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12 Celebrity Couples You Forgot Divorced Each Other


Celebrities marry and divorce at a rate faster than us mere mortals. Why this is remains unclear. What’s cooking in Hollywood that makes so many people want to tie the knot before barely learning their partner’s last name? It happens so often that you may’ve forgotten about a few A-list unions that were short-lived. We all know about Jennifer Garner‘s marriage to Ben Affleck, but did you know she was also married to Scandal heartthrob Scott Foley once upon a time? Or how about Kim Kardashian’s first marriage, which, nope, wasn’t to Kris Humphries? The list goes on. Check out these 12 short-lived celeb marriages you probably forgot all about, then check out Glamour.com’s weeklong series on modern divorce.



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My Parents Divorced at the Same Time as Brad and Jen—and Yes, There Was an Angelina


They were an impossibly good-looking couple, forever rocking micro-shades, twinning with their similarly bronzed skin and early-aughts cool. Their divorce—and the woman who was rumored to have caused it—rocked the community. I’m not referring to Jennifer Aniston and Brad Pitt. I’m talking about my parents and their scandalous separation.

My mother and father first split when I was 10 years old, in 2003. They told me it was amicable, that it wasn’t my fault, that they’d always be my parents. But their split was messy. For the first two years, they still lived in the same house. They dabbled in couples therapy, slept in separate rooms, and took turns having nights out with their single friends (dad’s night out was always Thursday, mom got the Tuesday shift). It wasn’t until 2005 that my father moved out and I realized what we were dealing with was more than just a new sleeping arrangement—that their break up was the real deal.

Then, as luck would have it, a certain celebrity—one that could be classified as the most famous in the world at the time—announced her own divorce, right as my parents began proceedings on theirs, forever tethering two conscious uncouplings in my mind.

I’d always loved Jennifer Aniston and considered myself a for-real fan. I was also nine years old and alarmingly invested in her marriage to Brad Pitt. Exhibit A: The letter to I wrote to Jen in 2002, saying, “Please tell your husband that I thought he did a very good job in Ocean’s Eleven and that it was one of my favorite movies.” I loved that, in her wedding vows, she promised to always make Brad’s favorite banana milkshake, that he made a cameo on Friends as the president of the “I Hate Rachel Green Club,” that they always showed up to red carpets looking like the all-American golden couple they were.

So when they broke up, I was stunned. But when I found out why they broke up, I was really stunned. The Jennifer Aniston, Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie alleged love triangle was my first glimpse of infidelity. And as the tabloids chronicled every single facet of the relationship’s demise (with vile headlines that often alluded to rumors about Jen’s unwillingness or inability to have children). I started to piece together the rumblings I’d been hearing in my own household, the whispers from all of the adults in my life. It was the inescapable and addictive news coverage of Jen, Brad, and Angelina that made me realize the glaringly obvious fact that my parent’s marriage had ended in a similar fashion.

Brad Pitt And Jennifer Aniston Soon To Wed

PHOTO: Dan Callister

It didn’t take long for the media’s obsession with the end of the golden couple to turn into a full-on Jen vs. Angie feeding frenzy. Every tabloid pitted them against each other, and retailers like early 2000s celebrity-favorite, Kitson, sold “Team Aniston,” and “Team Jolie” shirts—most famously worn by Paris and Nicky Hilton on L.A.’s Robertson Boulevard.

It was this narrative—these two women as eternal mortal enemies—that both the press and I clung to. In my mind, my mother became Jennifer Aniston: the scorned girl next door. And my father’s new girlfriend, with her belly button piercing, skimpy clothing, and wild mane, became a stand-in for Angelina. So I swore loyalty to my mother and Team Aniston, opted out of seeing Mr. and Mrs. Smith, and cursed Angie’s name when the W spread of Brangelina playing house hit newsstands.

