
Back in 2011, a then-21-year-old Eiza González did something that almost nobody in her position does. She appeared on the Spanish-language talk show Hoy and bluntly stated that she had had a nose job because she didn’t like the way her nose looked, not because of a deviated septum or for medical reasons. Not a spin. Not at all. She briefly gained notoriety for giving an honest response that most of her colleagues would spend their entire careers denying.
For an industry that depends on a well-managed image, the admission was surprisingly straightforward. And for a while, that official acknowledgement of rhinoplasty was the whole story. It’s evident how her nose has changed when looking at pictures from her early career. The tip looks more elegant, and the bridge seems narrower. It is difficult to attribute the difference between the woman who appeared in Hollywood ten years later and her red carpet appearances in 2007 to lighting or contouring alone, even to the non-medical eye.
However, it turns out that the nose was only the start of the discussion. Several plastic surgeons and experts in aesthetic medicine have offered their opinions by contrasting pictures of González from her Lola, Érase Una Vez days—when she was a teenager navigating Mexican telenovela fame—with her more recent roles in movies like Baby Driver and Ambulance. The list of suspected procedures is longer than most people expect. Yes, rhinoplasty. But also possible cheek fillers or implants to account for dramatically more defined cheekbones, lip injections to explain noticeably fuller lips, buccal fat pad removal to sharpen the mid-face, a possible brow lift or fox-eye procedure to create the more almond-shaped eye that has become something of a Hollywood signature, and Botox along the jawline to soften what was once a slightly squarer bone structure.
It’s worth being clear that these are professional observations, not confirmed facts. Eiza González has not addressed any of these additional procedures publicly, and the natural changes that come with aging, weight fluctuation, and makeup artistry can genuinely account for some of what people are seeing. In those early pictures, she was, after all, a teenager. Faces shift. That’s simply biology. However, it’s possible that some of the changes seen in the before-and-after comparisons aren’t just the result of time, and the number of medical professionals who are willing to publicly acknowledge this is noteworthy.
A more general cultural trend is worth discussing here. In dealing with this specific type of scrutiny, González is by no means alone. Hollywood has spent decades producing a narrow template of beauty, and the pressure on women — especially women of color breaking into an industry not always designed for them — to conform to that template is difficult to overstate. The intriguing aspect of Eiza’s case is that she honestly and early acknowledged one procedure, which in some ways added weight to the ongoing conjecture. The question that naturally arises after you’ve acknowledged one thing is: What else?
In 2024, she told InStyle that she had been passed over for movie roles due to her excessive beauty, which is a complex issue in and of itself—the notion that her appearance, whether improved or not, had turned into a barrier rather than an asset in some settings. It’s hard not to notice the irony in that. A woman was told the outcome was too distracting for serious work after refining her face in part to advance her career.
What González has built, regardless of what procedures she may or may not have had, is a genuinely impressive filmography spanning two countries and multiple genres. Whether the conversation about her face ever gives way to a more sustained conversation about her work is still unclear. However, there’s a sense that she’s turned into something of a case study in how Hollywood handles beauty, transformation, and the women brave enough to be honest about both, as evidenced by the Reddit threads, the surgeon breakdowns on social media, and the before-and-after compilations.
