In 2005 Paltrow became a "face" of Estée Lauder Companies;[2] she was previously the face of the American fashion brand Coach.[3] She is the founder and CEO of the lifestyle company Goop, which has been criticized for promoting pseudoscience, and has written several cookbooks. She received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Spoken Word Album for Children for the Brown Bear and Friends (2009). She hosted the documentary series The Goop Lab for Netflix in 2020.
Early life and education
Gwyneth Kate Paltrow was born on September 27, 1972, in Los Angeles, to actress Blythe Danner and film producer-director Bruce Paltrow.[4] She has a younger brother, Jake, who is a director and screenwriter.[5] Paltrow's father was Jewish,[6] while her mother is Christian.[7] She was raised celebrating "both Jewish and Christian holidays."[8] Her brother had a traditional Bar Mitzvah when he turned 13.[9][10] Her father's Ashkenazi Jewish family emigrated from Belarus and Poland,[11][12][13][14] while her mother has Pennsylvania Dutch (German) as well as some Irish and English ancestry.[15][16][17] Paltrow's paternal great-great-grandfather was a Rabbi in Nowogród, Poland, and a descendant of the well-known Paltrowicz family of rabbis from Kraków.[18][19]
Paltrow is a half-cousin of actress Katherine Moennig, through her mother, and a second cousin of former U.S. Congresswoman Gabby Giffords (AZ-08) through her father.[20] (Giffords' husband is U.S. Senator and retired astronaut Mark Kelly of Arizona.) Paltrow's godfather is director Steven Spielberg.[21][22] Her uncle is opera singer and actor Harry Danner, whose daughter, actress Hillary Danner,[23] is Paltrow's cousin and close friend. Paltrow recalls their family gatherings: "Hillary and I always had this in common, and to this day ... cooking for people we love, eating, hanging out as a family. It's how we were raised. It's what we do."[24] Another cousin is Rebekah Paltrow Neumann, whose spouse is the Israeli-American billionaire Adam Neumann, founder of WeWork.
Her career beginnings can be credited to her acting family, as her acting debut was in High (1989), a TV film her father directed, and after spending several summers watching her mother perform at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in Massachusetts, Paltrow made her professional stage debut there in 1990.[31] Her film debut followed with the musical romance film Shout (1991), starring John Travolta, and she was cast by her godfather Steven Spielberg in the commercially successful adventure feature Hook (1991) as the young Wendy Darling.[31] Paltrow's next roles were in the made-for-television movies Cruel Doubt (1992) and Deadly Relations (1993).
Her first plum feature film role was in the noir drama Flesh and Bone (1993) as the much younger girlfriend of James Caan. Janet Maslin of The New York Times described Paltrow as a scene-stealer "who is Blythe Danner's daughter and has her mother's way of making a camera fall in love with her."[32]
In 1996, Paltrow played the title character in the period film adaptation Emma, based on the 1815 novel of the same name by Jane Austen. Director Douglas McGrath decided to bring in Paltrow to audition for the part of Emma Woodhouse, after a suggestion from his agent and after seeing her performance in Flesh and Bone.[36] On his decision to cast the actress, McGrath revealed: "The thing that actually sold me on her playing a young English girl was that she did a perfect Texas accent. I know that wouldn't recommend her to most people ... I knew she had theater training, so she could carry herself. We had many actresses, big and small, who wanted to play this part. The minute she started the read-through, the very first line, I thought, 'Everything is going to be fine; she's going to be brilliant.'"[36] While she recovered from wisdom-tooth surgery, Paltrow had a month to herself to do research for the part;[37] she studied horsemanship, dancing, singing, archery and the "highly stylized" manners and dialect during a 3-week rehearsal period.[37] The film was released to critical acclaim and commercial success through arthouse cinemas.[38]Variety proclaimed: "Gwyneth Paltrow shines brightly as Jane Austen's most endearing character, the disastrously self-assured matchmaker Emma Woodhouse. A fine cast, speedy pacing, and playful direction make this a solid contender for the Austen sweepstakes."[39] Paltrow starred in the crime film Hard Eight.[40]
