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IF anybody understands Hollywood's obsession with sex appeal, it's famous American actress Brooke Shields.

Shields is all-too-familiar with the industry, starting out as a child model at just 11-months-old.

Brooke Shields in a floral shirt and khaki pants.
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Brooke Shields was the iconic face of the 80's.Credit: Alamy
Brooke Shields in a blue swimsuit on a boat.
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She was the poster girl for sex appeal from a young age.Credit: Alamy
Brooke Shields at the Giorgio Armani fashion show.
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But Brooke says with age she has realised there is far more to her than just her looks.Credit: Getty Images - Getty

She later garnered widespread notoriety for appearing in nude shots for Louis Malle's film Pretty Baby when she was just 11.

Now 59, about championing her identity and how as she has aged, she's realised her "external perceptions" don't match up to her "internal sense of self".

Brooke said the first time her revelation hit her was in her home of New York, as she walked down the street with her daughters, Rowan (21) and Grier (18).

Brooke said it was "impossible" not to notice admiring looks from people on the street - but to her surprise, they weren't aimed at her.

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As she processed her feelings (a mix of "protectiveness, pride and melancholy"), Brooke started to wonder if her time as an iconic pin-up girl was up.

But this feeling kick-started her journey to finding her real identity and realisation that she doesn't exist to make men feel "virile".

Over the years, Brooke has faced ageist comments from casting producers, agents and even dermatologists.

All have been quick to pick out the "flaws" of her ageing skin and body.

Brooke Shields roller skating.
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Brooke was the heart-throb of thousands.Credit: Alamy
Brooke Shields at the Yellowstone Season 5 premiere.
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She says men now feel 'offended' when she tells them she is 59.Credit: Getty Images - Getty

But she recalls one particular encounter that stood out to her amongst the rest - where she felt she had "offended" a man by revealing her age.

Attending a friend-of-a-friend's event, Brooke had struck up a conversation with the newly-divorced male host.

The acquaintance offered to show Brooke his extensive vintage wine collection, before making a quip about the year he was born.

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He joked about his own vintage, being born in 1972.

Brooke jokingly replied that she had him "beat", being born in 1965.

She saw her host's face "drop" as he replied tactlessly - seemingly disappointed in Brooke's age.

Brooke told the Daily Mail: "Only moments before, this man had been borderline flirty. But the moment he knew my actual age, the atmosphere chilled."

Brooke felt as though his shock stemmed from remembering her past as a "pin-up from his childhood".

She blamed his bad manners on his inability to understand that she, like everybody else, would inevitably age and no longer look like the glamorous image of her he held in his memory.

Brooke said she now just feels "disappointed" in men for their lack of understanding towards women.

She told the Daily Mail: "We could certainly be met with a little more celebration when we reach our ‘later’ years.

"What I’ve seen happen instead is that as we grow more comfortable with ourselves and more confident, men grow more threatened. They simply don’t know how to adjust."

Although she admitted she's "not immune" to the societal pressure and ingrained urge to "fix" ourselves in a bid to remain youthful.

Brooke says she shares self-doubt and concerns over her looks just like everyone else, describing looking at her knees and thighs, and seeing melted "Silly Putty".

Reflecting on some of the harsh criticism she faced in her younger years, Brooke said: "I was very specifically told I wasn’t runway-worthy because I wasn’t skinny enough... And being told you are ‘the face’, you begin to believe that’s all you are – a face"

Calvin Klein Jeans advertisement featuring a woman in jeans and a shirt.
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The controversial Calvin Klein advert faced backlash.Credit: Calvin Klein / The Advertising Archives
February 1983 issue of LIFE magazine featuring Brooke Shields.
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So did the Life magazine cover she starred in.Credit: EBay

Brooke's career has had it's share of controversy - she featured in Calvin Klein's 'Love my Calvins' campaign in 1980, an ad that caused outrage thanks to its questionable line: “Do you know what comes between me and my Calvins? Nothing” read by then-15-year-old Brooke.

Another eyebrow-raising assignment was her cover of Life magazine in 1983 - where 17-year-old Brooke posed in a tiny red bathing suit next to the headline 'Brooke Brings Back The Bikini'.

But Brooke reflects on her value, saying with age she has realised she is so much more than just her looks.

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She says older women "embody vitality", describing them as "smart, vibrant, powerful and ambitious".

And she won't slow down or cave to the idea that it's all downhill after 40 - instead, she's giving herself space to just be Brooke.

Why women should wear bikinis no matter their age or shape

IF you think you should hide your body this summer - think again!

Fabulous Magazine's Fashion Director, Tracey Lea Sayer has

Times have changed since 2015 when Protein World spent £250,000 on an ad campaign of a slim 20-something bikini clad model asking the reader “Are you beach body ready?” The uproar that followed about the objectification of women was global. Branded offensive, irresponsible and harmful, the verdict on the campaign and the social media uproar was well documented, and rightly so.

Now, I am happy to say that all sizes of women are represented in swimwear across the media landscape. Brands like JD Williams, In The Style and New Look, to name just a few, all work with models of all sizes and ages to promote their swimwear.

My social media feed is also full of ladies of all ages and sizes looking Fabulous in their swimmies. What started out as a trickle of shy bikini-clad selfies has now become a body-positive movement that makes us all feel good to get into our swimwear.

And why shouldn’t we! Our bodies are all completely different and we should be celebrating that fact.

At 53, I love bikinis, I love having an all over tan in the summer with as few white bits as possible. I don’t want to dumb myself down as I get older, I want to celebrate that I am still here! My aim is to keep on wearing bikinis well into my 80s if I am lucky enough to get there.

I have learnt to love the aging process. I will never look like I did in my 20s again, but I do enjoy looking after myself way more than I did back then. A better diet, more exercise and a lot of self-care makes me feel good on the inside as well as the outside.

I love that other cultures like to celebrate their elders. I think we should embrace this in western society instead of just fetishizing youth.

Aging isn’t something to be feared but embraced.

Wear the damn bikini, I am going to!

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