Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
USA TODAY

Jennifer Grey on the late Patrick Swayze, nose job that made her 'invisible': 'I was no longer me'

Edward Segarra, USA TODAY
3 min read

Jennifer Grey is opening up about her past history with plastic surgery.

In an interview with People published Monday, the "Dirty Dancing" icon reflected on the rhinoplasty she got when she was younger, which significantly changed the appearance of her face. In her upcoming memoir "Out of the Corner" (out May 3), Grey, 62, recalled a time when actor Michael Douglas did not recognize her at a movie premiere she attended following her second nose job.

"That was the first time I had gone out in public. And it became the thing, the idea of being completely invisible, from one day to the next," Grey told the outlet. "In the world's eyes, I was no longer me, and the weird thing was that thing that I resisted my whole life, and the thing I was so upset with my mother for always telling me I should do my nose. I really thought it was capitulating."

Advertisement
Advertisement

Grey continued: "I just thought, 'I'm good enough. I shouldn't have to do this.' That's really what I felt. 'I'm beautiful enough.' "

Related: 30 reasons why we're still obsessed with 'Dirty Dancing,' 30 years later

Look back: Jennifer Grey and Clark Gregg file for divorce after 19 years of marriage

Jennifer Grey, a cast member in the Amazon series "Red Oaks," poses for a portrait during the 2016 Television Critics Association Summer Press Tour on  Aug. 7, 2016.
Jennifer Grey, a cast member in the Amazon series "Red Oaks," poses for a portrait during the 2016 Television Critics Association Summer Press Tour on Aug. 7, 2016.

But Grey, the daughter of actors Joel Grey and Jo Wilder, said she understands her mother's insistence on plastic surgery came from her own experience of having to conform to the cosmetic expectations of Hollywood.

"I understand it was the '50s. I understand they were assimilating. I understood that you had to change your name and you had to do certain things, and it was just normalized, " Grey said. "You can't be gay. You can't be Jewish. You know, you can't look Jewish. You're just trying to fit into whatever is the group think."

Advertisement
Advertisement

She added: "She loves me, loved me, always has, and she was pragmatic because she was saying, 'Guess what? It's too hard to cast you. Make it easier for them.' And then I did and she was right."

'Dirty Dancing' returns! Jennifer Grey will star in new movie version of the 1987 classic

Grey shared that even famed artist Andy Warhol remarked on the appearance of her nose in a book that he published, which she called "humiliating."

"There was only one thing said to me, about me. And it was like, 'And, you know, I would look at Jennifer. I would wonder, you know, why was her… Um, her dad got a nose job. Why wouldn't he make sure she had one too,' or something like that," Grey recalled. "It's like everywhere I went, I'd be like, 'Wait. Excuse me. I'm a person with other features and other amazing characteristics. Why is everyone so hung up on the nose?' "

Advertisement
Advertisement

Celebrities often deny, keep quiet about their plastic surgery. Why that's problematic.

Ultimately, the Golden Globe-nominated actress told People she's gotten to a place where she's learned to embrace her personal authenticity.

"I just wanna feel who I am now," Grey said. "But I think that when you ask other people who you are and you ask people to love you and you take their opinion as a definition of your worth, it's a slippery slope, man."

Bella Hadid regrets getting a nose job at 14. How young is too young for plastic surgery?

Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey in "Dirty Dancing."
Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey in "Dirty Dancing."

Grab your tissues: 5 Patrick Swayze moments in the 2019 documentary that'll give you all the feels

Advertisement
Advertisement

Grey also opened up about her former "Dirty Dancing" co-star, the late Patrick Swayze, and the "tension" between them when the cameras weren't rolling.

"The same way Baby and Johnny were not supposed to be together … a natural match, right? And we weren't a natural match," Grey said. "And the fact that we needed to be a natural match created a tension. Because normally when someone's not a natural, you… both people move on, but we were forced to be together. And our being forced to be together created a kind of a synergy, or like a friction."

Swayze died of pancreatic cancer in 2009.

She adds that if she had the chance to say anything to him now, she would apologize. " … I would say, 'I'm so sorry that I couldn't just appreciate and luxuriate in who you were, instead of me wishing you were more like what I wanted you to be.' "

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jennifer Grey on 'Dirty Dancing,' Patrick Swayze, new memoir, nose job

Solve the daily Crossword

The daily Crossword was played 14,032 times last week. Can you solve it faster than others?
CrosswordCrossword
Crossword
Advertisement
Advertisement