Carson Kressley, 53, looks very young as he arrives in Sydney for WorldPride
Fountain of youth! Carson Kressley, 53, looks like he’s barely aged a day after his Queer Eye rise to fame nearly twenty years ago when he touches down for WorldPride in Sydney.
Rose to fame as a fashion stuntman on Queer Eye For The Straight Guy.
And Carson Kressley has barely aged a day since the show first premiered nearly twenty years ago.
The 53-year-old American star looked incredibly youthful when he touched down in Sydney on Thursday for the WorldPride celebrations.
Caron dressed comfortably for her flight: she was wearing a fitted white wool jumper and black sweatpants teamed with a baseball cap and multicolored white sneakers.
Carson brought her own luggage, including a $3,550 Louis Vuitton weekender bag.
Carson Kressley, 53, touched down in Sydney on Thursday for the WorldPride celebrations.
At one point he was seen texting on his phone and appeared to be waiting in an Uber after the flight.
Carson has been a familiar face on Australian TV screens over the years after starring in Queer Eye for four years and taking part in the Australian version of I’m Of A Celebrity…Get Me Out Of Here! in 2017.
During her stint on the reality series, she said it wasn’t a huge surprise when she told her parents.
Carson, who was 33 at the time, told his parents just one weekend before doing the TV Guide cover for Queer Eye.
‘We were going to be on the cover of the TV guide, I knew it would come out on a Tuesday, for the premiere of the show.
Caron dressed comfortably for her flight: she was wearing a fitted white wool jumper and black sweatpants teamed with a baseball cap and multicolored white sneakers.
‘I told them I was doing this new show and they said ‘What’s it called?’ I’m like, ‘It doesn’t have a name yet, it’s the untitled makeover show.'”
As her big TV moment loomed, Carson knew she had to tell her parents the truth.
He said: “Literally the weekend before the TV guide came out with us on the cover and the name of the show, I had to tell them.”
I said, “The show I’m doing is called Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.” She said, “Let me guess, aren’t you the straight guy? Yeah. We knew that.” It was not big news in my house.
Carson also spoke to his fellow campers about the frequent bullying he suffered as a gay youth at school.
Carson pictured in 2003 at the height of his fame for Queer Eye For The Straight Guy
He said: “Which is especially difficult for gay children: you go home and you’re afraid to tell anyone, because you’re afraid that nobody will love you.”
Carson began her career working as a freelance stylist and later worked for Ralph Lauren in menswear and corporate advertising from 1994 to 2002.
He then became Queer Eye’s fashion expert when the show debuted on the Bravo cable network in 2003.
Carson began her career working as a freelance stylist and later worked for Ralph Lauren in menswear and corporate advertising from 1994 to 2002.