Star Michelle Pfeiffer has undergone a dramatic hair transformation after changing her iconic blonde locks for fiery red hair.
The 62-year-old celebrity revealed that she has switched up her look in a post on Instagram recently.
RELATED: Five massive films Pfieffer turned down
However, the photo ended up being a throwback from her time on the set of her upcoming film French Exit in which she plays the titular role of broke New York socialite, Frances Price.
“Becoming Frances Price. #FrenchExit,” Michelle captioned the selfie, where she matched her look with bright red lipstick.
Many of her celebrity pals were stunned by her new look.
“It’s wildly different,” said Cruel Intentions star Selma Blair.
“Of course it looks great. And I see a bit of Hermione,” she added, referencing Emma Watson’scharacter in the Harry Potter films.
Comedian Chelsea Handler mistook Michelle for the actress Bryce Dallas Howard from Jurassic Park movies, who has bright red hair.
RELATED: Pfieffer returns hotter than ever
Some fans replied, with one arguing, “No she looks like Jessica Chastain.”
“Yes a mix of Bryce Dallas Howard and Jessica Chastain,” another commented.
Others were simply full of compliments for the actress’ new look.
Naomi Campbell wrote, “Beauty in Red” while Michelle’s sister-in-law, Rona Pfeiffer, said, “Damn you look good”.
Redhead actress Julianne Moore posted a bunch of flame emojis.
Meanwhile, the actress revealed several years ago in 2013 that she was once part of a cult that believed humans could exist only on sunlight.
Pfeiffer said she became involved in the cult when she first began her Hollywood career.
Run by a “very controlling” couple who believed in breatharianism, the cult put the actor on a strict diet she said “nobody can adhere to”.
Pfeiffer told Britain’s Sunday Telegraph she only realised what she was part of when she met her first husband, the actor Peter Horton, who was researching the Moonies, a quasi-Christian group regarded by some as a cult organisation, for a movie role.
“We were talking with an ex-Moonie and he was describing the psychological manipulation and I just clicked,” she said in the interview.
Pfieffer, who moved to Los Angeles when she was 20, described the couple as “kind of personal trainers”.
“I wasn’t living with them but I was there a lot and they were always telling me I needed to come more. I had to pay for all the time I was there, so it was financially very draining.”
Breatharianism – the belief humans can survive without food or water – has attracted controversy after it has been linked to several deaths, including a woman who died in the Scottish Highlands after a period of prolonged fasting.
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2020-12-06 09:19:22Z
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