Helen Mirren Has Thoughts on Tech Brosāand Why She Skips a Beauty Routine
- - Helen Mirren Has Thoughts on Tech Brosāand Why She Skips a Beauty Routine
Kathleen HouJanuary 11, 2026 at 10:00 PM
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Helen Mirren on Skipping a Beauty Routine Maarten De Boer
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Dame Helen Mirren says āfuckā with a mischievous smile, like a song. Sheās famously beautiful and bold in her performances (in her next role, she portrays crime novelist Patricia Highsmith in the upcoming film Switzerland). And at 80 years old, she is a long-standing global ambassador for LāOrĆ©al Paris. Ahead of the brandās Women of Worth dinner in Los Angeles last monthāan event honoring the program that has distributed millions to women-led nonprofits for 20 yearsāMirren talked to ELLE about the futility of tech bros chasing everlasting youth, the joy of not having any real beauty routine, and why the secret to a facelift just might be good bathroom lighting.
What does longevity mean to you?
To me, the word longevity is being active, proactive, and productive over a long period of oneās life. Living has to do with enjoying the physical elements of life; the beauty of nature; the excitement of professional success, if youāre lucky enough to have it; and family and kids. Longevity means contributing in as many diverse ways as possible, for as long as possible.
Life is finite. There is no fighting thatāas much as people like to put themselves into ice, hoping that they might wake up in 50 years. Itās a dream and a fantasy. Itās very strange to me. I donāt call it growing old. I call it growing up. You constantly grow up through life. But the tech bros who cannot face the idea that they will get old and die just canāt deal with it. I think itās so funny. They just havenāt grown up yet.
What does longevity mean to you in a beauty sense? Weāve been seeing the word on a lot more products.
But thatās just a buzzword? Itās just a new word, because they donāt want to use the word antiaging, because thatās sort of uncool. Maybe longevity is a better word because it means, yes, youāre aging, but you can age in a way that is positive, creative, and comes with new understanding and information.
Youāve said that in your twenties, you were pressured to get a nose job, but you didnāt. What made you resist?
That was a different era. Iām so glad that Iāve lived long enough to witness the social changes that have happened, and the diversification and embracing of many different types of sexuality, physicality, and race. The world today is very different from how it was when I was in my early twenties.
I wasnāt pressuredājust some film director told me Iād never have a career unless I had a nose job. It was one rather silly man. The wonderful, brilliant Barbra Streisand has a profile that is so powerful, strong, and undeniably beautiful. It would have been a travesty if sheād had any kind of plastic surgery. Iām not against plastic surgery, incidentally, and I want to say that very clearly. If it makes [someone] feel better, then why not? Lifeās too short to be miserable about elements of your face.
Thereās been a lot of chatter about people getting facelifts at younger ages. How do you feel when you see that?
Well, I donāt know. If women or men are seriously diminished, defeated, or depressed when they look in the mirror and are brought down by what they see, and they have the financial ability and the mental ability or whatever to change it, fine. I do think because of social media and what apps can do, you [can] look at the reality and you get literally depressed. I think thatās a very, very sad state of affairs.
Before contemplating anything, get really good lighting in your bathroom so that whenever you look in the mirror, you are lit beautifully and look great. Because from that point on, it really doesnāt matter. Youāve just seen that last image of yourself and think, Oh, I look fabulous. And off you go. Itās a lot cheaper than getting a facelift. I am serious about the good lighting in the bathroom. Bad lighting is so depressing. I think it would be a terrible mistake to get plastic surgery when youāre in your twenties. Your face changes. I donāt like to criticize or attack people for doing what makes them happy. But to try to look like a fake picture of yourself would be terrible.
Is it true that you donāt really have a beauty routine?
I really donāt. I wash, I clean my face. I use a moisturizer every night and every morning, but I donāt have a complicated regimen of any sort, honestly. I grab whateverās there. Itās 99 percent LāOrĆ©al Paris. Surprise, surprise. Iām a very proud ambassador, because I think the product is so well-researched, advanced, and affordable. I never wanted to associate myself with a line or a product that was out of the financial reach of most people. Iām a big drugstore beauty aisle junkie. I donāt know what it is, but a new lip liner is a cause of great excitement for me, and it always comes from the drugstore.
Youāve often been described as rejecting ānarrow beauty norms.ā Has that always been a mission of yours?
To play characters is great. The great fun and philosophy of being an actor is that you enter into very different worlds. [For me] playing Patricia Highsmith, Golda Meir, a Roman goddess in Shazam!, a MobLand matriarch, and an outdoorswoman in 1923, [I am] entering into such fabulously different worlds, looks, and understandings of human connection with the universe. Inevitably, you canāt be rigid in those contexts. You canāt say to the makeup person, āOh, no, I have to have false eyelashes.ā Or, āI have to have this particular lip color because without it, Iāll die if I donāt have it.ā No, you have to give yourself over to very extreme changes. I guess that feeds through into life as well.
Whenever I work with makeup artists, if Iām doing a photo shoot or something, I never tell them what to do. I just say, āDo what you want to do. Do what inspires you.ā Because we all have a limited imagination in the end. Itās much more exciting to experience someone elseās imagination, someone elseās creativity, and allow them to create and learn from it. Iāve always had that attitude.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
A version of this story appears in the February 2026 issue of ELLE.
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