
Now, in her 30s, Lohan has emerged as the partner in an Athens nightclub and several Greek beach clubs, leading to this year’s MTV series, Lindsay Lohan’s Beach Club. In a somewhat quiet period that followed, Lohan lay low-or as low as she could-still appearing in various media and TV reality series, with accompanying rumors about her behavior and health. Oprah Winfrey interviewed Lohan in 2013 after a recent stint in rehab and elicited a somewhat hesitant acknowledgement from Lohan that she was an “addict.” In 2014 Oprah produced an eight-episode docuseries, Lindsay, in which Lohan did not appear altogether self-possessed, with repeated reports that she had been partying and drinking. Thus Lohan entered a period when she was regarded, and regarded herself, as alcoholic, including attending AA. This crescendoed into a series of drunken episodes and traffic arrests, court involvements and repeated rehab stays. Self-management didn’t work well for Lohan, and she was hospitalized in 2006, aged 20, for “exhaustion” while filming, leading to her being deemed unreliable by Hollywood producers. Then came the troubled Lindsay, who-still making films and music-took over managing her life from her troubled parents. Around that time, she also made two successful music albums. Still in her teens, she made the hit film Mean Girls in 2004.
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First came the child model, television actress, and phenomenally successful young Disney performer, starting with the 1998 movie The Parent Trap, when she was 12, in which she played twins.


There have perhaps been five ages of Lindsay Lohan. Remember when Lohan was portrayed as the incorrigible bad-girl alcoholic who would never change-i.e., enter recovery? She may not now be in “recovery” in the sense that word is most often used in America.
