Dickinson, 71, unveils three-month facial rejuvenation results from Beverly Hills surgeon

Janice dickinson, 71, unveiled three-month results from an extensive facial rejuvenation by Beverly Hills surgeon Dr. Harrison Lee in unretouched photos.

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Megan Foster
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Dickinson, 71, unveils three-month facial rejuvenation results from Beverly Hills surgeon

stepped into public with a new face three months after an extensive facial rejuvenation, showing both makeup-free and fully glammed images that her surgeon released this week.

, a triple board‑certified Beverly Hills facial plastic surgeon who performed the work, shared before-and-after photos and videos and said Dickinson was “showing off her results just three months after a major facial rejuvenation.” Lee told reporters the images were untouched — “absolutely no filters or photo editing were used” — and that Dickinson was “beyond ecstatic with the results!”

The list of procedures Lee said he performed is long: an endoscopic brow and mid‑face lift, a deep‑plane facelift, a dual‑plane neck lift, a subnasal lip lift, extensive fat transfer and full‑face CO2 laser resurfacing. Lee has worked on other high‑profile patients and his statement framed the reveal as both surgical and photographic: Dickinson appeared makeup‑free in the posted before-and-after material and later in a social carousel shown fully made up.

That public reveal gains force because it follows a widely reported 2022 on‑set injury. Dickinson reportedly suffered a facial injury while filming and later brought a lawsuit against ITV, saying the incident left her with permanent traumatic scarring. The surgical images and Lee’s public statements arrive as a direct counterpoint to that account: the photos show a visibly smoothed, refreshed result three months after the operation.

Even so, the reveal contains a built‑in tension. The photos and Lee’s assurances address appearance and post‑op timing; they do not settle the broader question Dickinson raised in legal filings about the long‑term, traumatic nature of the 2022 injury. Lee’s release emphasizes technical details and the unedited nature of the images, but it leaves Dickinson’s own legal and medical claims from the earlier incident unaddressed on their terms.

Dickinson, now 71, spoke to reporters while attending the and posed for photographs at the event, but she has not made a detailed personal statement reconciling the surgery with her earlier description of permanent scarring. Lee’s posts replaced filters with procedure names and operatory timing — he noted explicitly that Dickinson was 3 months postop — and invited viewers to compare the barefaced images with the fully glammed shots she later shared online.

The practical takeaway is clear: the high‑profile model has chosen surgical revision and a public reveal as the way to show how she looks three months after an intensive program of lifts, transfers and laser resurfacing. What remains the central unanswered question is whether Dickinson will publicly link that outcome to her earlier claim of permanent traumatic scarring or to any ongoing legal action. For now, her surgeon has provided the visual evidence; Dickinson has not yet closed the loop on how the operation affects the legal and long‑term medical narrative that began in 2022.

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Entertainment reporter with insider access to music, celebrity news, and pop culture. Known for in-depth artist profiles and red-carpet coverage.