1998 marked a turning point in Paltrow's career as she took on leading roles in five high-profile film releases in the year—Great Expectations, Sliding Doors, Hush, A Perfect Murder and Shakespeare in Love. In the adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel Great Expectations, also starring Ethan Hawke, Robert De Niro, Anne Bancroft and Chris Cooper, she played the unrequited and haughty childhood love of a New York City painter. The British drama Sliding Doors saw her star as a woman whose life could take two central paths depending on whether or not she catches a train, causing different outcomes. Great Expectations and Sliding Doors both grossed over $55 million worldwide.[41][42] Paltrow starred opposite Jessica Lange in the thriller Hush, as an unsuspecting woman living with her psychotic mother-in-law. The film made $13.5 million domestically and was generally panned by critics.[43][44] In another thriller, A Perfect Murder, inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's 1954 film, Dial M for Murder, Paltrow starred alongside Michael Douglas, playing Emily Taylor, who was based on Grace Kelly's character from the original film. Despite a mixed critical response towards A Perfect Murder, the film grossed $128 million globally.[45] She was also considered for the role of Rose DeWitt Bukater in the 1997 film Titanic.[46]
In 1999, Paltrow co-starred alongside Jude Law, Matt Damon and Cate Blanchett in the psychological thriller The Talented Mr. Ripley, as the fiancée of a rich and spoiled millionaire playboy (Law) whose identity is adopted by a con artist (Damon). While The Guardian, noting the "very underwritten" female roles in the story, found her to be "peaky and pallid",[53] the film received positive reviews and grossed $80 million in North America.[54] She showcased her singing ability in 2000s Duets, which was directed by her father and co-starred singer Huey Lewis. In the film, about "the little known world of karaoke competitions and the wayward characters who inhabit it", she portrayed the estranged daughter of a hustler (Lewis). She performed a cover version of Smokey Robinson's "Cruisin', which was released as a single and went to number one in Australia, while her rendition of the Kim Carnes classic "Bette Davis Eyes" reached number three.[55] Also in 2000, Paltrow co-starred with Ben Affleck in the moderately successful romantic drama Bounce as Abby Janello.
She starred with Jack Black in the comedy Shallow Hal (2001), about a shallow man falling in love with an overweight woman. Her role required that she wear a specially designed 25-pound fatsuit and heavy makeup. Shallow Hal opened with $22.5 million and grossed $70.7 million in North America and $141.1 million around the globe.[56]Roger Ebert remarked that she was "truly touching" in the film, which he described as "often very funny, but ... also surprisingly moving at times."[57] In the Wes Anderson dramedy The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), co-starring Gene Hackman, Anjelica Huston, Ben Stiller and Luke Wilson, Paltrow took on the role of the adopted daughter in an estranged family of former child prodigies reuniting with their father. A positive critical response greeted the film upon its release, and it made $71.4 million worldwide.[58]
2002–2007: Career fluctuations
In 2004, it was noted that since her Oscar win for Shakespeare in Love, Paltrow's film career had been less noteworthy, and critical acclaim had waned.[59] She said she was unequipped for the pressure, leading to several bad film choices,[60] agreeing with peers who believe the win is, in some ways, a curse.[61] During this time, Paltrow rarely appeared in films, having taken a hiatus to raise her two children.[25] In The Guardian, she said she divided her career into movies for love and films for money: The Royal Tenenbaums, Proof, and Sylvia fell into the former category, while she signed on to View from the Top and Shallow Hal for the latter.[29]
