Cameron Diaz on Glowing Age

0
1,356 views

Seeing Cameron Diaz really refreshing, watch her smile, laugh, her action, and her skill in driving. She might seem to always be all sunshine and light, smiling, pretty and constantly being funny. There are more, capable, reliable, multitask in the other hand vulnerable and fragile.. Those only part that friends of her could describe in words about her.

Loosing your parents might change you to see the world and life. Cameron Diaz lost her dad, Emilio Diaz, unexpectedly at 58 of pneumonia while she was filming My Sister’s Keeper, she explains that experience changed her.

“I think, emotionally.… It definitely took its toll. Definitely,” she says in an interview in the June issue of Vogue. She later revealed to her friends that returning to the cast and crew was a comfort to her.

“It’s the human experience,” she says of death. “You know, that’s what the heart does. Things are given to us, and things are taken away. And I think the heart becomes stronger, more capable.”

In My Sister’s Keeper, Cam plays a mom dealing with a daughter dying of leukemia, in a role that’s definitely a shift to the serious side for her.The movie is about a family, and how that family deals with the death of a child, and with the painful machinations of the heart. “It’s about falling in love,” she says, eyes on the road. “It’s about all different kinds of love. Parents falling in love with their children. Children falling in love with their parents. Falling in love for the first time. Falling in love with being a teenager. All of the things that you fall in love with, that our hearts give way to over a lifetime, and then the heartbreaks when those things get taken away.”

And how she put herself as a mom with a sick child? “It was very cut-and-dried for me, as far as the mother’s motivation,” Cameron says. “This is a woman who does not waver.” Cameron saw the mother as a relentless fighter. “I mean, that’s not something you want to accept about anybody you love—particularly if you are a mother,” she says. “That’s what I held on to as I was telling her story. You are a parent. You fight to keep your child alive, no matter what it takes. I’ve seen what parents will do just for, you know, a frickin’ autograph.” A burst of full-throttle laughter.

At this point, she seems especially happy to have taken on a role that’s unexpected, as in My Sister’s Keeper. “People who put labels on themselves limit themselves,” she says. “If you are a woman who’s been labeled as a sex symbol, for instance—I mean, I am not saying that’s the label people would apply to me. But if you see yourself that way, inevitably you get to a point when you are no longer a sex symbol. And if you can’t move past that, you’re putting a limit on yourself; you’re arresting your development. And that’s where I think a lot of women get in trouble.

“I mean, I’m not 25 years old anymore, nor do I want to be,” she confesses of her career. “I wouldn’t even want to go back to being 30. You know what I mean? That journey — I’ve done it already. I don’t want to do it again. It’s a lot of work to get through it, and I am excited about moving forward. I think that people get caught up in getting back to some place that they already passed. Or to a place where you cannot stay.”

Cameron Diaz is not quit to sparkle, I love her smile and laugh most.

Read