Someone may have had a craving for cotton candy. Cate Blanchett debuted a new look this week; The 46-year-old British Oscar-winning actress had her blond hair dyed bright pink! She sported her new hairstyle, which she paired with matching tinted aviator glasses, while out and about in London. "We've been talking about doing it for a while but wanted to get all the award seasons out of the way to have a play and a bit of fun," he colorist, Nicola Clarke, told the U.K. newspaper The Telegraph in comments posted Thursday. The dye is semi-permanent. "It will last a couple of weeks, depending on how many washes it has," Clarke said. Blanchett joins...
- 3/24/2016
- E! Online
Cate looked like royalty on the red carpet at the British Academy of Film and Television Arts awards on Feb. 16. But you can get her exact hair look with a product that cost less than $10 bucks! Find out how below.
Cate Blanchett was stunning with a gorgeous, feminine updo at the 2014 BAFTA awards, held in London on Feb. 16. She won best actress and looked amazing while accepting her award. Celebrity hairstylist Nicola Clarke created the gorgeous style — get the step-by-step below!
Cate Blanchett At BAFTA Awards — Gorgeous Hairstyle How-To
Nicola tells HollywoodLife.com:
“I prepped Cate’s hair with John Frieda Luxurious Volume Fine to Full blow out spray. I blow-dryed with a small round brush and pinned each section, allowing it to cool off. I gently spritzed with John Frieda Luxurious Volume hair spray and tousled with my fingers to create texture before loosely [braiding].
Surprise Wins at Ee BAFTA...
Cate Blanchett was stunning with a gorgeous, feminine updo at the 2014 BAFTA awards, held in London on Feb. 16. She won best actress and looked amazing while accepting her award. Celebrity hairstylist Nicola Clarke created the gorgeous style — get the step-by-step below!
Cate Blanchett At BAFTA Awards — Gorgeous Hairstyle How-To
Nicola tells HollywoodLife.com:
“I prepped Cate’s hair with John Frieda Luxurious Volume Fine to Full blow out spray. I blow-dryed with a small round brush and pinned each section, allowing it to cool off. I gently spritzed with John Frieda Luxurious Volume hair spray and tousled with my fingers to create texture before loosely [braiding].
Surprise Wins at Ee BAFTA...
- 2/18/2014
- by Dory Larrabee
- HollywoodLife
Ricky Gervais has admitted he was "naive" to use a derogatory word associated with Down Syndrome in his online blog after speaking to a mother of two disabled daughters.
The Office creator outraged campaigners earlier this week (beg17Oct11) by posting the word "mong" on his Twitter.com page, but refused to apologise.
He branded his critics "humourless", and insisted he did not use the word as a way of describing those with Down Syndrome.
But after Nicola Clarke, a mother of two disabled daughters, broke down on BBC Radio 2 while discussing how her children were regularly called the name in public, Gervais contacted her through Twitter.com to apologise.
He then answered her questions publicly on his page, and when asked if he understood why the term upset people and how he felt now, he replied, "I do now. Never dreamed that idiots still use that word aimed at people with Down's Syndrome (sic). Still find it hard to believe.
"(I feel ) a mixture of confusion, anger, terror and disappointment. But mostly naive. Never meant the word like that..."
When he asked her for her opinion on him after they had discussed the matter, she replied, "I think that had I not spoken to you, I would have believed that you were a bully. The 'Tweets' seemed out of step with your work."...
The Office creator outraged campaigners earlier this week (beg17Oct11) by posting the word "mong" on his Twitter.com page, but refused to apologise.
He branded his critics "humourless", and insisted he did not use the word as a way of describing those with Down Syndrome.
But after Nicola Clarke, a mother of two disabled daughters, broke down on BBC Radio 2 while discussing how her children were regularly called the name in public, Gervais contacted her through Twitter.com to apologise.
He then answered her questions publicly on his page, and when asked if he understood why the term upset people and how he felt now, he replied, "I do now. Never dreamed that idiots still use that word aimed at people with Down's Syndrome (sic). Still find it hard to believe.
"(I feel ) a mixture of confusion, anger, terror and disappointment. But mostly naive. Never meant the word like that..."
When he asked her for her opinion on him after they had discussed the matter, she replied, "I think that had I not spoken to you, I would have believed that you were a bully. The 'Tweets' seemed out of step with your work."...
- 10/22/2011
- WENN
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