In 2002, Paltrow made small appearances in the documentary Searching for Debra Winger and the action satire comedy Austin Powers in Goldmember, while she starred in the thriller-drama Possession with Aaron Eckhart as a couple of literary scholars who unearth the amorous secret of two Victorian poets as they find themselves falling under a deepening connection. The film made a lukewarm $14.8 million worldwide.[62] In the following year, she headlined the romantic comedy View from the Top, where she played the part of a woman from a small town who sets out to fulfill her dream of becoming a flight attendant. Budgeted at $30 million, the film only earned $7 million in its opening weekend; it eventually grossed $15.6 domestically and $19,526,014 worldwide.[63] She later disparaged the film, calling it "terrible".[64] Paltrow starred as the titular role in Sylvia (2003), a British biographical drama directed by Christine Jeffs and co-starring Daniel Craig chronicling the romance between prominent poets Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes. Distributed for a limited release in most markets, Sylvia made $2.9 million internationally.[65]The New York Times, in its review of the film, wrote that "her performance goes well beyond mimicry. She has a vivid, passionate presence, even when her lively features have gone slack with depression and her bright blue eyes have glazed over."[66]
In 2004, she starred with her The Talented Mr. Ripley co-star Jude Law and Angelina Jolie in the science fiction film Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow. Her role was Polly Perkins, the reporter for the fictional New York Chronicle. Law became one of the film's producers and used his clout to get Paltrow involved. Once she had been suggested for the role, Law did not remember "any other name coming up. It just seems that she was perfect. She was as enthusiastic about the script and about the visual references that were sort of put to her, and jumped on board."[67] She said in an interview, "I thought that this is the time to do a movie like this where it's kind of breaking into new territory and it's not your basic formulaic action-adventure movie."[67] While critical response was positive, with a budget of $70 million, Sky Captain only grossed $58 million at the international box office.[68] Also in 2004, she was recognized as an outstanding woman in entertainment by Women in Film Los Angeles with the Crystal Award.[69]
In the drama Proof (2005), she starred as the depressed daughter of a brilliant, eccentric mathematician (played by Anthony Hopkins). The film was based on the play of the same name, in which Paltrow also played the same character at London's Donmar Warehouse between May and June 2002. On her portrayal in the film version, Eye for Film remarked: "As she has already shown in Sylvia, The Royal Tenenbaums and even Sliding Doors, Paltrow has an uncanny talent for playing women who are coming apart at the seams and her [character] veers from lovably eccentric to more disturbingly unhinged and back again with fluent ease. The scenes, which she and Hopkins share, as two difficult people bound together by affection, dependency, and mutual respect, are entirely believable and all the more touching for it."[70] For her performance, Paltrow received her second Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama.
Paltrow saw a resurgence in her career in 2008 when she was cast in Iron Man as Pepper Potts, Tony Stark's personal assistant, closest friend, and budding love interest.[73] At first hesitant to appear in a big-budget project, Paltrow asked Marvel to send her any comics they would consider relevant to her understanding of the character, whom she considered to be very smart, levelheaded, and grounded. She said she liked "the fact that there's a sexuality that's not blatant". The director Jon Favreau wanted Potts and Stark's relationship to be reminiscent of the 1940s screwball comedy, something which Paltrow considered to be fun in an "innocent yet sexy" way.[74]Iron Man was favorably received by critics, and with a worldwide gross of $585 million, it became Paltrow's highest-grossing film until The Avengers (2012).[75] She reprised her role in the sequels Iron Man 2 (2010) and Iron Man 3 (2013). While the second film grossed $623.9 million internationally,[76] the third entry went on to gross $1.215 billion.[77] She also reprised the role in Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017), Avengers: Infinity War (2018), and Avengers: Endgame (2019).
