Virginia Madsen: Botox Now, Plastic Surgery Later
Oscar-nominated actress Virginia Madsen is very open about her choices in life, including her use of Botox and Juvederm. While other Hollywood figures busy themselves with lying about getting plastic surgery, Virginia feels that there is no need to hide what she sees as just another choice she makes to express herself. Virginia is so serious about empowering women with honest information about beauty choices that she’s even teamed up with Allergan, the makers of Botox Cosmetic to educate consumers about it. In Make Me Heal‘s exclusive interview with Virginia, the 46-year old actress candidly discusses what work she’s gotten done and what she hasn’t had done yet.
Can you please describe your daily beauty regimen?
Virginia Madsen: I don’t have such a daily routine so much as I just really take care of myself. I get enough sleep. I have a really good breakfast in the morning and take care of my skin and I guess it’s not really that complicated what I do. I do use La Mer which is the only product I use that’s really expensive. Everything else is Nivea and Neutrogena.
After giving birth, what did you do to get your body back into your pre-mommy shape?
Virginia Madsen: I never got back to pre-mommy shape. I got better. I had a really hard time of it. I didn’t really bounce back at all. My son was 5-years old and I still hadn’t lost the baby weight and I was really unhealthy. I knew that I had to make some serious changes in my life overall. So started working out. I started taking Pilates. I started going on hikes with my son. And around this time, as things began to change, a friend of mine suggested that I try Botox Cosmetic. And I was like, oh I don’t know about that. So I asked a lot of questions of my doctor and found the right dermatologist and I started doing that and as my body began to change, I started to look on the outside as I felt on the inside. And Hollywood took notice and I started working again. And with success came better jobs and a lot of attention and it was a couple years after Sideways that I said in an article that I use Botox and it was big news. And everyone wanted to know about it. And I figured, fine, no problem I’ll tell you all about it.
Virginia Madsen often found herself in conversations about actresses and cosmetic enhancements. "Oh, she uses Botox," someone would say of another star. "See that frozen face?" Then Madsen would drop this: "I'd say, 'Well, I use Botox.' They would say, 'You do?! But your forehead moves!'"
Madsen, 45, nominated for an Oscar for 2004's Sideways, laughs as she tells the story, and her eyes do crinkle slightly when she does. She admits she has been a twice-yearly Botox user since 2003, which puts her in good company; last year more than 3 million doses of the drug a purified form of botulism toxin that temporarily paralyzes wrinkle-causing muscles were sold in the U.S., making it the most popular nonsurgical cosmetic procedure. And in youth-crazed Hollywood, Madsen is clearly not its only celeb fan, though few (Vanessa Williams included) cop to it.
But with the announcement this month that Madsen is launching an informational campaign with Allergan, the drug's manufacturer, she has become the first star to actually endorse it. "I don't like to criticize other actors for what they choose to reveal or not, but let's be honest. I know a lot of people who are doing it, who aren't talking about it," she says after a photo shoot in New York City, where she is filming a comedy, Diminished Capacity, with Matthew Broderick. Now that she's talking, people are asking questions: Does it hurt? "It isn't a tetanus shot, but you feel it," she says. Does your hairdresser do it? "These are medical products!" she insists. "Why would you do this in a place where people are getting their nails done?"
On another question, however, the actress's candor fades. Asked what she is paid to promote Botox and Juvéderm, a wrinkle-filler she recently tested on the lines beside her mouth, Madsen declines to say. She will make appearances in four cities later this year. So, more than a movie? "Depends on the movie, but, yes, it's lucrative," she says, adding, "I'm not advising anyone to use it I'm talking about my personal experience." (See box for more on injectable procedures.)
That history began in 2003, when Madsen sought help for her migraine headaches and was prescribed Botox, a non-FDA-approved use that some have nonetheless found effective. The treatment came with a pleasant side effect: She no longer had the two parallel creases that formed between her knitted brows—the dreaded "11" lines. "I looked good!" says Madsen. Next came shots above the outer edges of her brows. "If something about my body bothers me, I go to the gym," she explains. "Something about my face bothered me—and there was an alternative."
A medical procedure, Botox can come with side effects, among them drooping eyelids, bruising and nausea. Madsen says she has always received her injections from a dermatologist, never at Botox parties (where the shots are given in private homes), though she was invited to some. "I was horrified," she says. "I felt like I needed to say, 'Be careful. Know what you're doing is a medical treatment.'" She adds: "I'm very motherly. I was motherly when I was 12 years old."
Upon arriving in L.A. from Chicago at 19, Madsen built a résumé of playing vamps in films from the pulpy Catholic-school romance Fire with Fire to 1987's sexy Slam Dance. Off-screen, she had high-profile relationships: She was married for three years to actor Danny Huston (Anjelica's brother) and later had a son, Jack, with actor and underwear model Antonio Sabáto Jr. Long since uncoupled, the two live close by each other and are raising Jack, now 12, together, with Madsen homeschooling him.
Despite the early heat she generated, Madsen found it hard to return to work in her 30s after taking time off to be a full-time mom. Despite some TV work and help from friends and family, including her actor big brother Michael Madsen (Kill Bill), she faced foreclosure on her home twice. "My son didn't know what was going on, but he knew I was really tense about going to Chuck E. Cheese's."
Was it the age-old complaint that, for actresses of a certain age, good roles are few, far between and already booked by Susan Sarandon? "Actors like to blame other people for not working," says Madsen. "If you're an actor, the product is you."
Determined to emerge from a five-year career dip, she hired an acting coach and began working out with personal trainer Joe Sanceri, now 77, whom she calls "Burgess Meredith to my Rocky." Madsen ate better, lost weight and started using Botox. "I didn't do it for Hollywood," she says. And yet some combination of her renewed appearance and the self-confidence it brought turned things around: Later that year she landed the part of Maya in Sideways.
Ironically, to actually inhabit the role of the shopworn waitress and wine lover, Madsen, then 42, halted the Botox she says her headaches returned and put on pounds by eating pancakes. Then she shot the movie without makeup. Not Hollywood's lip-gloss-and-light-foundation version of no makeup, she insists: "No makeup." The film earned her swooning reviews, a Spirit Awards win and an Oscar nod.
"The thing that brought me the greatest success was a movie where I looked my age," she says proudly. She wishes younger stars would get the message even if she chooses to use Botox today. "There was an actress about to turn 30 who was so freaked out, saying, 'Now I'm just going to play the wife and the D.A.' I was like, 'I'd love to play a D.A.!' In every era of your life you can play different parts."
She's proved it this year in The Astronaut Farmer (as a mom of three) and The Number 23, which included a return to her sexpot past. "I walk around in lingerie," she boasts. "To do that at 25 was hard. Now, it's really cool I never expected to be asked."
Facing her 50s, Madsen won't predict her future onscreen or at the plastic surgeon's office. A face-lift? Probably not. "I want to look like myself," she says. She smiles and shows her laugh lines again. "But ask me in 10 years."
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