
Credit: Today with Jenna & Sheinelle
Watching a woman piece together the most intimate moments of her childhood in a memoir, knowing that millions of people will read it on subway rides and in airport bookstores, is almost unsettling. That’s precisely what Jennie Garth has done. She is 54 years old, and her book, I Choose Me, challenges a choice she made thirty years ago in a way that the entertainment industry seldom permits its female employees to do.
When she first entered the Beverly Hills, 90210 set, she was eighteen. According to her own account, she was emotionally in fairly good shape when she arrived. She didn’t have any body-related anxieties or an obsession with the mirror. The part that still hurts is what happened next: her character Kelly Taylor’s fictional insecurities gradually started to feel like her own. After the cameras stopped rolling, Garth’s perception of herself began to reflect the plotlines of the show, which included Kelly dieting, feeling judged, and receiving both praise and criticism for her appearance.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Jennie Lynn Garth |
| Date of Birth | February 3, 1972 |
| Age | 54 years old (as of 2026) |
| Birthplace | Champaign, Illinois, USA |
| Profession | Actress, Author, Producer |
| Known For | Kelly Taylor on Beverly Hills, 90210 (1990–2000) |
| Plastic Surgery (Age 24) | Breast augmentation and liposuction around the hips |
| Non-Surgical Treatments | TriLift (facial toning technology by Lumenis) |
| Recent Memoir | I Choose Me: Chasing Joy, Finding Purpose, and Embracing Reinvention (2026) |
| Children | Three daughters: Luca Bella, Lola Ray, Avery Elizabeth |
| Nationality | American |
There was more than just internal pressure. Co-stars like Luke Perry and Jason Priestley were among the real people on that set whose attention she yearned for, and there was a persistent, low-grade rivalry among the female cast members. Garth describes observing that other actresses who had undergone surgery had “a new kind of energy.” It’s an intriguing expression. Not necessarily happier or healthier, but in some way more self-assured, or at least more convincingly self-assured. And that was convincing enough for her at the age of 24.
After her daughter, Luca Bella, was born, she decided to have a breast augmentation, partly because of the physical changes that childbirth had caused. She underwent liposuction around her hips as well. It’s not vanity that stands out in her description, but rather something more desperate. “I asked the surgeon to smooth me out, make me smaller,” she said. “I wanted to disappear into the version of beauty that was being sold to all of us at the time.” That statement alone could apply to half a generation of women who grew up in the 1990s and were taught what beauty looked like by programs like 90210.
Garth’s willingness to say all of this now, so bluntly and without the typical Hollywood hedging, may be related to her current stage of life. The calculation shifts at 54, when you have three daughters, a memoir, and no TV contract to defend. In recent years, she has also embraced non-surgical procedures, such as Lumenis’ TriLift facial toning technology, which she publicly endorsed around her 50th birthday. She seems to imply that there’s a difference between pursuing an industry ideal at age 24 and making your own treatment decisions at age 50. Depending on your level of charity, that distinction may or may not hold.
Unquestionably, the women inside the 90210 machine suffered some sort of harm. Tori Spelling has discussed it. It was a unique experience for the late Shannen Doherty, whose complex relationship with Garth is also discussed in the memoir. The program did a fantastic job of creating aspirational images of young women, but it did a terrible job of protecting the young women who actually created those images. Every week, Garth, an 18-year-old girl, was photographed, examined, and subtly ranked on national television. At the time, no one in a position of authority seems to have found that particularly alarming.
In 2026, discussions about body image have become more prevalent in both mainstream media and school curricula, making it difficult to ignore how the discourse has changed. The world is better prepared to accept Garth’s account. Even if the answer isn’t clear-cut or simple, it’s worthwhile to consider whether it makes a difference for the women who are currently employed in front of cameras.

