Goldie Hawn, 75, enjoys a PDA-filled yacht trip with Kurt Russell, 70, in France

She recently enjoyed a sunsoaked break in Greece with her daughter Kate Hudson and family. 

So Goldie Hawn, 75, made the most of some quality time with her long-term partner Kurt Russell, 70, as they chartered a yacht in the South Of France on Tuesday before stopping off for a day at the beach. 

More than  34 years on from appearing together in the cult classic Overboard – in which they fell on love after a yacht-based amnesia incident – the couple were back on a love boat as they were seen kissing and cuddling while sailing around the high seas. 

PICTURE EXCLUSIVE: Goldie was later seen getting cosy with Kurt

PICTURE EXCLUSIVE: Goldie Hawn, 75, slipped into a skimpy black swimsuit as she enjoyed a PDA-filled yacht trip with Kurt Russell, 70, in the South of France on Tuesday 

For the day in the sun, Goldie was radiant in a black high leg swimsuit with a sexy zip detail across the bodice that showed off her glorious tan.

The mother-of-three looked incredibly youthful while going make-up free to allow her natural beauty to shine through, and wore her honey locks clipped up in a bun.  

Meanwhile Kurt opted for a pair of striped maroon swimming trunks, later slipping on a salmon T-shirt as they stopped off at the beach. 

Quality time: She recently enjoyed a sunsoaked break in Greece with her daughter Kate Hudson and family. So Goldie made the most of some quality time with her long-term partner Kurt

Quality time: She recently enjoyed a sunsoaked break in Greece with her daughter Kate Hudson and family. So Goldie made the most of some quality time with her long-term partner Kurt

Smitten: More than 34 years on from appearing together in the cult classic Overboard - in which they fell on love after a yacht-based amnesia incident - the couple were back on a love boat as they were seen kissing and cuddling while sailing around

Cute: The pair packed on the PDA

Smitten: More than 34 years on from appearing together in the cult classic Overboard – in which they fell on love after a yacht-based amnesia incident – the couple were back on a love boat as they were seen kissing and cuddling while sailing around

Goldie and Kurt have never married but are one of Hollywood’s longest-standing couples. In 2017, Goldie revealed how she fell for Kurt.

‘He was so good-looking. I had no pretense about him. I could tell right away he wasn’t a womanizer,’ she told People.

The long-term duo met in 1968 on the set of The One And Only, Genuine, Original Family Band.

But it wasn’t until they met up again on the set of their second film, 1983’s Swing Shift, that they began dating.

‘What really got me was when I watched my kids when they’d come to the set and how he was with them,’ she said. ‘He was amazing with them. He was such a natural.’

The pair are parents to son Wyatt Russell, 33, with Goldie also mother to son Oliver, 43, and Kate Hudson, 41.

On 2 October 2018 Kate welcomed her third child, Rani Rose with her partner Danny Fujikawa.

Rani join’s Kate’s son Ryder Robinson, 16, and Bingham Hawn Bellamy, nine.

She was previously married to Black Crowes singer Chris Robinson and Bingham’s father is ex partner Matt Bellamy of Muse.

A few years ago, Goldie was asked what the key to her timeless looks and good health are, to which she revealed were quite simple.

Speaking to People, she said: ‘I don’t have one. I really don’t. It’s not a secret. I try to drink my juices. I try to work out every day a little bit. I find moments in the day.

‘I have short meditation spurts during the day, if I don’t have a long one in the morning, which sometimes the phone rings and you’re off and running, but I do find time to get quiet. I hike. I bike. I try to have as much fun as possible.’

Earlier this year, Goldie appeared on Good Morning Britain to chat about her work in teaching children mindfulness – and opened up about her own battle with depression as she rose to fame.

‘When I was young, I became depressed,’ the Hollywood star recalled. ‘I was 21, rising to success, it’s a very difficult thing. I didn’t necessarily want that.

‘In doing so, I was very depressed and I had a lot of these issues where I couldn’t even go outside in public. This is something that for me I worked through. 

‘I went to a doctor, I went to a psychologist, I learned about quieting my mind and what happens to the brain, I studied the brain.

‘I didn’t understand why we weren’t taking it out and putting in our classrooms for our kids to learn and enjoy and to be able to have a much better sense of self-regulation.’

Goldie added: ‘Happiness is a choice. Unfortunately, I didn’t want to be a big deal. I wanted to go home… I wanted to be a dance school teacher. I did have a plan.

‘So I didn’t have delusions of grandeur on any level, I was extremely realistic. The problem was, I was a dancer. And then things changed. 

‘For every one of us, we have a different reason for why we might feel low, depressed, anxious, a lot of these things… If I broke my arm I would go to a doctor, if I fell and hurt my hip I would go to a doctor. Doctors can help us and we should never be ashamed to say, ‘I’m feeling sad’.’

Goldie launched MindUp to help children learn mindfulness techniques and said: ‘The idea is we have our children start early.

‘I started the programme when 9/11 happened, just knowing there was going to be, basically things had changed forever and our children are going to have to adapt and there was going to be what they call silent distress. That was then. Children feel everything.’

She added: ‘Now, when this pandemic happened it gobsmacked everyone. We didn’t know how to handle our children, we’re dealing with ourselves – so many issues with parenting and how do I handle this. It’s a plethora of problems.’ 

Of whether she thinks the pandemic will have a bigger impact on mental health than what she saw 9/11 had on American children, she said: ‘Yes I do. They basically were incarcerated in their own homes.

‘ There was frustration, probably in some ways very stressed parenting. Children didn’t feel safe oftentimes, they couldn’t see their friends, social development for their neuro growth, it didn’t quite happen.

‘I don’t believe that the time period they went through [in the pandemic] is going to be a lasting damaging effect, I think we have to learn obviously how to deal with it. That period of time can be made up.’

She added: ‘What are we teaching them? What are they learning? Yes we need math, English, we need all of it, but the wellbeing and the sense of resiliency and wellbeing of our children is everything. They’re the ones that are going to have to deal with the rest of the world as they grow up.’

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