The Academy Awards ceremony is approaching, and the major actresses are undergoing luxurious beauty care to ensure that the night of the awards ceremony can be flawlessly presented to the world. Unlike today's high-tech, Hollywood actresses of the past can only rely on simple methods to dress up, but their style is not inferior to that of today's female stars. Elizabeth Taylor, known as the "world's number one beauty" for her beauty, has starred in nearly 60 films such as Cleopatra, won two Academy Awards in 1961 and 1967, and used a razor to remove facial horn.

Marilyn Monroe's classic moment of stroking her skirt with her hands has almost become an eternal fixture in the hearts of generations. A 1952 pageant article about Marilyn Monroe said she had avoided sunbathing despite the popularity of sunbathing in California at the time. But she said: "I personally object to the skin turning brown, and I like my blonde and blue eyes and fair skin. ”
Joan Crawford won the 18th Academy Award for Best Actress for "The Devil in the Sea" and was nominated for the 25th Academy Award for Best Actress for "Fright Rises". She has charming blue eyes, and to keep them clear and bright, she washes them twice a day with boric acid solution and cold water.
Catherine Hepburn is the only actress in the world to win four Oscars. In 1933, she shared her own care tips, suggesting avoiding excessive amounts of "freshly squeezed juice" to maintain a perfect complexion, "which can lead to acidic coatings inside the skin that make the skin look speckled, try a glass of ice tomato juice".
Grace Kelly won the 27th Academy Award for Best Actress in 1955 for Country Girl. In 1956, she married Rainier III and became Princess of Monaco. She rubs hand cream countless times a day, and she says: "A woman's hands are more visibly exposed to age than anywhere else. ”
With her perfect breasts and talent and figure, May West became popular in Hollywood, and was the highest paid actress in the United States in the mid-1930s, known as the "silver screen witch". Her favorite make-up trick is to apply a layer of Vaseline to gray eyeshadow, "which is not only good for my eyelids, but also makes me look extra gentle." She said.
Audrey Hepburn won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her first actress role in Roman Holiday in 1954 and was named third by the American Film Institute as "The Greatest Actress of a Century." The elegant Hepburn would slowly apply mascara at breakfast and then use a pin to separate each lashes.
In 1999, Greta Garbo was named fifth by the American Film Institute as "The Greatest Actress of a Hundred Years." Her beauty secret is "occasional powder", often applying ice cubes to her face to promote blood circulation and reduce puffiness.
Betty Davis won the Academy Award for Best Actress twice, and in 1999 she was named second by the American Film Institute as "The Greatest Actress of a Hundred Years." Unlike today's female celebrities, who inject fillers into their lips, Betty uses makeup to keep the size of the upper and lower lips consistent, creating plump lips.
Sophia Rowland, an Italian, won the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Film for the film Two Women, as well as the Oscar for Best Actress, the Cannes Film Festival for Best Actress, and the British Academy Film Award for Best Foreign Actress. Her secret to maintenance is bathing in olive oil.
Rita Hayworth is a Spaniard who became popular throughout the United States in 1946 for her passionate, debauched and sexy screen charm in the movie Gilda, and became known as the "Goddess of Love". In 1999, she was named the nineteenth "Greatest Actress in a Hundred Years" by the American Film Institute. She is famous for her gorgeous red hair, but in fact her hair is black, in order to keep her hair healthy, she soaked her hair with olive oil and wrapped it in a towel for 15 minutes, after which she rinsed her hair with hot water with lemonade, and she would regularly rinse her hair with warm water with white vinegar to keep it soft and shiny. (Text/Photo)