Tracee Ellis Ross Gets Real About What It Takes to Look This Good at 45

Photo credit: Rich Fury - Getty Images
Photo credit: Rich Fury - Getty Images

From Prevention

Many Hollywood stars make the aging process seem effortless, but according to Tracee Ellis Ross, it’s all a sham. In a new interview with InStyle magazine, the Black-ish star, 45, hilariously blows the cover of basically every forty-something actress who appears to roll out of bed every single morning looking perfect.

"The 'I woke up like this' thing? Bulls--t!" the actress and daughter of the late Diana Ross, said candidly in the InStyle November cover story. "Black-ish is in HD, darling! There's no Vaseline on the lenses.” Ross knows it truly takes effort to look effortless. “At 18 I might have woken up like this. At 45 I f--king work for it,” she continued.

But working for it doesn't mean depriving herself of a few guilty pleasures. It just means she has to work harder on the backend. “I love potato chips more than anything in the world, and so I work out hard.”

In case you're curious about her workouts, the is a fan of the Tracy Anderson Method. In a previous interview she revealed that she works out 3 to 4 times a week, getting in one workout during the week (often at 6 a.m.) and two over the weekend.

BACK AT IT // @traineratlarge

A post shared by Tracee Ellis Ross (@traceeellisross) on Sep 19, 2018 at 12:13pm PDT

And while beauty treatments such as face masks are a component of her self-care regimen, she also makes sure to nurture her insides. She says, “to me self-care does not mean going to the spa. It's learning to say no. It's knowing yourself so you can make choices that are an expression of you. That's self-care." Preach, lady, preach!

MEXICO

A post shared by Tracee Ellis Ross (@traceeellisross) on Sep 13, 2018 at 2:29pm PDT

Ross also finds it “sort of fascinating” that she is “45 and single and childless.” "Happily single, I should add. Not at home crying about it," she says. She also doesn’t think that her personal life choices are anyone’s business. "Some of the ability to reflect on what I really want comes from pushing up against a society that shames me for not having the expected trappings,” she explains. “I'm very pleased with my existence these days. Have I had to learn to make friends with loneliness? Yes. I think if I were in a relationship, it would be the same."

Thank you for being such a strong and honest role model, Ms. Ross. We appreciate you.

('You Might Also Like',)