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Holmes’ short hair makes bold statement
Erin Carlson
NEW YORK—Call it “Scientology Chic.” Katie Holmes debuted a stylish bob
this past summer and, all of a sudden, her 180-degree reinvention from
low-key twentysomething to sophisticated arm candy of Tom Cruise seemed
established — in this case, the hair really DID make the woman. The
“Dawson’s Creek” alum recently updated her look, displaying eye-grazing
bangs at a red-carpet event in Germany. Photos of the china-doll haircut
swept through cyberspace, as Internet critics weighed in: some loved it,
some hated it, and some sniped at its uncanny resemblance to the ‘do of
her 1-year-old daughter, Suri.
“Is it just me or does Katie/Kate Holmes look like an ENTIRELY DIFFERENT
PERSON with her hair cut into that short, sharp bob??” Elle magazine
blogger Carol Han observed. “She’s gotten about 17 times hotter, while
Tom seems to have gotten exponentially worse looking!” While long hair
remains the norm in Hollywood, a handful of cropped cuts — versatile
variations on The Bob — are making bold statements, from Holmes’ classic
coiff to Victoria “Posh Spice” Beckham’s sleek style to pop star
Rihanna’s edgy mane makeover.
“The bob really comes back every couple of years, and it really is just
a way of kind of cleaning house — like starting new but still (having) a
great, feminine haircut,” says hairstylist Ken Paves. “And all the girls
that are wearing it right now are wearing it to perfection, I believe. I
think Rihanna’s hair is genius. I love Katie’s.” As for who triggered
the bob’s rebirth among the rich and trendy, Paves, whose celeb
clientele includes Jennifer Lopez and Jessica Simpson, points the finger
at Beckham.
“It would be silly to say that she was the only person in Hollywood
wearing a bob, because, you know, by all means, she was not — but hers
definitely drew the most attention at that time,” he says of the media
frenzy over the Spice Girl’s drastic 2006 hairdo: stacked in the back,
angled at the side. Rihanna put a severe spin on The Posh last spring
with super lopsided layers — a smart way to stand out, given the buzz
surrounding her megahit “Umbrella.” Holmes — Beckham’s B.F.F. — took a
more moderate approach, as did Christina Applegate and Hilary Swank.
Christina Ricci recently popped up on the red carpet with an
ear-skimming bob.
Posh, schmosh, says Amy Synnott-D’Annibale, beauty director at In Style
magazine. She says the trend began several years ago when former bad
girl Nicole Richie classed-up her image with a sideswept bob (a good PR
move, given the less-than-ladylike behaviour of certain long-haired
tabloid magnets.) “There was a time when the bob was considered a more
conservative, preppy hairstyle, and that’s no longer the case,” explains
Synnott-D’Annibale, who says the style “reflects a bigger change in
Hollywood that — among the younger generation — there’s a desire to be
more stylish than sexy.”
More and more young stars — under constant scrutiny from TMZ.com and
other celebrity news outlets — are tending to their appearance and
dressing to impress other women rather than appeal to mens’ taste for
revealing outfits and long, wavy hair, Synnott-D’Annibale says. New York
stylist Harry Josh, who oversees the silky manes of Gwyneth Paltrow and
Gisele Bundchen, says “there’s an overwhelming boredom with hair right
now. Going above the shoulder is so much fresher than keeping it on the
long side, but there’s very few people that are willing to take the
plunge.” He thinks it would take at least “20 major people” to make the
trend mainstream. “It’d be more influential if Kate Moss, Cameron Diaz,
you know, those kind of girls did something with their hair, because
people look at them and think, `I want to be them,’” says Josh, who
shuns Holmes’ status as a fashion icon.
All things considered, Frances Baetiong, 27, from Naperville, Ill., was
so intrigued by Holmes’ hair that she brought a photo of the star to the
salon a couple weeks ago. “I ended up chickening out with the bangs,”
says Baetiong, who instead took inspiration from Beckham for an
asymmetrical bob that one friend calls “the Victor/Victoria Beckham.”
Synnott-D’Annibale says she’s met several women who tell her that Holmes
spurred their decisions to get bob styles. “It’s a pretty wearable
style,” she says. “It’s not that crazy”. |