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The Honolulu Advertiser

Posted on: Monday, July 12, 2004

Hollywood's bold and the beautiful fib

By Colleen Long
Associated Press

Twenty-four years ago, starring in the movie "Fame," Irene Cara vowed to live forever.

Actress Irene Cara insists that she was born in 1964, and is five years younger than her Florida voter-registration records show.

Associated Press

Now she may be trying to fulfill that dream. A recent dispute over the correct birth date for the 40-to-45-year-old Cara is just the latest example of an old debate in the parallel universe called celebrity.

It seems the famous are as scared as always of getting old. And publicists, eager to please their clients, are still fibbing to keep their starlets young.

Cara, whose real name is Irene Escalera, says she was born March 18, 1964. But several media outlets, including The Associated Press, have her birth date as March 18, 1959.

Cara's publicist, Bernie Roswig, recently requested that AP correct the year to 1964. But voter registration records from Florida, where she lives, have her birth year as 1959.

"There is no one more sensitive about their age than Irene," Roswig said. "But she is adamant she was born in 1964. I can't explain the voting record, and there's no way she wants to talk about it."

Dave Olson, a veteran publicist who has worked with stars such as Rock Hudson and Laurence Olivier, admits that he has lied about clients' ages.

"I didn't feel bad doing it, I was protecting my clients' wishes," he said. "I think it's a touchier subject now, more than ever. There is such a concentration on youth now, our society is focused on it."

Oscar winner Catherine Zeta-Jones recently fumed about rumors that she has shaved a few years off her age.

"If I look older, I'm so sorry," she told W magazine. "I'm not a klutzy, stupid woman, and you know, that comes with maturity. Ask any smart woman out there. If people think I look old, there's nothing I can do about it. I turn 35 this year."

Nancy Alspaugh and Marilyn Kentz are writing a book called "Fearless Women: Portraits and Stories," which profiles women of all ages and professions, including film and music stars. But they've had trouble finding celebrities willing to reveal their ages.

"Age is a big no-no in L.A.," Alspaugh said. "You can't get old. And there's a whole bunch of people hiding from it."

During the studio system heyday in the 1950s, executives would dictate stars' ages. In some cases, a press release would say the leading lady was 16 years old, when really she was in her mid- or late 20s.

"And that's not even old," said publicist Harlan Boll. "There was not as much pressure on men like Bob Hope or Frank Sinatra, even today this is true. If they keep their hair, they pretty much have it made."

Esther Williams, the long-legged swimmer who made most of her movies in the water, said age was always kept quiet. She was never asked to lie about her age but says she knew many actors, such as Elizabeth Taylor (who is billed as being 72), who did.

"You can't stop the clock," said Williams, 82. "They wanted Judy Garland to look like a child, but she was turning into a beautiful woman."

Often, a star's true age isn't revealed until after he or she dies. Actress Mercedes McCambridge, who died March 2, gave her birthday as March 17, 1918, because she wanted to be two years younger. Her obituary revealed her true age of 87.

Actress Claudette Colbert, who died in 1996 at age 92, was born in Paris on Sept. 13, 1903. Three years later her father brought the family to New York City. Her passport listed her year of birth as 1905, a mistake she did not correct until she was 75.

Still, there are stars who don't care if the world knows they aren't as young as they used to be.

"I've never lied about my age," supermodel Naomi Campbell, 34, told AP. "I think if you worry about it, then you end up with trouble."