Paltrow starred opposite Joaquin Phoenix in the romantic drama Two Lovers (2008), playing the beautiful but volatile new neighbor of a depressed bachelor. Two Lovers premiered in competition at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival in May, receiving largely positive reviews,[78][79] especially for Paltrow's and Phoenix's performances. According to the Los Angeles Times, "Phoenix is at his best with Paltrow's bruised sparrow of a girl; he's desperate to take care of her when he can't even take care of himself. She is one of those actresses who understands the power of a look, and the one of regret and then resignation that overtakes her when Leonard professes his love is steeped in sadness."[80] The film was an arthouse success, grossing $16 million worldwide.[81]
In the musical drama Country Strong (2010), Paltrow starred as an emotionally unstable country music star who attempts to resurrect her career. She recorded the song "Country Strong" for the film's soundtrack,[82] and it was released to country radio stations in August 2010.[83] The film received mediocre reviews and grossed a modest $20.2 million in North America.[84] The consensus of review-aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes was: "The cast gives it their all, and Paltrow handles her songs with aplomb, but Country Strong's clichéd, disjointed screenplay hits too many bum notes."[85] At the 83rd Academy Awards, Paltrow performed another song from the film, "Coming Home", which was nominated for Best Original Song.[86]
Paltrow reprised her role of Pepper Potts in The Avengers (2012), which set numerous box office records, including the biggest opening weekend in North America; it grossed over $1.5 billion worldwide, becoming Paltrow's most widely seen film.[98] Also in 2012, she starred in the independent romantic dramedyThanks for Sharing, opposite Mark Ruffalo as people learning to face a challenging and confusing road as they struggle together against sex addiction. Distributed for a limited release in certain parts of the United States, the film garnered mixed reviews and grossed $1 million domestically.[99]Paste magazine noted that her role: "...exhibits some of the same obsessive diet and exercise habits that Paltrow herself has been accused of—a kind of meta character trait that balances the power in [the main roles'] budding relationship."[100]
2014–present: Acting sporadically
In 2014, Paltrow had a two-episode arc in the improvised online series Web Therapy, as Maya Ganesh, "a new-age caricature".[101] In 2015, she starred in Mortdecai,[102] alongside Johnny Depp, Olivia Munn, and Paul Bettany. In it, she portrayed the wife of an unscrupulous art dealer and swindler (Depp). Budgeted at $60 million, the film only grossed $7.7 million in North America and $47.3 million internationally.[103] Paltrow was featured on the track "Everglow", which was included in Coldplay's seventh studio album A Head Full of Dreams (2015).[104]
In June 2017, Paltrow announced that she would take a break from acting to focus on her business Goop, stating: "I'm still going to do a little bit here and there, but [the company] really requires almost all of my time."[105] In 2019, Paltrow reprised her role as Pepper Potts in Avengers: Endgame.[106] That same year, she played a supporting role in the Netflixcomedy drama series The Politician, playing the mother of Ben Platt's character.[107] In October 2021, Netflix released Sex, Love, and Goop, a sex therapy-themed series produced by and starring Paltrow.[108]
In 2023 Paltrow said that her responsibilities with Goop made her less likely to accept acting roles, stating, "Well, it would be very hard for me to do any acting right at the moment, just because of my job. But, I guess Robert Downey Jr. could probably always get me back. You know, to some degree."[109][110] Paltrow will return to acting with Josh Safdie's sports drama Marty Supreme, starring Timothée Chalamet.[111]
In April 2020, Paltrow, along with other celebrities, discussed the COVID-19 pandemic with Dr. Anthony Fauci on a one-hour-long zoom call. Fauci hoped the celebrities would use their social media "megaphones" to encourage proper precautions among their followers.[116][117]
In May 2005, Paltrow became the face of Estée Lauder's Pleasures perfume. She appeared in Chicago on August 17, 2007, to sign bottles of the perfume, and on July 8, 2008, she promoted Lauder's Sensuous perfume in New York with the company's three other models.[120] Estée Lauder donates a minimum of $500,000 of sales of items from the 'Pleasures Gwyneth Paltrow' collection to breast cancer research.[121] In 2006, she became the face for Bean Pole International, a Korean fashion brand and in 2014, she partnered with Blo Blow Bar, teaming up with the brand's creative branch.[122]
