his cash secrets on his physical evolution, “My biological beauty is no more”

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Monica Bellucci was the guest of the new issue of Quelle epoque! on France 2, this Saturday, November 5. The 58-year-old actress spoke about her beauty and her physical evolution over time.

This Saturday, November 5, Léa Salamé presented a new number What an era! on France 2. To promote the documentary film The Girl in the Fourtain by Antonio Panizzo devoted to the life of Swedish actress and model Anita Ekberg who died in 2015, actress Monica Bellucci was a guest on the show.

The actress confided in its physical evolution over time. Now 58, the actress is still considered one of the most beautiful women in the world. During the broadcast, Léa Salamé referred to a sentence uttered by Monica Bellucci in which she said that “[sa] biological beauty is no more”. “How can you say that?” then questioned the facilitator. “Time passes and that’s how it is”explained the former companion of Vincent Cassel.

For Monica Bellucci, beauty evolves over the years to give way to other things in life. “There is a time for everything and there is a biological period that is precise. Afterwards, there are other things that happen, we have a distance from things… I think it’s very interesting to see the evolution of a person’s life (…) The passing time is another vision of life but which takes nothing away from the passion and the desire to live”, she revealed.

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“I felt this a priori linked to the physical”

This is not the first time that Monica Bellucci has mentioned her relationship to the physical. During the 14th edition of the Lumière Festival in Lyon, she had already spoken about the physical evolution in the world of cinema in the columns of Brut: “When I arrived, at the beginning I felt this a priori very linked to the physical, because I came from a world which was not the world of cinema. But today, that all changed.”she revealed.

Last December, she also returned to this subject in an interview with the Sunday Times. “There are a multitude of stages in a life”, she confided. And to continue: “When you’re young, you have what they call, in France, the beauty of the devil. It’s a natural thing, it’s the beauty of youth, the beauty of a biological moment in life. And life goes on. The physical gets old and you have to live with it. There’s nothing we can do.”

Lea Ouzan

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