Jennifer Aniston

TPF may earn a commission from merchant affiliate
links, including eBay, Amazon, and others

There was this video of Aniston I saw on one of the websites when she was 23 that I'd never seen before, even at 23 she had good comic timing.


She's beyond adorable in this video. She was the cutest thing I've seen.

I really, really loved her old face, sometimes I forgot how much she's changed it, but the lower hairline, the smaller eyes, the first nose job all worked for her… she was cute and so perfect and funny. Why isn't she funny like this anymore?
 

Attachments

  • ja.jpg
    ja.jpg
    48.9 KB · Views: 1,071
She's beyond adorable in this video. She was the cutest thing I've seen.

I really, really loved her old face, sometimes I forgot how much she's changed it, but the lower hairline, the smaller eyes, the first nose job all worked for her… she was cute and so perfect and funny. Why isn't she funny like this anymore?
I think it's because she was happy then.
 
Well she's been through a public divorce and media scrutiny for years. . . plus I think most people are different in their 40s than 20s. I don't perceive her to be uptight though, the contrary actually.
 
Her natural eyes are blue. I know contact lens when I see one.

That's the strange thing. (I wear contacts too) I never see a line around her irises in a close up so the colored contacts thing don't make sense. But why would people then say she naturally has brown eyes?

I don't really care what eye color she has. I'm just wondering why people would make up stories hers aren't really blue then.... I mean... it's just an eye color.

No attack on you personally I'm just wondering and you were the first one quoting me :)
 
Oooops!!!! I guess I can't believe everything I read!


That's the strange thing. (I wear contacts too) I never see a line around her irises in a close up so the colored contacts thing don't make sense. But why would people then say she naturally has brown eyes?

I don't really care what eye color she has. I'm just wondering why people would make up stories hers aren't really blue then.... I mean... it's just an eye color.

No attack on you personally I'm just wondering and you were the first one quoting me :)
I can't believe stories are made up about eye color, either. What's the point?
 
I wear different color contacts all the time and they look very real and if you have the money you can have them custom made. I have dark brown eyes and wear blue, green and hazel, there are hundreds of different shades of colors.
And mine aren't prescription either.
Not that it matters but I doubt she wear them.
 
I think this may explain more about her pinched nerve/physical comments:

'I Was So Grateful For My Body': Jennifer Aniston Portrays Chronic Pain
JANUARY 04, 2015 7:46 AM ET
NPR STAFF


Jennifer Aniston plays a woman who suffers from chronic pain in the independent film Cake. Aniston says she was drawn in by Claire — "someone who is suffering from an unimaginable trauma and loss, [while] also dealing with the daily physical pain that is a constant reminder of that trauma and loss."
Cinelou
In the new movie Cake, Jennifer Aniston plays a woman suffering from chronic, debilitating pain. Her pain is both emotional and physical — her anger is so uncontrollable that she has been kicked out of her chronic pain support group. "You really do not know what happened to this woman," Aniston tells NPR's Rachel Martin. "As the story unfolds you slowly start to discover bits of information as to what happened and why she is in this state."

Aniston says that's not the kind of narrative that generally gets approved in Hollywood, and so she's glad this was an independent film. "It's a little bit more risky, but I think the audiences have really been appreciating it," she says.

Aniston talks with Martin about her new film, about the time she spent working on Friends, and about her hopes for the future.

On how she played a character who is experiencing pain

It was a lot of studying the back, the leg, the neck. Pretty much every single part of her body was hurt, injured. And you really do start to manifest odd little, you know, cricks and ... pinches in your neck and lower back pain. ... Every week I would have some form of body work, just to make sure, you know, my body didn't kind of lock into any of that permanently....

Talking to women, or men, who are suffering from chronic pain on a daily basis — it is so unimaginable. I mean, I was so grateful for my body at the end of the day.

On whether she is at a point in her career where she can pick her projects.

Well, you can and you can't. The truth is: you can become established in a certain category, and I think you are given, you know, offers and opportunities based on how the industry sees you fitting into that — that job. And sometimes you have to kind of take the reins yourself or take a project on and get it made independently so that you can do that work [that] not necessarily another director or studio would see you, you know, fit for. It is, I've said, such a catch-22. It's like, "I know I can do this, you just have to give me the opportunity" and then what comes back is: "Well, we can't give you the opportunity because we've never seen you do this."

On the time she spent on the sitcom Friends

It was awesome. It was the greatest 10 years. The greatest people to work with every day, the greatest crew, killer writers. Funny. Beloved by people. Not only were we having so much fun ourselves, but the amount of love that people felt for that show, still feel for that show, we tapped into something. I don't know what the hell, but it was something, really kind of struck a nerve that continues to sort of be hit. And I think that's so special to be a part of something like that.

On the way she thinks about the future

I kind of live in the moment. And I don't have a five-year-plan and I don't have, "OK, so what we're going to do now is we're going to go for a character that takes you into a real dark territory ..." It's not a strategy.

On whether she's seeking out dramatic roles

I see what comes to me. I mean, I'd love to play more dramatic roles but I love comedic roles. I love just good material. But honestly, after doing Cake, I feel like I scratched an itch that's been needing to be scratched and I want very much to play really wonderful characters and telling a story, exposing a human experience, comedy or drama or both infused. I mean I think comedy and drama go hand in hand. You know, life isn't one or the other.

http://www.npr.org/2015/01/04/37458...y-jennifer-aniston-on-portraying-chronic-pain
 
24770CC500000578-0-Successful_stars_The_Huffington_Post_founder_was_happy_to_take_a-a-65_1420598691314.jpg

24770CD600000578-2899940-Successful_stars_The_Huffington_Post_founder_was_happy_to_pose_w-m-62_1420600322685.jpg

24770DF600000578-0-image-m-60_1420598539080.jpg

24770E3200000578-0-image-m-58_1420598442200.jpg

24770FBF00000578-0-image-m-67_1420598751584.jpg

24770EA700000578-0-image-m-49_1420598157868.jpg

24770CE400000578-2899940-Everything_s_going_swimmingly_Jennifer_Aniston_middle_and_her_fi-m-58_1420599570953.jpg


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbi...a-Hayek-luncheon-celebrate-new-film-Cake.html
 
Top