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‘They look like Barbie dolls’: Cate Blanchett says tech is ensuring nobody is ageing

Cate Blanchett, flanked by Catherine Deneuve and Emma Stone at Paris Fashion Week on March 5, says she does not feel "regret or shame" when she sees how she has aged.

Cate Blanchett, flanked by Catherine Deneuve and Emma Stone at Paris Fashion Week on March 5, says she does not feel "regret or shame" when she sees how she has aged. Photo: Getty for Louis Vuitton

Thanks to technology and Instagram filters, “nobody’s getting older – they just look like Barbie dolls”, Australian actor Cate Blanchett says.

The 54-year-old Australian actor and producer, known for her roles in Carol and The Lord Of The Rings trilogy, said she does not feel “regret or shame” when she looks back at photos and sees how she has aged.

“Nobody’s getting older – they just look like Barbie dolls,” she told The Sunday Times.

“It’s not the ageing I find confronting at all because that is like when you stumble across a photo of a holiday when you were 16 or one of my husband and me when we got married.

“It doesn’t produce regret or shame.

“Rather, a recognition of the joy of the experience, or a painful moment.

“I’m transported right back.”

Discussing how it feels to look back at her decades-long career, she said she felt “irked”.

“It’s out of context,” she said.

“They’re just bits.

“Like ‘here are the breasts, hands – a bunion’.

“If you put the whole person together it makes more sense.

“I find it disconcerting.”

The two-time Oscar winner, who plays a nun in the film The New Boy which explores colonialism and religion, pondered on her own experience growing up as a Christian in Australia.

“As a child I wanted a religion,” she said.

“I wanted the strong hand of God to put a hand on my childish shoulders to say ‘Your (late) father is with me. He’s having fun. You’ll see him in 60 years’.

“But that didn’t happen and so, as a 10-year-old, I fled from the church and moved down to the river and spent my childhood propelled into nature.

“If I’d stayed inside the Methodist Church I’d have a lot of bad guitar playing, but instead I rode my bike, thinking I was Nancy Drew, down by the Yarra River.

“I remember that as profoundly as I remember the hymns.”

The actor explored Australian colonialism when she co-created and executively produced the 2020 TV mini-series Stateless, which touches on issues of asylum and the country’s immigration system.

Blanchett has won Oscars for her roles in The Aviator (2004) and Blue Jasmine (2013).

In 2023, she won the best leading actress Bafta award for her role as a composer/conductor in Tar.

-PA

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