Ayo Edebiri always comes back to the bob.
Amid burgeoning interest in the above-the-shoulder style on the red carpet and beyond, the 30-year-old actress appeared on “Late Night With Seth Meyers” on Thursday in New York City with her dark brown hair trimmed to her chin and micro bangs just barely touching the tops of her eyebrows.
Edebiri’s short hairdo was reminiscent of Pamela Anderson’s at the Met Gala in May — finely cut bangs, flipped ends and all. Earlier, before the show — however — “The Bear” star was spotted in Chelsea with a head full of curls waterfalling from her roots to her ends. The ringlets were crafted by celebrity hair artist Lacy Redway, whose client list includes Chappell Roan and Michelle Williams. Redway famously fashioned Roan’s long coils to match her fiery red hair jacket in the music video for “The Subway.”
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Though Edebiri’s bob felt particularly fitting for her early October appearance on the show, as the style tops the predicted hair trends for fall, this was far from the first time the “Bottoms” actress has been spotted out with the style. In fact, Edebiri appeared at the premiere of “After the Hunt” in New York on Sept. 26 with her hair neatly cut well above her collarbone. Here, her bangs were brushed to the sides by Redway.
Micro bangs have been making a comeback recently, with A-listers, actors and models leading the charge on runways and red carpets. The refined cut once belonged to the signature aesthetic of ingenue Hollywood stars such as Audrey Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor and Natalie Wood, after the likes of Louise Brooks popularized it in the early 1920s.
Speaking with WWD in late August, stylist Jacob Rozenberg, a Redken artistic ambassador who works with Meghann Fahy and Rose Byrne, left micro bangs out of his trend predictions for fall; however, he did say copper coloring would continue to influence the fashion and beauty worlds in the months to come. “I have seen a big shift from more high-contrast colors to more tonal, warmer tones,” he told WWD. “I just feel like natural colors and keeping within a close range of your own natural color is just more what we’re going to see this fall.”