And it stayed that way for years. I saw The Breakup opening weekend, every time someone praised Angelina’s philanthropic work I retorted that she was a homewrecker. Obviously, I knew nothing of the situation other than what the rags were reporting, yet I stood by Jen despite a few questionable romantic choices (John Mayer? Really?). In my real life, I grew older and even closer to my mother as I continued to keep my distance from my Angie and held tight to the vision of my parents’ divorce I’d stolen from the headlines years prior.

2009 Cannes Film Festival - Inglourious Basterds Premiere

PHOTO: Jean Baptiste Lacroix

Then something funny happened. In 2016, Brangelina parted ways. At first, I was thrilled. Remember that New York Post cover that came out with Jen laughing about their separation announcement? That was my reaction, except I was laughing even harder. But then it didn’t take long for the rumors to emerge that their split was prompted by Brad’s on-set affair with French actress Marion Cotillard while filming another sexy spy flick, Allied. Though it seemingly proved to be nothing other than gossip, it struck an emerging-feminist nerve: During all my years of anger, there were two people I was never mad at: Brad and my father.

As a young girl who loved (and still absolutely loves) her dad, the tale of Brangelina provided me with the perfect way to avoid assigning my father any blame. It made the women in my father’s life the center of the drama, absolving him of any misdoing. Much like how, in the media, we were all so obsessed with the Jen and Angie feud, that Brad got out of it nearly unscathed. In all the T-shirt making, where was the “Team Fuck Brad” top?

But with the demise of Brangelina, I no longer felt vindicated. I just felt sad. This was a real marriage that ended, and all the press could do was start circulating “will they or won’t they” articles about a Brad and Jen reconciliation. I no longer found comfort in the narrative the media had created, instead I was outraged, that these women’s pain was made into the story of the ages. And I was angry at myself, for deriving so much pleasure from it.

While the media hasn’t retired the lonely ex versus the hot replacement girlfriend storyline, as women in Hollywood come together to say Time’s Up, they’re also calling bullshit on this narrative. Take Olivia Munn and Anna Faris, who didn’t let themselves become Jen and Angie take two after Anna’s divorce from Chris Pratt. When rumors swirled Olivia and Chris were having an affair, she posted an Instagram text exchange with Anna and captioned it, “Not every woman is scorned and upset after a breakup,” Munn wrote. “Not every woman is ‘furious’ at another woman for dating her ex…So even if I was dating [Chris], some tabloids got me and [Anna] all wrong…women respect and love each other a lot more than some people like to think.” But it’s not the women’s responsibility to dispel the rumors, it’s society’s obligation to wake up and realize that pitting women against women is a bad look—plain and simple.

So I’m sorry, Angelina, and Jen, too, for perpetuating a story you never chose to be a part of, and were never given the opportunity to excuse yourselves from. I’m on both your teams.





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My Number One Skincare Tip? Get Divorced.


After peaking during the 1970s and ’80s, much has been made of the fact that divorce rates are now on the decline—especially among millennials. Still, if you’re thinking about splitting with your spouse, or you have already, sunny statistics aren’t exactly useful. Throughout this weeklong series, Glamour.com explores what it means to uncouple in a modern world.

・・・・・

The first step is to just lie down. You can deal with the rest of it—the moving, the lawyers, the what do I do with these old letters—later, but for now you should just lie down.

Then, put one of these over your eyes. That’s better, isn’t it. You don’t have to see or think, just lie down somewhere with a blue gel pack on your eyes and see how that feels. Dig into it: consider an acupressure mat—one of those “maybe wellness, maybe nothing” purchases that works for me, for some reason, and that I now love. Look, now you can lie down on the little spike bed and cool your eyes off. This is where your post-divorce skincare journey begins.

After you’ve been on the ground for 7 to 12 days, it is time to focus your attention on looking and feeling better. Start by sinking deeper into your post-breakup depression. (Life hack: the fast track to a glow up is looking very bad for a few weeks prior.) Throw your mascara in the garbage, it is months if not years over its expiration date, and besides, you can’t bat your lashes at Nick Kroll through your laptop, much though you wish it were so. Rustle up some breakouts with a few Night Burgers (regular burgers, ordered at 4 a.m.). Nurture dark circles by lurking on Instagram in the wee hours. Stop drinking water for four days or so.

