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Jim Carrey’s ‘unrecognizable’ look at the 2026 César Awards sparked clone and impersonation rumors, fueled by makeup artist Alexis Stone’s viral claim. Officials confirm it was the real Jim Carrey in Paris.

Jim Carrey sparked massive online buzz after his rare appearance at the 51st César Awards in Paris on February 26, 2026. He received an Honorary César for lifetime achievement. Fans quickly called him unrecognizable. They pointed to a fuller face, jet-black straight hair, and possible eye color shift.

Jim Carrey delivered his acceptance speech fully in French. He joked about his “mediocre” accent. Conspiracy theories exploded online. Some claimed a clone replaced him. Others suggested an impersonator took his place.
Makeup artist Alexis Stone jumped in on March 1, 2026. He posted on Instagram: “Alexis Stone as Jim Carrey in Paris.” The post showed photos of Jim Carrey at the event plus a hyper-realistic prosthetic mask, fake teeth, and dark wig. The images matched Jim Carrey’s look that night.
Internet reactions split fast. Celebrities like Megan Fox commented in confusion. Many asked for proof. Alexis Stone usually shares process videos for transformations. He skipped that here. Prosthetics experts noted Jim Carrey’s animated expressions during the speech. Thick masks make such movements hard or impossible.
Official sources shut down the rumors fast. César Awards General Delegate Grégory Caulier called them a “non-issue.” He confirmed Jim Carrey planned the visit since summer 2025. Jim Carrey practiced his French speech for eight months. Jim Carrey attended with his partner, daughter Jane, grandson Jackson, and close friends. Longtime collaborator Michel Gondry joined too.
Jim Carrey’s publicist Marleah Leslie stated clearly: “Jim Carrey attended the César Awards, where he accepted his Honorary César Award.”
Comedian Heather Shaw, a known Jim Carrey lookalike, weighed in. She denied any involvement. She called it normal aging with possible minor fillers or Botox.

Experts view Alexis Stone’s post as performance art. It highlights how digital and physical tricks fool people easily. Most agree the mask photos look AI-generated or prankish.
Jim Carrey clone theories and Jim Carrey replaced claims stay viral. But facts point to the real Jim Carrey on stage—no clone, no mask needed.
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