ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

Demi Moore on Skincare, Longevity, and the Importance of Staying Curious

This article contains affiliate links; if you click such a link and make a purchase, we may earn a commission.Demi Moore on Skincare, Longevity, and the Importance of Staying Curious

Tiffany Dodson DavisWed, April 22, 2026 at 5:42 PM UTC

0

How Demi Moore Gets Better With AgeDesign by Sarah Olivieri

"Hearst Magazines and AOL may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."

Whether you know Demi Moore from one of her many beloved acting roles or place her on your mood board for hair inspiration, there’s no denying that the Academy Award–nominated actress seems to have cracked the code on aging gracefully. Apart from streamlining her skin and makeup essentials, one thing making a major impact in Moore’s beauty routine these days? LancĆ“me. She recently signed on as a global ambassador for the brand, joining stars like Zoe SaldaƱa and Christy Turlington.

ā€œThis is a new venture for me, and I feel really honored to be now a part of the company,ā€ Moore tells Bazaar. ā€œSharing in this energy field of those who have come before, those who are with me now, and for those who will then come after. I really do feel honored to have been honored to represent this for them.ā€ LancĆ“me is well-known for maintaining a stable of effective formulas, but the star says the company’s bigger picture intention behind its products is part of what drew her to a partnership.

Amy Proost / LancƓme

ā€œI’ve grown up with LancĆ“me being such a progressive brand that was always looking, not just at external beauty, although they always captured that so beautifully. What captivated me was all the campaigns the company did with Isabella Rossellini, that was super aspirational, but also the innovation with science, and really trying to get to the underneath. Not just products that feel good, but are truly active.ā€

An example of the brand’s progressive products is its newly released Absolue Longevity MD collection. ā€œJust the idea of longevity in general, moving away from this idea that we're fighting something through anti-aging, and we’re actually being proactive and focusing on what’s preventative, and really from a place that’s much more inside out,ā€ adds Moore. Formulated with the longevity skincare supplement ingredient Mitopure, the line aims to reverse the skin’s visible biological age at every life stage with three options: Anticipate, Intercept, and Reset.

Bazaar caught up with the actress to learn about her thoughts on longevity, why she’ll probably always have long hair, and the staple product she never leaves home without. Read on for a few of the beauty favorites Moore swears by, along with a few pearls of wisdom on gracefully growing older.

If you don’t mind sharing, how old are you?

I’m 63 and—let’s see, how many months? I am 63 and five months if we want to be accurate.

What age do you feel you are in your head?

My insides, I feel, always fluctuate between 35 and 40, like somewhere in there. And I’m only reminded that ā€œOh, you can’t be that because you have a child that age!ā€ But just my general energy and sense. I feel like that happens for a lot of us; we start to just lock in on a certain time period. And it’s not that I have any particular anchored memory or association, or even an attachment to wanting to grab something from the past, it’s more just kind of the inside feeling—relating. And part of that is, I think back to how I perceived, say, my grandmother at my same age. I feel so different from how I remember looking at her and how she lived, you know? I’m a very different 63-year-old than my grandmother. We’re living longer, and that’s part of my fascination [with aging]—the whole longevity moment, and how do I want that to look and feel twenty years from now? And that, I think, is determined by the quality of how we care for ourselves today, at whatever age we are.

Advertisement

Do you have a beloved beauty product that you’ve worn for most of your life?

I don’t have any one product that I would say I love more now. Though using a great moisturizer is one thing I can’t do without. It’s just one thing that, no matter what, I don’t leave home without it.

What aspects of your physical appearance do you love more now, as you’ve gotten older?

I had such a round face when I was younger, and while I can sometimes miss that certain plumpness and having a full cheek, what I really appreciate are my angles. My cheekbones, these things that emerged only as I’ve grown older.

Which beauty products would you say have aged well?

I do know and feel that the LancĆ“me GĆ©nifique was ahead of its time. It’s been one of those products that, from the time it emerged, has stayed as strong and as effective as it was from the day it was launched.

Please give us a quick breakdown of your current beauty routine.

I am truly someone who likes to keep things very simple; I don't like too much complication. My general is a good cleanser, and that’s head-to-toe—basically cleansing and moisturizing are my two mainstays no matter what. And then I sprinkle in the Absolue Longevity MD, which I’ve been using for three months now. So, I have my serum and my reset—the Reset serum and the moisturizer, and I’m good to go. I’m a pretty simple gal, because I think more than anything, it’s not how much you do, it’s the consistency with which you can do it. It’s the same for my hair; I don’t like to overdo it, especially if you have long hair. And when I’m not working, I also generally don’t wear any makeup; I keep it really clean and fresh.

Regarding your long flowing hair, it’s iconic! Though we also loved how it looked when styled in a bob.

Although it wasn’t cut because I’m so attached. But I love the opportunity to play; that was the best part. And every once in a while, when I get a little bored, it helps break up the monotony of ā€œOh, should I cut it? Should I do bangs?ā€ And I always say no, because I’ll wake up the next day and say, ā€œWhy did I do that?ā€

What keeps you feeling vibrant and youthful?

Being curious. When you maintain curiosity on a daily basis, then life always feels vibrant and alive, because it’s just filled with possibilities. Anytime you feel that kind of stuck feeling, and you don’t feel that vibrancy, it’s because there’s some part that’s not engaged with keeping curious. I really do feel that the people that I meet who inspire me who are older, one thing I find that’s a common thread is that they’re not stuck in already knowing everything. They’re not stuck in having seen it and going through the motions of life. They’re stuck in that lens of what a child sees, which is the appreciation and awe of what we have around us. I would say one of the things that keeps me vibrant and alive is when I wake up in the morning, and I open the back door to a little deck I have, and the lights are still off in my room, and I just listen to the birds. And the birdsong just lifts my spirit, soul, and my being, and it changes my whole day.

Many people fear growing older. In your opinion, what is the best part about it?

I think that there is a combination of comfort in your own skin and caring less about getting external validation. There’s something that really does come with time, which is just finding a greater acceptance of who you are, not just the parts that you like best. It’s like getting to where we find the appreciation for those quirks, those things that we judge, and we can kind of let the judgment just fall away.

You Might Also Like

Grace Jones’s Career in Photos

Michelle Pfeiffer’s Style Evolution Through the Years

Goldie Hawn’s Style Evolution Through the Years

Original Article on Source

Source: ā€œAOL Entertainmentā€

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.