Anne Hathaway Addresses Those Facelift Rumors
“The speculation has gotten so loud that you do feel the need to just get your truth out there”

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
The facelift rumor mill moves fast — faster, apparently, than a simple Instagram getting-ready video. When Anne Hathaway posted a clip of her hairstylist's face-lifting hack (two small braids at the crown, pinned back), the internet didn't celebrate a clever styling trick. It turned it into a confession stand. Suddenly, everyone was an armchair plastic surgeon.
In a recent interview with Elle, Hathaway addressed the speculation with the kind of measured clarity that only comes from having survived years of public dissection. "My preference would be to never comment on anything and just live in the mystery," she said — but the noise got too loud to ignore. She posted the video to set the record straight, and she's still not sure she made the right call. What she is sure about: the rush to declare something "fact" when it's really just assumption. According to Harper's Bazaar, she put it plainly — people are very confident right now in what they think they know, and they're not always correct.
The Part Where She Actually Wins
In her April 2026 Harper's Bazaar cover story, Hathaway talked about aging in Hollywood with a frankness that most women in her position don't risk. She described reaching a "harmonized" state with her changing body — not as a PR talking point, but as something she seems to have genuinely arrived at. The moment that crystallized it? A vacation, an aspirational swimsuit packed by accident, and a "What?" day in the mirror. She stood there at 43, braced for disappointment, and landed on "Nice." It's a small story with a sharp point: self-acceptance isn't about loving what you wish you looked like. It's about actually seeing what's there. "I wasn't expecting to find another gear at 40," she told Bazaar — and she pushes back on the idea that youth is automatically the best chapter.
And on the facelift question specifically? She closed it with the only answer worth giving: "I might still get a facelift someday." Which is to say — her body, her call, full stop. The problem was never the procedure. It was the presumption that she'd made a major medical decision and owed anyone an explanation.
The lesson here isn't about braids or Botox — it's that the moment you let other people's certainty about your body become your problem to solve, you've already lost the plot.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.

