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Anne Hathaway's message to Hollywood: actors don't have a 'shelf life'

Updated

The actress shot to fame in 'The Princess Diaries' in 2001 before winning an Oscar for her role in 'Les Misérables' just over a decade later

Anne Hathaway attends the 60th New York Film Festival in 2022.
Anne Hathaway attends the 60th New York Film Festival in 2022.SHUTTERSTOCK

Anne Hathaway refuses to believe in the notion that actors have a "shelf life."

The 41-year-old actress shot to fame when she took on the leading role in Disney's The Princess Diaries in 2001 and just over a decade later won an Oscar for her role as Fantine in Les Misérables but was warned that her career would "fall off a cliff" before she turned 40 but has now insisted that no-one is more "valuable" at any given time in their life than another.

She told US TV show Extra: "The concept of human beings having a shelf life, there are eras in your life where you are somehow more valuable than other eras, I just don't believe that."

The Eileen star recently admitted that she has always been "upfront" about her ambitious and still has dreams that she wants to achieve within her career.

She told Porter magazine: "I've always been really upfront about being an ambitious person. I have goals, I have dreams; they don't look much different than they did when I was [younger], but I'm still pursuing them.

"There's really good seasoning on the pan in a lot of the relationships in my life, and I feel like I'm still growing. When I started out [in this industry] as a child, I was warned that my career would fall off a cliff at the age of 35, which is something I know a lot of women face."

The Devil Wears Prada star — who has Jonathan, seven, and three-year-old Jack with husband Adam Shulman — went on to add that it is "fantastic" that women's careers last longer these days and that while she is "proud" of a lot, still believes there is a lot to "fix" within the industry.

She said: "The thing that has evolved during [that time] is that more women are having careers deeper into their lives, which I think is fantastic.

"Obviously, it doesn't mean we should have a ticker tape parade — someone said this to me the other day: 'There's so much to be proud of and there's so much to fix."