Times have been tough for poor Gwyneth Paltrow. The 41-year-old Iron Man actress finds herself fighting off cheating allegations. The scandal has allegedly started an all out war between Paltrow and Vanity Fair, who is planning an expose on the mother of two. Now it’s being reported that Paltrow has been told to drop her diet and gain weight in order to change her image.
Radar Online recently spoke with an unnamed source, who claims that Paltrow is under pressure to change her image:
“It looks like she will have to undergo either some weight gain for a role that wins her Bridget Jones-style sympathy or perhaps do a play on Broadway or in London that will allow her to reconnect with her core fans. She knows there’s a problem, and is focused on fixing it. She’s completely lost the public’s sympathy with her ‘little miss perfect’ image.”
After Radar Online broke the story, a rep for Paltrow reached out to The Huffington Post about the issue:
"That is completely absurd and beyond ridiculous. Clearly the item was made up."
Paltrow has also been busy denying that she asked friends to boycott the upcoming Vanity Fair Oscar party. A rep for the actress told E! News:
"This supposed feud is blown complete out of proportion. The V.F. story that they wrote and may or may not run is not a takedown at all. Gwyneth did not participate because we were not promoting anything for the month they wanted to run the story, which was October. She never asked anyone to boycott the [Vanity Fair Oscar] party, she just asked her friends not to give quotes about her."
However, Vanity Fair is still reportedly planning on running the issue, as editor Graydon Carter told The Times of London:
“We started a story on her. We have a very good writer and it’ll run. Well, she sort of forced my hand...Some famous people believe that they live in a cone of celebrity that protects them. But it doesn’t really exist anymore in LA unless they stay in. I mean, you can be a well-known movie star and go decades without getting an embarrassing picture in a magazine just by leading a quiet, normal life...We wouldn’t be doing our job is there wasn’t a little bit of tension between Vanity Fair and its subjects, In any given week, I can expect to hear from a disgruntled subject in Hollywood, Washington or on Wall Street. That’s the nature of the beast.”
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