"I Am Old": Why Sally Field Refuses to Hide Her Age

Sally Field, 76, never HAD plastic surgery despite fighting ageism in Hollywood her whole career

Sally Field turned 79 in November, and she will tell you so herself. She has said it publicly, repeatedly, without hedging. 'They say I look old,' she told an interviewer. 'But I am old. And I'm grateful to still be here to hear them say it.' For a woman who spent the first half of her career being told she was not enough — not serious enough, not sexual enough, not whatever the room required that day — that kind of directness was a long time coming.

Field was born in Pasadena in 1946, the daughter of actress Margaret Field and stepdaughter of stuntman Jock Mahoney. She landed her first network job at 19, playing a novice nun who could fly. The Flying Nun ran from 1967 to 1970 and made her famous in a way she could not spend. 'Three years of being trapped in a role that made me invisible,' she said later. Producers who watched her play a cartoon did not rush to cast her in anything requiring depth, and the show's success became its own kind of trap.

The break came with Sybil in 1976. Playing a woman with dissociative identity disorder, Field delivered a performance so physically and emotionally demanding it reset the industry's understanding of what she could do. An Emmy followed. Norma Rae came in 1979, and with it her first Oscar. Places in the Heart earned her a second in 1985 — the night of the 'you like me' acceptance speech, which has been misquoted and mocked in the decades since and which Field has addressed with more patience than most people could summon.

The career that appeared, from the outside, to be a steady climb was built on a foundation she kept hidden for most of her life. In her 2018 memoir In Pieces, Field wrote about being sexually abused by Mahoney during her childhood. 'I didn't understand why he did it,' she wrote. 'I just knew that from that moment, I was no longer a child.' She had stayed silent for decades, partly to protect her mother. Going public, she said, was 'like breathing for the first time.'

She was 17 when she had an illegal abortion in Tijuana, her mother present, no anesthesia, in conditions she described as horrifying. 'I felt everything, and yet I couldn't move,' she recalled. 'My body wasn't mine anymore.' The experience shaped her advocacy on reproductive rights for the rest of her adult life.

Her relationship with Burt Reynolds — her co-star in the Smokey and the Bandit films — defined much of the tabloid coverage of the late 1970s. Reynolds was among the biggest box-office draws in the country. By Field's account, he was also controlling, dependent on painkillers, and far more complicated than the magazine stories suggested. 'I loved him,' she said, 'but that love erased me.' When Reynolds died in September 2018, just weeks after In Pieces was published, she mourned him. She also did not revise what she had written. The love was real. So was the cost.

Field went public with her osteoporosis diagnosis in 2006 and has done sustained advocacy work around bone density and aging in women. She has not had cosmetic surgery. Her hair is silver. She does not appear to be performing either defiance or acceptance about any of it — she simply looks the way she looks and does not treat that as a problem requiring a solution.

The credits have thinned in recent years. She earned strong notices as May Parker in The Amazing Spider-Man films and appeared in Lincoln in 2012 as Mary Todd opposite Daniel Day-Lewis. Her current life, she has said, is largely private — closer to the rhythms of daily California existence than to the industry calendar.

When asked whether she carries regret about the compromises of a fifty-year career, her answer has not changed. 'No,' she said. 'Everything I endured made me who I am. I don't want to be younger. I just want to look back and know I lived truthfully.' For someone who spent so long in rooms where honesty was a liability, that answer means a lot.

  1. Leatha Peters says:

    Sally Fields is one of my favorite actresses of all times. She and Burt Reynolds are the best together. Much ❤️ to both of them. I truly respect Sally to stay away from the knife!

  2. Debbie Lane says:

    Salley Field is a great actress and absolutely beautiful. I've watched her in several different movies . And I don't think I've ever been disappointed in her acting skills . SHES BEAUTIFUL !!!!

  3. carla Landreth says:

    I cant stand fake! Beauty is within! Sally Field is simply gorgeous at 76

  4. Stephen Hunsucker says:

    Sally Fields is a real beauty! Still looks great without all plastic. Beauty is within. Looking fine Sally!!!!

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