My mother never put an emphasis on looks. She let us grow up on our own time line. She never forced any beauty regimen into my world.
What I find most upsetting about this new all-consuming beauty culture is that the obsession with good looks and how you can supposedly attain them is almost entirely female-driven.
I've never had any illusions about being a lead actor in films because lead actors have to be of a certain kind. Apart from the beauty of looks and figure which I cannot claim to have there's just a particular kind of ordinary-Joe quality that a film star needs to have.
Beauty is merciless. You do not look at it it looks at you and does not forgive.
A whopping 89 percent of buyers start their home search online. How your house looks online is the modern equivalent of 'curb appeal.' Rent a wide-angle lens and good lighting get rid of your clutter and post at least eight great photos to win the beauty contest.
It was one of those evenings when men feel that truth goodness and beauty are one. In the morning when they commit their discovery to paper when others read it written there it looks wholly ridiculous.
Beauty is all very well at first sight but who ever looks at it when it has been in the house three days?
She got her looks from her father. He's a plastic surgeon.
My grandmother is this amazingly theatrical woman. She acted like a movie star as far as looks and attitude kind of like Susan Hayward.
Britishness is just a way of putting things together and a certain don't care attitude about clothes. You don't care you just do it and it looks great.