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Where is it? Sarah Jessica Parker’s so-called trademark
mole, the one she rigorously refused to have removed and thus attempt to better
fit Hollywood’s
standards of perfection, has apparently disappeared.
Sarah Jessica Parker has been outspoken on her views about
beauty, grace, ageing, cosmetic surgery etc. “I believe in ageing gracefully,
and of course, buying as many anti-ageing creams as possible,” the “Sex an the
City” star said, stating she would never resort to cosmetic surgery to enhance
her looks.
A small quaint dainty mole she’s had forever on her chin
stood as testament to this. Some could – and have for that matter – consider it
a blemish, an imperfection that could be easily removed to reveal a clear
complexion free of any faults.
Yet Sarah Jessica Parker never had it removed, never tried
to hide it – as evident in numerous scenes of “Sex and the City: The Movie,”
where her mole is perfectly visible.
So it comes as a surprise that the 43-year-old mother of one
should make an appearance sans her noticeable beauty mark. The actress attended
an all-star baseball game in New York on Tuesday and close-up photographs of
her visage show no excrescence on her chin…only a slight ever so vague spot where
the mole used to be.
Has she succumbed to pressure? Or was it for health reasons?
Or perhaps she was wearing exceptionally creative make-up that day, which
perfectly hid her three-dimensional skin growth?
Either way, until a statement comes from Parker’s camp to
explain to the world what has become of a mole millions of us have watched on
HBO over the past years, unnamed sources have been confirming the removal.
One source told Foxnews.com that the actress had her facial mole
removed sometime during the last two weeks, while another source told British paper
The Daily Mail that the actress “definitely had a procedure” but “kept it
really quiet.”
No “World, I am having my mole removed” announcement here.
Sarah Jessica Parker joined singer Sheryl Crow and MLB
commissioner Bud Selig at the Yankee stadium in a public-service announcement
to raise money for cancer research.
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