Following the release of her eagerly awaited movie Babylon, Samara Weaving made a stunning hair debut.
The 30-year-old Australian actress shared several pictures of herself in the stylist’s chair on Instagram to debut her daring new look.
Her blonde hair was fashioned in a wolf cut with dark fringe that framed her face.
Samara seemed to adore her new hairstyle, claiming it made her feel “cool” and “artistic.”
She said in her post, “I’m a goth baker who writes and has 17 poodles all named Fredrick.”
The celebrity was spotted strolling along the street with a buddy in a video from her Instagram.
The friend behind the camera enquired, “Who is she?”
She’s awesome, Samara retorted.
The former Home and Away star’s friends and admirers expressed their love and support for the Hollywood actress in the comments section.
‘I love!!!’ Phoebe Tonkin, a fellow actor, wrote.
Overly clever brunette in the front and party all night blonde in the back. #keepthemguessing, a fan wrote, while Bella Thorne added, “So lovely.”
It follows her most recent performance in the eagerly awaited film Babylon, which also stars Margot Robbie and Brad Pitt.
Samara also unveiled a shocking new appearance for Constance Moore, the character she plays in the movie.
The model wore a pink button-up shirt and skirt with a pearl necklace as jewellery and had a 1920s Hollywood hairstyle.
Alongside the picture, she added, “Clutch your pearls!”
Babylon is set in Hollywood during the talkie film revolution of the roaring 1920s.
According to Paramount Pictures, which is publishing the project, it is “a tale of outsized ambition and outrageous excess, that recounts the rise and fall of numerous people during a period of unfettered extravagance and depravity in early Hollywood.”
Damien Chazelle, who won the Best Director Oscar for La La Land, also wrote and directed the historical drama.
Olivia Wilde, Jean Smart, Li Jun Li, Jovan Adepo, and Diego Calva are among the diverse cast members of the movie.
The plot takes place before the 1930 introduction of the Hays Code, which outlawed on-screen use of profanity, nudity, drugs, sexual “perversion,” inter-racial relationships, and many other things. The period and the off-screen shenanigans in Tinseltown, according to the filmmaker, served as inspiration for the plot.