so weird, like, 'What are you doing?' It's like, 'I'm just taking care of myself. Go fuck yourself.' You know what I mean? Well, I think it's amazing that you're taking this annoying way that women are treated and you're going to make a product. I'll be first in line. Hair by Ward Stegerhoek for Bumble and Bumble; makeup by Kristofer Buckle at OPUS Beauty; manicure by Eri Ishizu at The Wall Group; set design by Happy Massee at Lalaland Artists; produced by Dana Brockman at Viewfinders. This story appears in the Summer 2025 issue of ELLE.

Benito Skinner felt guilty for not coming out sooner. 'Overcompensating' changed that.
Benito Skinner felt guilty for not coming out sooner. 'Overcompensating' changed that.

USA Today

time16-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • USA Today

Benito Skinner felt guilty for not coming out sooner. 'Overcompensating' changed that.

Benito Skinner felt guilty for not coming out sooner. 'Overcompensating' changed that. Benito Skinner knows a thing or two about trying to play it straight. For his fourth-grade birthday party, he invited the boys in his class to go see Disney's 2004 camp masterpiece 'Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen.' ('I was like, 'It's because Lindsay Lohan's hot,'' he recalls wryly.) And on the high-school football team, the comedian remembers trying to pass off his pop-star obsessions as pure, red-blooded machismo. 'I was like, 'Lady Gaga is sexy!' But the guys in the locker room were like, the one from the 'Alejandro' video? She's terrifying to us,' says Skinner, who has now funneled his real-life closeted chaos into Amazon Prime Video comedy "Overcompensating" (all eight episodes now streaming). 'To be clear, Gaga is a goddess. But for straight guys, nothing could be scarier than a woman with a bob and red lipstick who's actually expressing herself.' Created, written by and starring Skinner, 'Overcompensating' is a barbed, pop culture-savvy series about a college freshman named Benny (Skinner), who's struggling to find himself as a young and confused gay man. He becomes fast pals with Carmen (Wally Baram), who after realizing they're not sexually compatible, is content to just bond with him over 'Glee" and Nicki Minaj. But not even Carmen is safe from Benny's messy crosshairs, as he tells people that they're hooking up in order to maintain his frat-boy appearance. Meanwhile, Benny is crushing on Miles (Rish Shah), his chiseled British classmate, and hiding his sexuality from his older sister, Grace (Mary Beth Barone), who goes to the same university. The show is guaranteed to be stress-inducing for queer viewers, many of whom can understand the crushing anxiety of lying to your best friends and bedfellows about who you really are. 'I want the sick stuff,' says Skinner, 31, who like his character came out during college. At that age, 'you're selfish at times, and maybe doing something really (messed) up to a friend, just out of safety and protecting yourself. It feels so true to me: I could be out in one room, but in another room, I would code-switch and do a deeper voice and find myself still hating this part of me. You're performing so much." Barone remembers dating one of her best friends before he came out, and loves how Skinner captures the bluntness and vulnerability that Benny and Carmen share. "I got to have that relationship, and I knew how special it was," Barone says. "It starts off where you have that wall between you before the person comes out. But as you really get to know each other, you can be so honest and say anything and not feel judged." 'Overcompensating' began as a standup show, which Skinner performed across the country in 2019. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he frequently went viral with his online persona Benny Drama, donning makeup and wigs as he impersonated celebrities ranging from Kim Kardashian to Billie Eilish. Those sketches ultimately helped him to hone his hyper-specific voice on 'Overcompensating,' which references many of Skinner's favorite touchstones as a kid growing up in Boise, Idaho. (The series opens, for instance, with a young Benny watching 'George of the Jungle,' whose nearly naked star Brendan Fraser left a lasting impression.) 'The more specific, the funnier,' Skinner says. 'Even if 'George of the Jungle' wasn't your queer awakening, you can immediately slot in the thing you know. But also, coming up on the internet helped me realize that an attention to specificity is what people really responded to. If I did this tiny little thing where I put a Pepsi can in the back of a Kendall Jenner (video), that's what all the comments were about.' Baram admired Skinner's strong vision: "He brought everything with every hat that he wore: as a boss, as a friend, as an actor," she says. "I've never met anyone with more poised energy. My brain is exhausted looking at him." The acid-tongued comedy features myriad guest stars including Charli XCX, Bowen Yang and James Van Der Beek. Kyle MacLachlan and Connie Britton also pop in as Benny's well-meaning parents. Most memorably, Megan Fox appears as a poster on Benny's dorm room wall, which springs to life during irreverent confessionals. The image is modeled after Fox's lingerie-clad 2008 GQ magazine spread, which Skinner often feigned attraction to among his friends but really just found "so iconic." During college frat parties, 'I remember being in these bathrooms and seeing these posters of Sports Illustrated models, being like, 'Girls, what are we doing here? This sucks. I'm so sorry, darlings, I love you all,'' Skinner says. When it came time to write similar scenes for the series, he wanted Fox to be the fantastical embodiment of Benny's heteronormative angst: 'She is my idol. She's brilliant, and people haven't really allowed her to be as funny as I think she is in the show.' For Skinner, who has been dating photographer Terrence O'Connor since 2016, "Overcompensating" was a chance to revisit a very tumultuous period of his life, but with newfound humor and understanding. 'It was so cathartic,' Skinner says. 'I was able to forgive myself for not coming out sooner or feeling like I couldn't. I always judged myself for that throughout my 20s, but then being able to perform this and feel like I had some power over it, I finally gave myself a little bit of grace. For so long, I was like, 'Man, I wasted so much of my life,' but I don't think I did. I had my reasons and I'm proud of my experience as a queer person. Hopefully, other queer people see themselves in the show.'

Who is Delaney Rowe? Tiktok star known for 'cringe' comedy skits linked to B.J. Novak
Who is Delaney Rowe? Tiktok star known for 'cringe' comedy skits linked to B.J. Novak

Express Tribune

time29-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Express Tribune

Who is Delaney Rowe? Tiktok star known for 'cringe' comedy skits linked to B.J. Novak

B.J. Novak, best known for his role on The Office, is reportedly linked to rising TikTok sensation Delaney Rowe. The pair have been spotted together at multiple events, sparking speculation of a budding relationship, although neither has confirmed their status. Delaney Rowe has carved out a major presence online with her comedic skits, earning over three million followers on TikTok and one million on Instagram. Her videos often parody social stereotypes and 'cringe' characters seen in popular films and television, gaining her viral success and a loyal fan base. Her most popular video on Tiktok currently with 9.1 million likes and more than 50 million views shows Rowe embodying the 'Absolutlety insufferable indie movie girl', a character that keeps making an appearance on her feed in different circumstances. Other skits involve characters such as 'The neglected wife and mother in every devastating, critically acclaimed dramatic film' and ' The overly cool and down to earth parents in every high school movie'. @delaneysayshello 'Rowe's portrayal of Martha's beautiful fragility makes this film come to life.' ♬ original sound - Delaney Rowe Before becoming a digital star, Rowe worked as a personal chef for celebrities such as Stan Lee and various NFL players, although she has admitted to embellishing her culinary credentials at the time. Her passion for acting was sparked by watching Lindsay Lohan's 2004 hit Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen as a child, inspiring her early interest in theatre and performance. Originally from Idaho, Rowe now lives in Los Angeles, focusing on her acting career and expanding her digital presence.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store