It seems Cameron Diaz has wasted no time moving on following her split from model Paul Sculfor earlier this month.
The Hollywood actress, whose year long relationship with the former Essex brick layer ended after she refused to move to the U.K., was spotted enjoying a lunch date with Maroon 5 lead singer Adam Levine.
The pair dined together at the Chateau Marmont over the weekend sparking rumours of a budding new romance.
New romance? Hollywood actress Cameron Diaz and Maroon 5 rocker Adam Levine dined together at Chateau Marmont over the weekend
They certainly dressed the part of a new couple in matching blue jeans and crisp white tops and spent more than an hour exchanging flirty glances and conversation over a meal.
Levine, 30, is known as something of a ladies man in Hollywood and has been linked to a string of starlets including Jessica Simpson, Natalie Portman, Paris Hilton, Maria Sharapova, and Kristen Dunst.
His last romance was with a cocktail waitress named Rebecca Ginos who worked at popular L.A. celebrity haunt, Teddy’s.
There's something about Cameron: The pair exchanged flirty glances over lunch
Cameron, 36, has enjoyed her fair share of high-profile romances too.
Prior to her relationship with Sculfor, she briefly dated singer John Mayer and of course, had a four year relationship with Justin Timberlake.
Over: Cameron split from Essex model Paul Sculfor earlier this month
Her other love interests have include Matt Dillon, Jared Leto, Edward Norton, Vince Vaughn, Djimon Hounsou and Gerard Butler.
Aside from stepping back into the dating scene, Cameron is also busy promoting her new film, My Sister’s Keeper, where she plays a mother of three in a moving story about a family living with cancer.
Famed for her quirky performances in romantic comedies, Cameron admits fans might be surprised to see her take a drastically different direction in her new movie.
But she told Vogue magazine she revelled in the challenge.
She said: 'People who put labels on themselves limit themselves. If you are a woman who’s been labeled as a sex symbol, for instance - I mean, I am not saying that’s the label people would apply to me.
'But if you see yourself that way, inevitably you get to a point when you are no longer a sex symbol. And if you can’t move past that, you’re putting a limit on yourself; you’re arresting your development. And that’s where I think a lot of women get in trouble.'
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