Jennifer Lawrence candidly revealed that she plans to pursue a career in boob work after giving birth to her second child earlier this year.
The 35-year-old actress is eyeing surgery in November, The New Yorker reported in a profile of the actress published Monday.
Lawrence said her body has changed since welcoming her second child with husband Cook Maroney.
“After my first birth, almost everything recovered,” she said of her first pregnancy with her eldest son, Cy. “The second time, nothing bounced back.”
Lawrence revealed that she plans to film a nude scene on camera in the spring, one year after giving birth, but said she would have the surgery if she were not a famous actress.
“Maybe I wasn’t in the same hurry to get to the appointment,” she thought. “But I think so.”
Lawrence said she has had Botox treatment for the work she has already done, but she needs to be able to use her forehead for acting.
She explained that she wouldn’t get fillers because it would appear on camera, but seemed excited that she might get a facelift someday.
“But believe me, I do!” she said of the procedure, which has become even more popular in recent years.
The “Hunger Games” star has yet to reveal the name of her second child, but she may have revealed it while walking in New York City last month, thanks to her keychain, which was seen in a photo obtained by Page Six.
One of her keychains featured an alphabet bead that read “Cy,” her 3-year-old son’s name, and the other read “Louie,” likely referring to her youngest child.
Lawrence spoke about her struggles after giving birth at the Cannes Film Festival in May while promoting her new film “Die My Love,” in which she plays a new mother who suffers from postpartum depression and becomes mentally ill.
“I had just given birth to my first son, and there was nothing like postpartum,” she said of her relationship with her character. “It’s very interesting because it’s so isolated.”
Lawrence filmed the film opposite Robert Pattinson while five months pregnant with her second child. She said becoming a mother “changes everything.”
“It’s brutal and unbelievable,” she said. “So they not only step into every decision of whether I’m working, where I’m working, when I’m working, but they’ve also taught me. I mean, I didn’t know I could feel so much, and my job has so much to do with emotions,” she said.
“It feels like I’m getting a blister or something. I’m very sensitive,” she continued. “So they’ve obviously changed my life for the better and creatively as well. I highly recommend having children if you want to be an actor.”
