Julianne Moore, 58, goes braless under plunging risqué outfit as she admits she was 'really unhappy before she prioritised her private life'
Julianne Moore looks stunning as she goes braless underneath a black sequin number which had an extreme plunging neckline for a new photoshoot.
Posing for Tatler's July cover, Julianne admitted she was really unhappy in her early 30s before she 'prioritised her personal life'.
She said: 'It wasn’t until I was in my early thirties and I was really unhappy that I realised I hadn’t made my personal life a priority.
Superstar: Julianne Moore, 58, went braless under a plunging risqué outfit for Tatler as she admitted she was 'really unhappy in her 30s before she prioritised her private life'
'I realised: “I really want this. I want to be married. I want to have children"
'Growing up in the late Seventies, I definitely got the message that it was important to have a career and that I had to work to make that happen.
'But there was this idea that you don’t need to work for your personal life – that it was supposed to be like a romantic comedy: you meet someone, have a couple of dates and there you go.
You're beautiful: Julianne said she's 'loathed' her freckles from between the ages of seven and 49
'That’s just not true. Life is finite. This idea that you can do whatever you want at whatever time, it’s not true in terms of work and it’s not true in terms of having a family.'
And while she might look incredible, Julianne said she's 'loathed' her freckles from between the ages of seven and 49.
She said: 'I still don’t like them…I’d prefer not to have them, but I do have them and so, so what? It’s okay to have something you don’t love. It’s really alright.'
Julianne also acknowledged that the #MeToo movement has changed the atmosphere on set.
Musical marvel: Julianne pictured at the Rocketman premiere at the Cannes Festival on Thursday night
She said: 'We’ve been inculcated with this idea that men were allowed to do certain things.
'Even something casual, like a man you didn’t know kissing you hello rather than shaking your hand – we used to tolerate that because we were told: “He doesn’t mean anything by it, he’s just being friendly.”'
She also discussed Obama’s Vice President’s Joe Biden, who was accused of ‘inappropriately touching’ women.
She said: 'My husband and I were discussing just this, and he said: "That kind of stuff’s okay at a family party.” And I said “No, it’s not.”
'I remember someone who was that way when I was a kid and I was uncomfortable and I couldn’t say anything.
'The only person I could say something to was my sister, and she felt the same way. So this sort of discussion is a real change, and it’s important.'
See the full feature in the July 2019 issue of Tatler, available on digital download and on newsstands Thursday 23rd May.
A dream in green: Julianne at the opening ceremony and screening of The Dead Don't Die at the Cannes Film Festival on Tuesday
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