She Survived a Difficult Childhood to Become One of the Biggest Celeb Icons at 72 – Her Transformation in 40+ Pics

The legendary talk show host’s decades-long journey through pain, shame, and reinvention has led to a transformation that’s left the internet speechless.

The 72-year-old star has seen her share of battles, both public and deeply private, but her recent physical and emotional evolution is something few saw coming. And it all started with getting rid of shame.

Now, her photos tell a story that words alone simply cannot. Let’s check them out, including the images and videos from her most recent appearance, which had worried netizens claiming she cannot walk!

The legendary TV host as a young girl in front of her childhood home, from a video dated April 30, 2021 | Source: YouTube/DoctorOz

Before the empire, the magazine, and the name known around the world, there was a little girl in Mississippi whose life was anything but easy.

The legendary TV host as a young girl in front of her childhood home, from a video dated April 30, 2021 | Source: YouTube/DoctorOz

Growing up, church was the absolute center of her existence, with Sunday school flowing into the 11 a.m. service, then home for a meal, and back again for another service in the evening. Her grandmother was her anchor, so close that the two shared a bed every night.

The legendary TV host as a young girl in a throwback photo posted on April 27, 2021 | Source: Instagram/oprah

But beneath the warmth of that bond, fear lived in the house too. In a conversation tied to her book “What Happened to You?: Conversations on Trauma, Resilience, and Healing,” she described the lasting psychological impact of a terrifying incident involving her grandfather, who had dementia.

The legendary TV host as a young girl in a throwback photo posted on May 5, 2021 | Source: Instagram/oprah

The aftermath rewired how she slept and how she felt for years.

“That’s when I started sleeping on alert. I’m sleeping, I always slept with listening for the cans. Listening for what happens if that doorknob moves, what happens if that chair moves. And so the message that was sent to my childhood brain is thatyou are not safe in your own home,” she shared in a 2021 interview with Dr. Oz.

The legendary TV host as a young girl in a throwback photo posted on April 28, 2021 | Source: X/oprah

That childhood would also be marked by loss, and the complicated love between a mother and the daughter she chose to keep.

A Teen Mother and a Sacred Goodbye

The legendary TV host’s mother was just 17, living in Mississippi with no education, no training, and no safety net when she became pregnant. Many people around her suggested giving the baby up or not having it at all. She chose differently, and decades later, her daughter would find a way to thank her for it.

The legendary TV host in a throwback photo from the 1970s | Source: Getty Images

In 2018, as her mother’s health was failing due to diabetes complications, she sat with her and spoke the words she had long needed to say.

The host thanked her for keeping her, acknowledged how hard that decision must have been as a teenager with nothing to her name, and made sure she knew that no matter what had passed between them, she had always done the best she knew how to do.

The legendary TV host and Jerry Turner upon her becoming co-anchor of "Eyewitness News" on WJZ on June 26, 1978, in Baltimore, Maryland | Source: Getty Images

Her mother had refused dialysis three years earlier, a decision her daughter chose to honor rather than fight. The legendary TV host revealed that her mother’s body had started shutting down by then and that the only thing left to focus on was making the process as peaceful as possible.

The legendary TV host attends the 43rd Annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 24, 1986, in Beverly Hills, California | Source: Getty Images

It was a goodbye that was as heartbreaking as it was loving. But the years leading up to it had already tested her in ways few people knew about.

The legendary TV host attends the nominees luncheon for the 58th Annual Academy Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on March 13, 1986, in Beverly Hills, California | Source: Getty Images

Rock Bottom at 14

Her teenage years brought a level of trauma that would have broken most people entirely. She was abused by relatives, and at just 14, became pregnant after being assaulted by her uncle.

The legendary TV host attends the 59th Academy Awards at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on March 30, 1987, in Los Angeles, California | Source: Getty Images

The legendary TV host attends the 19th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards at the Sheraton Hotel on June 23, 1992, in New York City | Source: Getty Images

And the weight of it all became unbearable.

“I hit rock-bottom,” she told The Hollywood Reporter on its “Awards Chatter” podcast in 2017. “I became pregnant and hid the pregnancy. I’d intended to kill myself actually. I thought there’s no way other than killing myself. I was just planning on how to do it.”

