BEYOND SKIN DEEP: GARANCE DORÉ ON THE (MANY) CONTRADICTIONS OF GETTING OLDER
RECONCILING THE OPPOSING FEELINGS
It’s a good era for me. Not only have I never had a problem with people who have their surgeon on speed dial if that makes them happy (and if, on top of that, they’re funny, I’ll let absolutely anything pass. Yes, I am looking at you, Joan Rivers, Dolly Parton and Cher), but more than this, I’ve always cherished contradictions. Contradictions make life interesting, unexpected, scandalous and fun.
Just because I like my beauty closet to be ‘clean’ doesn’t mean I always stay firmly on the straight and narrow. I can appreciate the natural look of an actress while knowing the exact plastic surgery procedures she’s had. I don’t think anyone owes full disclosure about what they do to look the way they do. I love openness, yet I can fully appreciate mystery. And that sums up my problem. Because, with all these possibilities in front of me, what am I to do? How do I want to age?
I am forty eight – almost forty nine – which means that in my head I am already fifty (which is basic ‘girl math’). I do Botox, but not quite often enough because my guy is in the South of France, and I have been too lazy to look for someone in London.
I colour my hair because I don’t know how I feel about the white streak that’s growing right where I part it. I have days where I want to just let it go grey — but my indecision makes me think I need to ponder this for another few years. By then I will have missed the chance of a slow and progressive shift and will have to endure the dramatic bicolour growth that women went through during the pandemic.
I am witnessing my jawline slowly soften and I know that at some point, I’ll have to ‘decide’ what to do about it. It will be nothing, or a facelift, because I believe that when it comes to these kinds of matters, you don’t play around. You go big or you go home. Nothing or a facelift – it sums me up exactly.
TO ‘AGE’, OR NOT TO ‘AGE’?
I wish I’d have chosen my camp. The full natural definitely feels worthier. You can shout it over social media roofs and become a sort of goddess of virtue which, you know, I wouldn’t mind being. I could slather myself in essential oils, strike a pose in my garden. I’d have bunnies running around. It would be great! I’d be an amazing role model... But that would be forgetting that I am vain.
But none of these paths are me. So, instead, I take my freedom one step at a time, exploring what my version of ageing means. Finding my ageing personality, if you will.
WELCOMING IN THE NEXT CHAPTER
I take it slow. I stay informed, I keep curious, I know all the new things that come on the market. But I am also a lover of simplicity and ease — I couldn’t keep up with the beauty regimens of the super upkeepers, but I am too vain to go full natural. I welcome those two parts of me and try to unite them in my very own special way.
And, meanwhile, I am letting the image of the future me gently take shape inside of my head — I want to accompany her, give her airtime. Because whatever I do and however I play with all the possibilities that are out there, I know that one day I’ll want to welcome her — or more like, she’ll welcome me — all grey and soft, and gorgeous.
And there will be wisdom, and joy, and the peacefulness of embracing exactly who you are. One day, I want to enjoy the blissful surrender that is being old. Or I’ll be Joan Rivers. Pretty fabulous either way!