Stevie Nicks says Botox 'destroyed' her face for 4 months and made her look like 'Satan's angry daughter'
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Amanda Krause
Oct 15, 2020, 23:00 IST
Stevie Nicks seems to prefer natural beauty over cosmetic surgeries.Phil McCarten/Reuters
Stevie Nicks told The Guardian that Botox once "destroyed" her face for four months and made her look like "Satan's angry daughter."
She previously made a similar statement while speaking to The Telegraph in 2013, adding that she'd have to be tied down to get the treatment again.
Celebrities including Chrissy Teigen and James Charles have also been open about their use of Botox.
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Stevie Nicks is opening up about her experience with Botox.
The two-time Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee recently spoke with Jenny Stevens of The Guardian for an interview about her life during the pandemic, her history with Fleetwood Mac, and her experience as a woman in music. She also spoke about beauty standards and aging as a celebrity, saying, "Oh God, the Botox."
"Let me tell you, Botox only makes you look like you're in a satanic cult," Nicks told The Guardian. "I only had it once and it destroyed my face for four months."
"I would look in the mirror and try and lift my eyebrow and go: 'Oh, there you are, Satan's angry daughter.' Never again," the musician continued. "I watch a lot of news and I see all the lady newscasters looking like Satan's angry daughters, too."
"Botox makes everybody look like Satan's children," she told the publication. "You'd have to tie me down to get me to do it again."
Nicks also told interviewer Craig Mclean: "You have an 18-year-old daughter, right? You tell your daughter if she ever even thinks about Botox, you get me on the phone and I'll talk to her."
In place of Botox and other plastic surgery, Nicks seems to prefer natural beauty. In her interview with The Guardian, she reflected on her iconic fashion and signature beauty, saying: "Of course I thought that I was very pretty."
"You know, I once wrote a song called 'Prettiest Girl in the World,' but it never came out," Nicks told The Guardian. "It started with the line: 'She was the prettiest girl in the world / But that was a long time ago.'"
She added: "And that's something that I have said to a lot of my younger friends: No matter how beautiful you are, you're going to get older and you're not going to look like you did when you were 25. So roll with the punches."
"I have lip filler, I have Botox, I'm very open about it," Charles said. "I don't have too much of it, but my dad has literally the worst forehead wrinkles you could imagine on anybody, ever, so for me, my Botox was very much just preventative because my dad and I have a very, very similar face."
When Campbell responded by saying that Charles is "too young" for Botox, he replied: "There's not a lot in there. I can definitely still move everything around, and just a little bit of filler in the lips because it was needed."
"Although it's highly toxic and related to a serious bacterial infection called botulism, Botox is safe in clinical settings," Landsverk wrote. "Injecting it into muscles causes paralysis, which is why it works for wrinkle reduction by relaxing the facial muscles."
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