Then run into an acquaintance at the store and tell them you’re “having a hard time, but I know I’m going to figure it out… I’m reading a lot of books.” Recommend The Four Agreements, buy some coconut oil, whimper the word “self-care,” and get the hell out of there.

When you get home, look in the mirror. You might feel a deep melancholy. You might feel you’ve lost years of your life. “If only I had access to some kind of time machine, or whatever potion was responsible for Benjamin Button,” you might say. Well: Benjamin Button actually had a rare disease; educate yourself. And if you got a time machine we all know you’d have to mostly use it to hunt down Hitler as an infant, so turning back the clock is not an option.

Steam your face over a pot of hot spaghetti then scream into the rain. It can be very hydrating!

What you can do: adopt a 10-step Korean skincare routine. Learn what an essence is (this is a nice one), experiment with emulsions (this, here), and buy a few ampoules, because why not? Put a sheet mask on and get in the bath, a variant on “just lying down” that makes you seem like a much more together woman. Remember that coconut oil that seemed like a good idea at the time? It was. Throw some of that in there, plus a few drops of whatever essential oils you have lying around. The time-consuming nature of this routine will take up all that extra time you have after making dinner now that you’re cooking for one.

Over the next few months, your skin will appear plumper and more luminous, and your psychic and emotional wounds will begin to heal. You might even consider applying highlighter again. You will do a few adult education classes and probably get a bit into horoscopes. You will go for long walks with your mom and let your friends cook for you. You will start to sleep better, and you will drop a few steps of your 10-step skincare routine. (Ampoules tend to be the first to go.) You will know you’re ready to download Tinder when you have winnowed the process down to a single cleanse, tone, serum, and moisturizer.

At this point, you should feel free to supplement with some non-traditional skincare solutions: Not many dermatologists will tell you this, but serums actually absorb better if you’re listening to the finale from The Last Five Years on repeat for the twelfth time. Space out your product applications by consuming one to three glasses of red wine between each step. Steam your face over a pot of hot spaghetti. Have a small relapse into sadness and scream into the rain. It can be very hydrating!

Soon, it’ll be time to add a new product: sunscreen. Previously irrelevant, you’re a free woman now. You deserve to walk in the light without fear of free radicals, sun spots, or the chance of bumping into someone from your past at the café.

Of course you’re going to relapse, I’m sorry. You’ll probably even start double-cleansing again, and that’s okay. If you get the urge to call your ex, or worse, run to them, consider these hand and foot masks, which should keep you immobile until the urge passes. Once your hands and feet are silky smooth and you’ve deleted that intense email you’ve been not-quite-sending but drunkenly editing for many months, it’s time to add a new product: sunscreen. Previously irrelevant as it was impossible to leave the house during daylight hours (hard and risky; he could be anywhere), you’re a free woman now. You deserve to walk in the light without fear of free radicals, sun spots, or the chance of bumping into someone from your past at the café.

One day you’ll have such a good date you’ll forget to wash your face after. Or you’ll be out with friends and things will feel so good and so normal and so easy, you’ll get a bit wild on martinis and pass out in your makeup. Or you’ll wake up in a new person’s bed for the third time in a week and think “I really have to start stockpiling Sephora samples to keep in my purse.” You’ll splash yourself with cold water and brush your teeth with your index finger. Next week, when you get pimples all over your chin from making out too much, that someone will think it’s charming, and you’ll decide you agree. Anyway, when you get home, just wash your face and use Good Genes when the mood strikes. That’s basically all that works, anyway.

Monica Heisey is a Toronto-based screenwriter best known for her work on Schitt’s Creek, the Baroness Von Sketch Show, and Gary and His Demons.



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