Actress and model Brooke Shields, 56, was not at all surprised when she learned at a very young age that Hollywood favored younger, attractive women. What did surprise her, however, was the fact that after she turned 40, “the world” seemed to be saying that her life was “done.”
“You’re marketed to if you’re 20 or if you’re in dentures,” Shields told Know Your Value. “But the margin in the middle is a very, very full, vibrant generation.” In fact, Shields spent most of her career carving out a space for herself in that margin.
Shields said she is thrilled with where she’s at right now and wouldn’t want to be in her 20s anymore.
“I just now feel as if I’m my most powerful and vibrant, and I’m not bogged down by the same insecurities or the same pettiness,” Shields said. “I don’t give a sh– the same way I did when I was a kid. I think I look sexier. I feel more myself. I feel like I’m living my life, according to my terms … It’s an interesting thing to be 56 and saying, ‘Now I’m ready to start.’”
Aside from acting, Shields has embarked on new adventures. She is the newest face of True Botanicals, a clean skincare brand. When Shields began her career, it would have been unheard of for someone of her age to promote a skincare line. Now, her age is her strength; fans who have followed her career for decades are eager to know how Shields takes care of herself.
And just two years ago, Shields started Beginning is Now, a quickly-growing, lifestyle platform for women over 40. Through this venture, she made the leap from actress to entrepreneur, a title she initially knew very little about. Though there is inherent risk in trying something new, Shields did not shy away. “I feel lucky because I have belief in myself. And when I lose that belief, there are people around me who remind me of it,” she said.
Mother of reinvention
With over five decades in show business under her belt (she became a model at just 11 months old), Shields has learned to pivot multiple times.
Though she initially gained fame even before her teenage years by acting in movies like “Pretty Baby” and “The Blue Lagoon,” Shields quickly began forging a path for herself outside the studio lots, attending Princeton University and pursuing roles on Broadway. Then she once again found success on the small screen with “Suddenly Susan,” “Lipstick Jungle” and a slew of guest appearances and television movies.
And rather than solely focusing on her career, Shields used her fame to help others.
After experiencing crippling postpartum depression in 2003 after the birth of her first daughter Rowan, she wrote a book sharing her struggles in effort to help other women feel less alone. And when the Covid-19 pandemic struck, Shields began sharing her lighthearted, at-home workouts—which often incorporated common household items like wine bottles. And when she broke her femur in early 2021, Shields focused on sharing her long, solitary hospital stay to highlight that there is “always something you can do to move forward.”
Shields said, “I was in the hospital for months. I had a staph infection, a blood clot, I had to get multiple blood transfusions. It was a really difficult period of time. But what I said to myself was, ‘What can I control?’ My physical therapy was the one thing I could control. Instead of doing it one time a day, I requested having the physical therapist come twice a day. And I just focused on learning how to walk again.”
And for the last two years, Shields has also focused putting one foot in front of the other—this time as a CEO.
Another new beginning








