Under the sun, 77-year-old Sheila poses with her hair in the wind and a smile on her lips (she is sublime!)

Under the sun 77 year old Sheila poses with her hair in

On Instagram, Sheila revealed her radiant beauty which proves that at the age of 77, the singer has lost none of her charm. Check out her vacation photos.

While we discovered Sheila and her son Ludo, who died in 2017, through intimate videos revealed on the show Secret Archives on May 12 on France 3, the singer shared photos of her on vacation on Instagramgarnering a host of compliments.

Sheila is still gorgeous at the age of 77

After seducing us with her new bob cut on Instagram not long ago, Sheila is once again appearing on social networks, revealing pictures from her vacation in Morocco. In one of these photos taken in Marrakech, the singer strikes us with her stunning beauty, highlighted by her radiant skin. Whether his face is punctuated with visible wrinkles, the Frenchwoman knows how to subtly highlight it thanks to a thin line of black eyeliner, worked eyebrows and nicely rosy cheekbones. Real name Annie Chancel, Sheila also shines thanks to her haircut, a long square with luminous blonde sweeping, enhanced by a vaporous brushing. Fans of the icon of the yéyés years are conquered: “You are splendid”, “Magnificent, your new haircut makes you look younger”, “What a beautiful woman”, or “you are lovely” are some of the compliments posted under this Instagram photo.

Sheila admits having plastic surgery

If she is of obvious beauty, Sheila admits it bluntly: she has already had recourse to plastic surgery, “like everyone“, she had underlined at the microphone of Entertainment TV. The one who was born in Créteil is not necessarily proud of the results obtained: “Besides, when you look at me, you can see that it hasn’t had only good effects”she had noticed, before adding “I regret nothing“. If she has ever thought of undergoing a rhinoplasty and breast augmentation, Sheila preferred to abstain. “In the meantime, I did the work that had to be done to accept myself, to tell myself every morning and every evening that deep down, I was more of a nice, nice girl and that I ‘accept as I was, with my mistakes’, had concluded the superb septuagenarian.

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