In September 2008, Paltrow launched the weekly lifestyle newsletter Goop, encouraging readers to "nourish the inner aspect".[123] Goop has expanded into a web-based company, Goop.com. According to Paltrow, the company's name came from someone telling her that successful internet companies have double O's in their name,[124] and "is a nickname, like my name is G.P., so that is really where it came from. And I wanted it to be a word that means nothing and could mean anything."[125] Goop has expanded into e-commerce, collaborating with fashion brands, launching pop-up shops,[126] launching a wellness summit,[127] a print magazine,[128] a podcast,[129] and a documentary series streamed on Netflix.[130]
Goop, and by extension Paltrow, have faced backlash for showcasing expensive products[131] and promoting medically and scientifically impossible treatments, many of which have harmful consequences. The controversies have included vaginal steaming,[132] the use of jade eggs,[133][134] a dangerous coffee enema device,[135][136] and "Body Vibes", wearable stickers that were claimed to "rebalance the energy frequency in our bodies" and which Goop falsely claimed were made of a NASA-developed material.[137][138] Goop settled a lawsuit regarding the health claims it made over the jade eggs.[139]
On January 27, 2020, Truth in Advertising watchdog (TINA.org) filed another[a] complaint with the district attorneys of California alleging that Goop has continued to engage in deceptive marketing,[155] even after Goop was sued by the State of California earlier that year and agreed to refrain from "making any claims regarding the efficacy or effects of any of its products without possessing competent and reliable scientific evidence that substantiates the claims" for a period of five years.[156] TINA.org's complaint alleges that Goop claims their products are "clinically-proven" to treat such symptoms as anxiety, depression, OCD and more.
In January 2021, it was announced that Paltrow was an early investor in Thirteen Lune, an e-commerce site focused on makeup, skincare, haircare, and wellness products owned by people of color and ally brands.[157] In April 2021, Goop became Thirteen Lune's first ally brand.[158]
In October 2007, Paltrow signed with PBS to make a television series, Spain... on the Road Again, which showcased the food and culture of Spain.[159] In 2008, Paltrow co-wrote the book Spain... A Culinary Road Trip with Mario Batali.[160] In 2011, she wrote a book titled My Father's Daughter: Delicious, Easy Recipes Celebrating Family and Togetherness.[161] That same year she penned the book Notes From the Kitchen Table.[162] Two years later she published a book titled It's All Good: Delicious Easy Recipes That Will Make You Look Good and Feel Great, which promoted an elimination diet that is unsupported by medical evidence.[163] Included in that book was a recipe for avocado toast which was widely copied and adapted as part of a 2010s food trend.[164] Also in 2013, Paltrow wrote a foreword for a book by Ross Mathews, Man Up! Tales of My Delusional Self-Confidence. In 2016, Paltrow published a cookbook: It's All Easy: Delicious Weekday Recipes for the Super-Busy Home Cook.[165]
In February 2021 it was reported that Paltrow was suffering from long COVID, leaving her with "some long-tail fatigue and brain fog". She advocated treatments for it which involved a "ketogenic and plant-based" diet (with no sugar or alcohol), fasting until 11:00 every day, and taking infrared saunas. This advice was criticized by NHS England's Professor Stephen Powis.[167]
In 1997, Paltrow revealed that during the filming of Emma (1996), producer Harvey Weinstein made unwanted sexual advances toward her. She confided in her fiancé Brad Pitt, who confronted the producer at an industry event. Weinstein later warned Paltrow not to tell anyone else.[173] She was, in 2017, a major source for an article written by The New York Times investigative journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey about Weinstein's sexual abuse cases.[174]
Paltrow has received backlash from the scientific community and medical professionals for promoting unproven treatments based on pseudoscience through her company Goop.[175][176]
Relationships and marriages
Paltrow became engaged in December 1996 to actor Brad Pitt, whom she dated from 1994 to 1997.[27] According to Paltrow, they called off the engagement because she was not ready for marriage.[177] She later said that, as this was her first high-profile relationship with another celebrity, it taught her the need for public discretion about her love life.[178]
Paltrow began dating actor Ben Affleck in October 1997 after meeting at a Miramax dinner and they worked together on Shakespeare in Love (1998). Although they split in January 1999, months later Paltrow persuaded Affleck to co-star with her in Bounce (2000) and they rekindled their relationship.[179][180] They broke up for good in October 2000.[181] In 2015, Paltrow said she and Affleck remain friends.[179]
