Eva Mendesis offering a look at a very private time in her life.
The Hitchactress has recently shared her thoughts on the period shemade efforts to hide her pregnancywith her second daughter, Amada Lee, who is 9 years old, whom she shares with her long-term partnerRyan GoslingThe couple is also the parents of their daughter Esmeralda Amada, who is 10 years old.
Participating in a popular social media trend where users share pictures from 10 years ago, Eva celebrated the occasion with an Instagram post on January 15. “2016 — I was keeping my second pregnancy a secret from the public,” she wrote. “I made some impressive business moves, and sadly, my brother John passed away.”
She also mentioned Amada’s birth later that year, stating, “Thank God my youngest was born and saved the family.” Amada came into the world on April 29, 2016.
A 51-year-old shared a black-and-white photo of herself sitting wrapped in a blanket, accompanied by the text, “2016 – I was pregnant. This is me concealing my belly.”
Elsewhere in the article, Evaincluded a glamorous photoabout the photos she called her “first photoshoot after having a baby,” along with another picture from her “first cover shoot following motherhood.”
Even though Eva and Ryan prefer to keep their family life private, the founder of Skura Style recently commented on rumors suggesting they were moving their family abroad.
WRONG again @dailymail,” Eva wrote on her Instagram Stories in November, posting a screenshot of the article. “Although I enjoy my time in London,I’m eager to return home.and celebrate the @dodgers World Series victory!”
Although she has made it clear that she will remain in Los Angeles, Eva has been honest about taking a break from Hollywood and her acting profession.
I never truly loved acting,” she said to The Times in October. “I don’t say this in a self-deprecating manner, but I wasn’t an exceptional actress. There were times when I worked with amazing individuals.
The Place Beyond the PinesStar also mentioned that her Cuban-American heritage frequently resulted in restricted roles.
There were some pretty terrible roles,” she said. “That’s all they would say at first—’she’s too ethnic for this, too ethnic for that.’ It was so ridiculous. That was the constant comment.
