While reading 77-year old Liz Smith's hot new memoir Natural Blonde (Hyperion Press), it became apparent that one
of America's premier purveyors of gossip was a Natural Cover for The Sheet! Her syndicated column is devoured by millions in over 70 newspapers a day, including the New York Post and Newsday. Liz is the ultimate pro, with the surprising component of heart and soulrare for a gossip columnist today. Read on for her deep dish ... on herself!
Joan Jedell:
What's your age-defying formula? You've obviously tapped into the fountain of youth.
Liz Smith: I think it's just to stay very busy and interested in everything. You know, not give up and not accept being old. People aren't old anymore unless they want to be. I mean, if they get sick or injure themselves, that's different of course. But a healthy person doesn't have to be old, act old, or look old. There are a lot of options open, like exercise and eating better, that most of us are doing now.
JJ:
So what's your take on plastic surgery?
LS:
I think plastic surgery's great. It makes people feel happier about themselves. I had work done a long time ago by Tom Rees. I think it sort of postponed the inevitable.
JJ: And you certainly have. What celebrities have you come across that share your formula for staying young at any age?
LS: Let's see ... Goldie Hawn is America's perennial young sweetheart. And she's over 50. Raquel Welch is just a phenomenon. She's sexy and looks great. Then there are those older women in New YorkKitty Hart, Brooke Astor, and Pauline Trigere. They're in their nineties and act like 65.
JJ:
What about men?
LS: There are lots of older men in New York who are younger than springtime. Mike Wallace, 83; Skitch Henderson, over 80; Isaac Stern. All kinds of men who are very sexy and with it, and you'd never know are over eighty.
JJ:
At your party, I noticed a little midriff showed on you. Was it intentional?
LS: [laughs] Christie Brinkley gave me that top years ago, and I never wore it. I thought, this is just too exposing for me. And so that night I thought: "What can I wear under this jacket that will look dressy?" So I found this thing lying in the drawer, put it on and thought, I wish it covered my midriffbut maybe nobody will notice.
JJ:
I read your mind. I knew you either thought that or did it intentionally.
LS: I didn't do it deliberately, but when Cindy Adams told me it was the most vulgar thing she'd ever seen, or tacky or whatever she said, I thought it was so funny I opened my jacket and started showing her! [We both laugh].
JJ:
Give me a sentence on the essence of the following peoplewho
are they deep down? Barbara Walters.
LS:
Deep down she's a very generous person. Determined never to grow old. Working herself to death, you know. Workaholic.
JJ:
Warren Beatty.
LS:
[long pause] Never met a woman he didn't like. He's a perfectionist like Barbara Streisand. He's a work perfectionist.
JJ:
Donald Trump.
LS: Donald Trump believes his own publicity, which is great. It makes him very happy.
JJ:
Hillary Clinton?
LS: I think Mrs. Clinton is a world beater, and we haven't heard the last of her yet.
Archaelogist Iris Love
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David Pecker, Liz Smith
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Star Jones
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photos taken by Joan Jedell at Liz Smith's book party for Natural Blonde at Le Cirque
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