In October 2002, Paltrow met Chris Martin of the British band Coldplay backstage three weeks after the death of her father, Bruce Paltrow. The Coldplay song "Fix You" was written to help Paltrow through her grief. They married on December 5, 2003, at the Santa Barbara County Courthouse. She was pregnant at the time of their wedding.[182] Paltrow and Martin have two children together: a daughter, Apple, born in May 2004,[183][184] and a son, Moses, born in April 2006.[185][186][187] Their son's name was inspired by a song Chris Martin wrote for Paltrow. Simon Pegg and Martin's bandmate Jonny Buckland are her daughter's godfathers.[188]
Paltrow cut down on work after becoming a mother.[189] She also suffered from postpartum depression after the birth of her younger child in 2006.[190] In March 2014, Paltrow announced that she and Martin had separated after ten years of marriage, describing the process as "conscious uncoupling".[191][192][193] In her official announcement, Paltrow had her doctor, Habib Sadeghi, and his dentist wife, Sherry Sami, explain conscious uncoupling as "the ability to understand that every irritation and argument [within a marriage] was a signal to look inside ourselves and identify a negative internal object that needed healing," Sadeghi explained. "From this perspective, there are no bad guys, just two people, it's about people as individuals, not just the relationship".[194] In April 2015, Paltrow filed for divorce,[195] which was finalized on July 14, 2016.
In 2014, Paltrow began dating producer Brad Falchuk, whom she met on the set of Glee in 2010. The couple went public with their relationship in April 2015[196] and announced their engagement on January 8, 2018.[197] Their marriage ceremony was held on September 29, 2018, in the Hamptons on Long Island, New York.[198]
Ski crash lawsuit
In January 2019, retired optometrist Terry Sanderson sued Paltrow, claiming that three years earlier she collided with him on a ski slope at Deer Valley Resort in Park City, Utah, causing him permanent traumatic brain injury.[199] Paltrow counter-sued Sanderson that February, claiming that he was the one who crashed into her. She sought nominal damages of one dollar and repayment of her legal fees.[200][201] At trial in March 2023, Sanderson claimed damages for $300,000. The jury found that Paltrow was not at fault, Sanderson was at fault, and awarded Paltrow $1 in damages.[202][203][204]
The lawsuit was depicted in two separate musicals, I Wish You Well: The Gwyneth Paltrow Ski-Trial Musical and Gwyneth Goes Skiing.[205]
Public image
As an actress, Paltrow performed in mainly small and medium-budget films for most of her early career,[206] starring in few blockbusters until 2004's Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow.[207] According to Charles Taylor of Salon, much of these performances were defined by a "blasé" demeanor that made her endearing at times, but overall demonstrated "a promising actress who needed some training to refine her potential".[207] Similarly, Jose Solis of PopMatters said "When she’s good, she’s absolutely brilliant, when she’s bad, she just seems deeply uninterested".[208] Many of her characters were wealthy, privileged, and academic,[209] and she was often labeled "Hollywood royalty" by the press.[210][211][212] Many viewers mistook her as British due to her regular roles as ingénues in period films,[208] and some publications have described her feigned British accent as one of the best among non-British actors.[213][214][215][216] She was frequently compared to actress Grace Kelly,[208][217] with whom she shared "blondness, refinement, glacial good looks and all-round star quality", according to The Independent.[218]
Christina Newland of BBC said Paltrow used her roles throughout the 1990s to cultivate "an image off and on-screen ... as a chic social butterfly with charm to spare".[219] She also established herself as a fashion icon,[207][220] becoming recognized for her minimal style of dressing for public events.[221][222][223] In April 2013, Paltrow was named People magazine's annual "Most Beautiful Woman".[224] Film critic Owen Gleiberman described Paltrow as one of the industry's finest actresses in 2011.[25] He was perplexed by readers' negative comments towards her on his reviews of her work, but agreed that her reputation had suffered from a selection of weaker roles and reduced workload.[25] Critic Wesley Morris defended her acting, calling Paltrow among the final generation of movie stars "for whom stardom and skill seem scarily, thrillingly natural" and "for a while, the best young American actor in Hollywood".[209] Paltrow herself has stated that her passion for acting waned early in her career due to the scrutiny she received as a young actress,[225] with Morris theorizing that she pivoted away from acting towards an industry she could exercise complete autonomy over.[209] In 2019, she claimed to have been only "masquerading as an actor" before founding Goop.[226][227]
"There is something so absurd about Paltrow's image that it seems almost to transcend the disdain you might expect to be levelled at her for such flagrant unworldliness. To many, she's such a caricature of privilege, doing things that are so glossily removed from ordinary life, that she seems to have become a source of amused, even affectionate fascination".
