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At 91, this legendary actress still turns heads after a facelift – see her transformation - by Jonh

 

Few stars in Hollywood have managed to stay as instantly recognizable as Shirley MacLaine. With a career spanning more than seven decades, she remains one of the most decorated and enduring performers in American entertainment. Born on April 24, 1934, in Richmond, Virginia, MacLaine is 91 now and will turn 92 later this month. Her younger brother is Warren Beatty, and she began training in ballet as a very young child, an early discipline that helped shape the confidence and work ethic she later carried into show business.

Long before she became a screen legend, she was already moving toward the spotlight. After high school, she headed to New York to pursue performing, a decision that did not shock her family nearly as much as it might have shocked others. She later reflected that her parents were so certain she would be fine that she grew into that certainty herself. That mix of discipline and fearlessness became part of her identity very early on.

Her breakthrough came after she was hired for The Pajama Game on Broadway. When lead performer Carol Haney was injured, MacLaine stepped in, and that moment changed everything. Producer Hal Wallis noticed her and offered her a contract, opening the door to a film career that would soon explode. Her screen debut came in Alfred Hitchcock’s The Trouble with Harry in 1955, and from there Hollywood quickly realized she was not just another pretty newcomer. She had a fresh, unconventional quality that stood out immediately.



Success followed fast. Within a few years, she earned Academy Award nominations for Some Came Running (1958), The Apartment (1960), and Irma la Douce (1963). Over the course of her career, she received six Oscar nominations in total and won Best Actress for Terms of Endearment in 1984. She also collected major honors including Golden Globes, an Emmy, the Cecil B. DeMille Award, the AFI Life Achievement Award, and a Kennedy Center Honor, confirming her place among the greats of film history.



What makes MacLaine especially striking is that she never seemed interested in behaving like a distant Hollywood monument. In a 2020 interview, she said her longevity came from honesty, discipline, and hard work, adding that she was “not a diva.” She also explained that she stayed in the business partly because acting gave her the freedom to travel, something she valued as much as fame itself. That practicality, mixed with curiosity, helped give her image a rare grounded quality.

Even now, she is not done. Deadline reported in February 2026 that MacLaine is set to star in Margret and Stevie, directed by Matthew Weiner, where she will play Margret Rey, the co-creator of Curious George. That alone says plenty about how unusual her career has been. At an age when many legends are only being remembered, Shirley MacLaine is still signing on for new work.



Her appearance has also long been part of the conversation. MacLaine has spoken openly about having had a facelift decades ago and about thinking carefully over the years about aging, wrinkles, and whether to do anything more. Unlike many stars who avoid the subject, she has been candid, even humorous, about it. But whatever people notice first—her face, her age, her past roles—the larger truth remains the same: Shirley MacLaine is still one of the last living links to a remarkable era of entertainment, and she continues to carry that legacy with unmistakable presence.



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