Austin American-Statesman

Brooke Shields dishes on downsizing, tunes and trolls

- Kim Willis This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

In a new series, celebritie­s share what fuels their lives. Brooke Shields looks pretty great in an ugly mother-of-the-bride dress. The hideous gown foisted upon her as Miranda Cosgrove’s mom in the new Netflix movie “Mother of the Bride” − black, feathered, impossible to shimmy into − figures into Shields’ favorite scene from the rom-com (now streaming), in which she hilariousl­y pratfalls through a try-on. “The minute a color is called something like seafoam and you’re a bridesmaid, you know you’re in trouble,” says the “Suddenly Susan” and “Blue Lagoon” actress and model, recalling her own bridal party experience­s. “And the minute someone says, ‘Oh, you can wear it again,’ you’re like, ‘No, unless this is a perfect little black dress, I actually am never going to wear this again.’ ”

Casually clad in a black polo shirt and her signature aviator glasses for a Zoom call, Shields, 58, discusses her extensive jeans wardrobe, why she’s struggling to downsize and distancing herself from internet trolls.

hWhat’s on her playlist?

h“I’ll just put on Beyoncé (“Renaissanc­e’ and “Cowboy Carter”) and listen over and over again at the gym,” she says. “I’ll put on Miley (Cyrus). I love to listen to the voices and stories of very strong women.” Husband Chris Henchy “puts on jazz the minute he wakes up in the morning, so there’s that in my house all the time.”

She also is starting to share music with her daughters Rowan, 20, and Grier, 18, who went to the Eras Tour. “I do listen to Taylor Swift,” Shields says. “I just like the energy.”

Her most recent concert? Madonna. “I’ve linked a lot of my history to those songs.”

Jeans are still a wardrobe staple

Nothing came between Brooke Shields and her Calvins in the ’80s, and her jean wardrobe remains sizable.

“Sometimes I’m in the mood for a little bit of a lower rise and a slight bell. Sometimes I would like what’s really in now, which is high-waisted, button, straight leg,” she says. “Then there’s the cropped version that I like to wear with a kitten heel. Then there’s Nili Lotan, who does this really soft, great

hkind of slight flare. I’m moving away from the skinny jean unless I’m wearing an over-the-knee boot and a big, big sweater.

“I have so many pairs of jeans, and I’m constantly re-looking at them, re-folding them, seeing how I can repurpose them.”

Her workout routine changed after she broke her femur

In 2021, Shields tumbled off a

balance board and snapped her thigh bone. She had to learn to walk again, and “I’m still not able to do a lot of things.”

She took up pickleball for her new movie and has shifted to exercises that “help with rehab as well as strengthen­ing, like Pilates. I can now spin again, so I can resume some SoulCyclin­g. I’m getting back.”

She’s happier living with less but finds it difficult to purge

“I struggle with that,” she says. “Because now I’m in this place where I want to get rid of everything.” She has the unique problem that “a lot of my stuff is archival.”

She recently decided to ditch the contents of her bookshelve­s and “just situate pretty stacks of books that made sense from a decorative standpoint,” but the issue is that “I’m in a lot of them.”

“It’s a weird thing, because it’s not that I’m not attached, it’s just that it’s attached to me.”

What she doesn’t want to do is subject her children to “the monstrosit­y of a project that I had to go through” after her mother, Teri

She won’t let trolls ruin Instagram

“I don’t read comments” from mean fans. “It’s never really about me, it’s about them. You’re putting it out there, so you’ve got to expect this, but what I don’t have to do is let it affect me. Because 99% of the time, I imagine, it’s not coming from people I respect, nor did I ask for their opinion.”

She’s thinking more about what work looks like beyond acting

“A few years ago, I just started expanding the way I thought about my career. Between COVID and the strike, there were periods of inactivity I had in my life I’d never had before,” she says.

“I realized that it was important for me to reinforce other areas of creativity that I had potential access to.”

That spurred an upcoming book about aging and Beginning Is Now, her brand for women 40 to 60-plus. She’s “pleased and proud” to be starring in a movie about finding love later in life, because “we’re not told it’s this beautiful period of time that can have possibilit­y. We have a lot to offer at this age. But because our kids are leaving, there’s this sense of no man’s land. And I refused to feel that.”

She wants to be president of Actors’ Equity

“I’ve been a member for so long and the theater community has given me so much,” she says of the union. “It felt like it was my time to step up.

“In order to make (celebrity) something you don’t try to hide from or resent the lack of privacy, it has to have good (with it),” she says. “It’s easy to want to become a hermit. I have to feel like I’m harnessing it and I’m not a victim to it. If I can be the voice piece, or at least the conduit, well, then there’s value in being famous.”

 ?? ??
 ?? PROVIDED BY SASIDIS SASISAKULP­ORN/NETFLIX ?? Brooke Shields stars as “Mother of the Bride” Lana on Netflix.
PROVIDED BY SASIDIS SASISAKULP­ORN/NETFLIX Brooke Shields stars as “Mother of the Bride” Lana on Netflix.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States