—Christina Newland, BBC
Paltrow has been described as a polarizing and divisive public figure by the media for much her career.[228][229][230] Although generally revered as an actress, her subsequent career endeavors as a businesswoman have garnered mixed reviews.[227] Taylor wrote in 2004 that "No star of the last 10 years has been such a magnet for the neuroses and prejudices of those who watch her than Paltrow", which the author surmised as due to her being "rich, white, beautiful and successful".[207] In 2023, Leanne Delap, a writer for Everything Zoomer, called her "one of the most divisive personages of our time", equally beloved and hated.[231] Many of her remarks regarding diet, health, wellness, and wealth have drawn public backlash and mockery,[232][233][234][229] which some critics have used to justify dismissing her as a privileged and "out of touch" celebrity.[235] Paltrow has attributed the public's discourse surrounding her to the perception that her success hinges exclusively on the achievements and wealth of her parents, which she has attempted to dispel in interviews.[236][237] The actress also maintains that the public's shift in favor against her can be traced back to the moment she delivered an emotional acceptance speech when she won her Oscar for Shakespeare in Love in 1998.[238] Journalist Hadley Freeman believes Paltrow is completely in control of how she is perceived, describing her as a performer who has ingeniously cultivated an overexposed image that allows her career to benefit from being a parody of the modern-day celebrity.[239]
According to entertainment journalist Dylan Howard, "Inevitably, in a saga of Hollywood, people identify with either the sympathetic character or the villain ... When it comes to Gwyneth Paltrow, she's both the villain and sympathetic figure".[230] Describing her as "successful, opinionated and seemingly happy" in 2013, journalist Tanya Gold attributed her unpopularity – particularly among women – to her "venturing beyond the accepted Hollywood script and expressing her thoughts about clothing, motherhood and nutrition".[240] Some journalists theorized that Paltrow's brand and reputation benefited from the sympathy she gained during the ski crash trials, as reported by Edward Helmore of The Guardian.[233][238][241]The Independent said "The very trial that threatened to harm her reputation — one that has not been exempt from its fair amount of controversies over questionable advice ... ultimately invigorated the Hollywood actor’s image in the court of public opinion".[241] However, Alex Abad-Santos of Vox argued that, rather than seek sympathy or relatability, Paltrow embraced the stereotypes her detractors had long accused her of perpetuating, ultimately to her own benefit.[242] Paltrow's penchant for wearing understated luxury-brand clothing during the trial also received widespread coverage,[243] inspiring a trend known as "courtcore", as coined by The New York Times fashion journalist Vanessa Friedman.[244]
In a 2021 article for Vogue, Keaton Bell defined her as "one of our last, true A-listers" whose "every move consumes daily headlines", observing that she "is now better known as a fabulously out-of-touch entrepreneur than an actor, and she seems perfectly fine with that".[245] In 2023, EJ Dickson of Rolling Stone reported that Paltrow had largely rehabilitated her image by "lean[ing] into her own image as an out-of-touch celebutante", becoming "regularly heralded as a scrappy, savvy, self-made entrepreneur".[232] Newland agreed that "in today's relentlessly critical social media discourse, many find her schtick so over-the-top that they can't help but find it entertaining".[219] According to Charles Trepany of USA Today, Paltrow's "calm, unbothered demeanor" had become virtually synonymous with her brand and public image by 2024.[246]
Paltrow, Gwyneth (2019). The Clean Plate: Eat, Reset, Heal. Photographs: Ditte Isager. New York: Goop Press, Grand Central Life & Style. ISBN9781538730461. OCLC1089896843.
