
Three women entered a stage at PaleyFest LA earlier this month and took a seat to discuss a television program that ended forty-five years ago. Charlie’s Angels was the program. The women were 80-year-old Jaclyn Smith, 77-year-old Kate Jackson, and 74-year-old Cheryl Ladd. They were all wearing business-casual blazers and pantsuits, and they were grinning for the cameras in a room that most likely smelled like the unique blend of perfume and anxious energy that comes with any high-profile Hollywood reunion. By most accounts, the exchange was cordial. During the event, Ladd disclosed that she was receiving treatment for an aggressive type of breast cancer. After the pictures were posted online, the focus of the discussion shifted almost entirely to the appearance of their faces.
The response was quick and, in some cases, cruel. One commenter asked, “Who the hell is who?” “I don’t recognize them at all,” another person remarked. “They don’t look like themselves.” It was implied that three women had undergone plastic surgery to the point where they were unrecognizable. This was repeated in social media threads with the assurance of people who have never looked at a photograph in a clinical setting. It’s a predictable response that isn’t wholly incorrect, but it tends to reduce a complex situation to a straightforward conclusion and ignores the more intriguing question of what actually transpired and how much of it was done correctly.
| Full Name | Cheryl Jean Stoppelmoor (Cheryl Ladd) |
| Date of Birth | July 12, 1951 (age 74) |
| Birthplace | Huron, South Dakota, USA |
| Profession | Actress, Singer, Author |
| Known For | Kris Munroe in Charlie’s Angels (1977–1981), Purple Hearts, Las Vegas (TV series) |
| Years Active | 1970 – present |
| Spouse(s) | David Ladd (1973–1980); Brian Russell (1981–present) |
| Health (2026) | Revealed breast cancer diagnosis at PaleyFest LA 2026 (recovering) |
| Rumored Procedures | Botox, fillers, rhinoplasty, possible facelift & brow lift (unconfirmed) |
| Expert Assessment | Likely combining surgical work with non-invasive treatments (Dr. Ramtin Kassir) |
To examine the photos, Dr. Ramtin Kassir, a triple board-certified celebrity facial plastic surgeon who hasn’t worked on any of the women, was called in. According to his assessment, Cheryl Ladd, in particular, falls somewhere between Jaclyn Smith’s surgical restraint and Kate Jackson’s relatively unaltered appearance. She probably combines ongoing non-invasive treatments with actual surgery to preserve both skin quality and facial contour. He presented it as a compromise. Not the most aggressive, nor the most conservative. The type of outcome that implies continuous upkeep instead of a single, significant intervention at some point during the previous ten years. Additionally, he made a point that is often overlooked in these discussions: the moment you overfill, you lose identity, and that’s when faces start to look fake. That observation serves as both a warning and a diagnosis.
The founder of La Femme Plastic Surgery, Dr. Rachel Mason, examined the same photos and noted a few noteworthy areas. With fuller, raised cheekbones and less hollowing under the eyes, the midface looked smoother and more structurally supported than natural aging would normally permit. The definition of the lower face and jawline was consistent with lower-face lifting techniques such as deep-plane facelifts. She added that Ladd and Jackson seemed to have had a brow lift, which, when done skillfully, raises the brow position and softens the resting expression in a way that reads alert rather than surprised. Both surgeons are using photos instead of patient records, and none of this is verified. However, the observations are specific enough to be taken seriously.
It’s difficult to ignore how the public discourse on this differs from what it most likely felt like on the inside. Ladd has been in Hollywood since 1970. She moved to Los Angeles as a teenager with a band from Huron, South Dakota, and eventually landed the role that came to define her public persona: Kris Munroe, who took Farrah Fawcett’s place on Charlie’s Angels in 1977. She persevered through the show’s cancellation in 1981, developed a career in film and television over the course of five more decades, made her Broadway debut in Annie Get Your Gun in 2000, and participated in Dancing with the Stars in 2022. Her appearance has long been scrutinized. It dates back to a time when that scrutiny was even less scrutinized than it is now, and it has been a constant companion to a career that has always been partially focused on her appearance.
Ladd has never publicly acknowledged what the experts describe as likely surgical work. But in a widely shared CBS interview from 2020, she talked candidly about having cataract surgery, describing it as a life-altering procedure that literally changed the way she saw the world. It appears that she does not automatically turn to denial because she is willing to talk about medical procedures on her own terms and without feeling ashamed. More likely than active concealment, the silence on cosmetic work in particular is a matter of personal preference.
It’s worthwhile to consider Dr. Kassir’s more general observations regarding the reunion photos. He suggested that what people see when they say these women look alike is convergence rather than a coincidence. Many practitioners of modern aesthetic medicine adhere to a blueprint that includes controlled volume restoration, smoother skin, and tighter jawlines. When applied to several individuals of comparable age, in the same city, and under the care of surgeons using comparable aesthetic frameworks, the outcomes begin to rhyme. That is more a reflection of the state of the industry as a whole than a failure of individual creativity. The “unrecognizable” complaint seems to be a complaint about that convergence, about the perception that something particular has been superseded by something more universal.
Cheryl Ladd, 74, deserves more than a comment section verdict for coming to celebrate 50 years of work she is truly proud of after recently disclosing a cancer diagnosis. It’s still unclear exactly what she has or hasn’t done, and to be honest, she probably wants that ambiguity. It is evident that the work, whether surgical or non-surgical, has been managed with sufficient discipline that the discussion is still ongoing. And from a Hollywood perspective, that may be the closest thing to a compliment the internet can offer.