The legendary TV host attends the 21st Annual Daytime Emmy Awards at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel on May 25, 1994, in New York City | Source: Getty Images

She ultimately suffered a miscarriage, which her father described as a “second chance” for her.

The legendary TV host kicks off the Los Angeles Walk Spring Training at Griffith Park on May 5, 1995, in Los Angeles, California | Source: Getty Images

Although hard, the TV host held onto those two words, treating them as a kind of lifelong compass. “I was, in many ways, saved by that, and I made a decision that I was going to turn it around,” she added.

The legendary TV host attends the "Beloved" premiere at Mann Bruin Theater in Westwood, California, on October 12, 1998 | Source: Getty Images

That decision would fuel everything that came next, but even as she built a career and an empire, one source of shame stubbornly refused to let go.

The legendary TV host in the press room during the 54th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards at The Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California | Source: Getty Images

The Shame That Followed Her Into the Spotlight

Of course, we’re talking about Oprah Winfrey, and no part of her public life has been more scrutinized, more dissected, or more cruelly commented on than her body.

Oprah Winfrey poses backstage at the 5th Annual Directors Guild of America Honors at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel on September 29, 2004, in New York City | Source: Getty Images

For 25 seasons as the host of her hit talk show, her weight was practically treated as public entertainment by media outlets and critics alike.

Oprah Winfrey during the "Their Eyes Were Watching God" Los Angeles premiere at El Capitan Theatre on March 2, 2005, in Hollywood, California | Source: Getty Images

 

One early career moment that cut deep came when she landed on a notorious fashion critic’s worst-dressed list.

“I was on the cover of some magazine and it said, ‘Dumpy, Frumpy and Downright Lumpy,’” she recalled to People in 2023. “I didn’t feel angry. I felt sad. I felt hurt. I swallowed the shame. I accepted that it was my fault.”

Oprah Winfrey during the "The Great Debaters" premiere at the Arclight Theater on December 11, 2007, in Hollywood, California | Source: Getty Images

For 50 years, she obsessed over her shifting weight. This constant cycle of gain and loss persisted because she believed she could solve the problem simply by summoning enough willpower.

Oprah Winfrey hosts "The Oprah Winfrey Show: Fridays Live from New York" at Rumsey Playfield in Central Park on September 18, 2009, in New York City | Source: Getty Images

It wasn’t until a pivotal 2023 panel conversation on obesity, part of Oprah Daily’s “Life You Want” series, that something finally shifted.

Oprah Winfrey arrives at the OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network TCA Winter Press Tour Cocktail Party at the Horseshoe Gardens at the Langham Hotel on January 6, 2011, in Pasadena, California | Source: Getty Images

The Aha Moment That Changed Everything

That taped conversation with weight loss experts and clinicians became a turning point Winfrey described as one of the biggest realizations of her life. For the first time, she understood that her struggle wasn’t a personal failing; it was a medical reality.

Oprah Winfrey speaks onstage during O You! presented by O, The Oprah Magazine, at the Los Angeles Convention Center on October 20, 2012, in Los Angeles, California | Source: Getty Images

Oprah Winfrey attends the 20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards at The Shrine Auditorium on January 18, 2014, in Los Angeles, California | Source: Getty Images

“I realized I’d been blaming myself all these years for being overweight, and I have a predisposition that no amount of willpower is going to control,” she said. “Obesity is a disease. It’s not about willpower — it’s about the brain.”

Oprah Winfrey attends the "Queen Sugar" premiere at Warner Bros. Studios on August 29, 2016, in Burbank, California | Source: Getty Images

Oprah Winfrey attends "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" premiere at SVA Theater on April 18, 2017, in New York City | Source: Getty Images

From there, she consulted her doctor, who prescribed a GLP-1 weight-loss medication she now uses as a management tool, though she has chosen not to publicly name the specific drug.Oprah Winfrey arrives at St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle before the wedding of Prince Harry to Meghan Markle on May 19, 2018, in Windsor, England | Source: Getty Images

Oprah Winfrey poses with the Cecil B. DeMille Award in the press room during the 75th Annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 7, 2018, in Beverly Hills, California | Source: Getty Images