Sadeghi, Habib (2017). The Clarity Cleanse: 12 Steps to Finding Renewed Energy, Spiritual Fulfillment and Emotional Healing. Foreword: Gwyneth Paltrow. New York: Goop Press, Grand Central Life & Style. ISBN978-1455542246. OCLC982093512.
^"Hollywood celebrity finds family links in Barbados". The Barbados Advocate. March 31, 2011. Archived from the original on January 19, 2012. Retrieved April 4, 2011. The blurb for Friday's episode explains: "Gwyneth Paltrow digs into her family's past and finds a surprising connection to her spiritual roots, a new appreciation for her great-grandmother and ancestors on the island of Barbados."
^"Giffords is 1st female Jew elected from Ariz". Arizona Daily Star. March 4, 2007. Archived from the original on October 13, 2018. Retrieved January 9, 2011. Gabrielle Giffords' [paternal] grandmother and Gwyneth Paltrow's late [paternal] grandfather were brother and sister.
^ abBrockes, Emma (January 27, 2006). "Where the heart is". The Guardian. London, UK. Archived from the original on July 25, 2008. Retrieved May 4, 2010.
^Berardinelli, James (September 29, 1995). "Moonlight and Valentino". reelviews.net. Archived from the original on February 24, 2021. Retrieved July 26, 2012.
^Owen Gleiberman (December 11, 1998). "Shakespeare in Love review". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on November 5, 2019. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
^Janet Maslin (December 11, 1998). "Shakespeare Saw a Therapist?". The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 7, 2013. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
^Morris, Bob (February 22, 2009). "Martha, Oprah ... Gwyneth?". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 7, 2020. Retrieved July 7, 2017.
^Wilde, Val (January 20, 2020). "Gwyneth Paltrow's "The Goop Lab" Is Unscientific Garbage. Then It Gets Worse". Patheos.com. Patheos. Archived from the original on January 21, 2020. Retrieved January 20, 2020. Netflix and Gwyneth Paltrow have entered into an unholy alliance and spawned The Goop Lab, a (purported) health and wellness docu-series set for release on January 24.
^Wilson, Clare (January 17, 2020). "Goop Lab on Netflix shows how easy it is to fall for bad science". Newscientist.com. New Scientist. Archived from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2020. Still, Goop was valued at a quarter of a billion dollars in 2018, so Paltrow has clearly found an effective business model. She was quoted in The New York Times as saying that controversies just led to more people visiting her website, letting her "monetise those eyeballs". It's hard not to suspect that criticism of The Goop Lab won't bother Paltrow one bit.
^Miller, Matthew (March 19, 2018). "'Science Moms,' a documentary on 'fact-based parenting,' to screen at MSU". Lansingstatejournal.com. Lansing State Journal. Archived from the original on September 15, 2023. Retrieved March 21, 2018. It was 2015. Paltrow and company had filmed a video pushing for mandatory labeling of food made with genetically modified organisms. A group of women scientists, science writers and farmers decided to respond.
^ abGelles, David (March 6, 2019). "Gwyneth Paltrow Is All Business". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 11, 2023. Retrieved April 4, 2024. As an actress, Gwyneth Paltrow was embraced by fans and critics, winning an Oscar for her leading role in 'Shakespeare in Love'. As a businesswoman, Ms. Paltrow has received decidedly mixed reviews.
^ abMurphy, Chris (May 4, 2023). "Gwyneth Paltrow Says the Public Turned on Her After Her Oscar Win". Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on June 2, 2023. Retrieved April 2, 2024. after Paltrow's spectacular 2023 ski trial—where she was awarded $1 after a court decided that she was not liable in an accident—it seems that she's decidedly back in the public's good graces.