Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Entertainment | 07/02/2008 12:00 am

The Silver Tsunami: Is Gray the New Power Hair Color for Women?

By The Staff at wowOwow.com
Meryl Streep as the quintessential powerbabe Miranda Priestly

in "The Devil Wears Prada" © Getty

This is not a beauty story about glamour. It’s a beauty story about power.

And how somehow, suddenly, women are showing up in boardrooms and on red carpets with the most unexpectedly fierce fashion accessory of all: the Power-Gray head of hair. It’s a watershed moment in the popular culture, a reminder of our aging population and a baby boomer generation that’s not about to stop changing and breaking the rules.

Click here for wowOwow’s photo gallery of ferociously fabulous gray-haired beauties.

Power Gray: It’s not your mother’s soft, silvery tresses. It’s a fashion statement with a purpose. It takes the ultimate symbol of aging — gray hair — and literally stands it on its head, declaring it an asset rather than something to be colored away. It allows the wearer, when walking into the room, to subliminally convey the notion: “You think growing older is a bad thing? Think again.”

Power Gray. It's not your mother's soft, silvery tresses. It's a fashion statement with a purpose.

And its powers also carry weight with the laws of attraction.

Anne Kreamer, whose authoritative book, Going Gray: What I Learned about Beauty, Sex, Work, Motherhood, Authenticity, and Everything Else That Really Matters, says that staying or going gray is a way for women to “rediscover their generation’s youthful embrace of honesty and authenticity and to swim against the tide.” While Kreamer is happily married, for the book she performed a simple market research test on the computer dating site, Match.com. She posted the same profile of herself twice: once with a picture of herself with brown hair, another with an image of herself gray. Unexpectedly, three times as many men responded to the gray-haired profile than they did to the version of Anne with brown hair.

Power-Gray hair is often paired with the Rule-Breaking Cut. Forgetting those dated nostrums against long or short after a certain age, these new gray-haired beauties often intentionally embrace radically younger hair styles. In fact, it is wearing exactly those unexpected-after-40-or-50 cuts that make gray hair less of a symbol of aging and more one of confidence and power. The Power-Gray-haired woman intentionally pairs her natural color with the most contemporary haircut money can buy.

For decades, the silver-maned male has ruled as the icon of American power in the boardroom, in politics, even in the cockpit.

Joining him? The new silver tsunami of confident gray-haired women.

Click here for wowOwow’s photo gallery of ferociously fabulous gray-haired beauties.

 

 

105 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

phyllis Doyle Pepe
And the point being that none of these women ARE GRAY, are they? Gray is the color of a dead mouse. All these women, as someone pointed out have been to colorists or do it themselves. Well, maybe not the Queen, but I betcha she gets some kind of blue rinse.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 07/02/2008 10:12 am
SURA B
So what! Time marches on. Aging is NOT A FOUR LETTER WORD. What does “beyond their years” mean? Is there a standard one must look like for each decade or year! When you were 17, you were a girl; now you are a mature woman, I presume. Give yourself a break and enjoy who you are. Blonde clones are not attractive, just insecure, in my view.
By SURA B on 07/04/2008 10:00 am
Serena .
In the multitude of days filtered by, I thought gray hair made one look old and should be avoided at all costs … funny how one’s perspective changes as one gets older. As I approach 43, and more and more sinewy, white strands spurt out here and there on my own head—unruly and totally with a mind of their own—I now see gray hair as a mark of class, sophistication, and yes, definitely power. Meryl looks marvelous with gray hair, by the way!
By Serena . on 07/02/2008 7:51 am
Lorraine Bates
If it was all grey, maybe. But not even my mother’s hair is “all” grey yet, and she’s pushing 70. Besides, I haven’t seen my natural hair color since I was 14.
By Lorraine Bates on 07/02/2008 7:57 am
Star Lawrence
LOL—who knows what mine is like under there!
By Star Lawrence on 07/03/2008 9:28 am
Jeannot Kensinger
I am waiting for my mixed gray , white , brown hair to turn WHITE, I probably will not see it in this life and I am to cheap to force it with a salon visit. Salt and pepper it is. I live with it and even like it.
By Jeannot Kensinger on 07/02/2008 8:01 am
Valerie Naughton
OK, should we synchronize the colors on our screens? I mean, hello? There is blonde and there is gray and only a very few of those shown here are gray. Their colorists must be planning a revolt as I type this. Annie Lennox, Helen Mirren, Chazz Levi and Geraldine Fabrikant are anything BUT gray. You probably thought Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield and Carole Lombard were gray, too. If you are going to present an idea like this, do your homework. More than half of those shown here are about as gray as the class picture above with the wOw founders, which means not very. (Bottle) blonde (and in many cases, about two identical hair styles) is obviously the new gray here. That’s all fine but tell it like it is. We come to this site for that, nothing less.
By Valerie Naughton on 07/02/2008 8:07 am
Elizabeth Bennett
Blonde is the new gray, doncha know? Prematurely blonde. I had the same reaction you did. Most people do not know that much premature gray hair is due to B12 deficiency of thyroid imbalances. I got my first gray hair at 19 and promptly ripped it out. By 25, I was regularly coloring, as it did not seem that tearing out the gray hair was a very good plan.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 07/02/2008 2:39 pm
SURA B
Not always! Genes, ethnic background, etc. determine who we are. Gray hair is not a disease though in some cases, it indicates a hormonal deficiency. For most, aging bring changes, such as graying hair. One can choose to be a clone and have the dye job and worry about every wrinkle and root, or one can get on to more important things. How fixated are the women who want to remain looking one age!
By SURA B on 07/04/2008 10:06 am
Fontessa 1952
About ten years ago, one of the big hair-coloring companies—Clairol maybe—launched a line of “gray” hair dyes in about a dozen shades as I recall, from platinum to gunpowder. It was a huge bomb. Maybe the company was just too far out in front of a trend. Thank you, by the way, for spelling the word gray, and not “grey,” which annoys me completely.
By Fontessa 1952 on 07/02/2008 8:14 am
Linda Clark
I’m not bothered by the fact that I now have “natural highlights” of gray. When my husband first noticed them a few years ago, I experienced the most delightful smile upon his face as he brushed his hands through my hair. However, I must admit……I do miss the “looks” I used to get in years past when my auburn hair glistened in the sunlight.
By Linda Clark on 07/02/2008 8:15 am
Linda Clark
A “more recent” photo to follow……………..maybe………
By Linda Clark on 07/02/2008 8:33 am
Frank Peterson
Auburn hair-Oh MY!
By Frank Peterson on 07/02/2008 10:46 am
kat
Gray or White hair can be absolutely stunningly beautiful. My mom’s hair is a show stopper. My own started graying at 17, with a somewhat gray looking head band in the front of my brunett natural color. I now color my hair a blonde, the gray or white blend in like i paid for them to be strategically placed there. I am waiting for the day i will be comfortable enough to just let it go and hoping that my white hair will be as beautiful as my mothers.
By kat on 07/02/2008 8:52 am
Barbara
On some women gray is gorgeous. My gray hair makes me look totally washed out and tired but I do keep some of it mixed in with my highlights. I do think that some of the women’s pictures you show are not gray at all. Geraldine Fabrikant and Helen Mirren look blonde to me. I would kill to have Fabrikant’s hair, so shiny, smooth and blonde. I believe the power is in the cut and the attitude of the woman.
By Barbara on 07/02/2008 9:22 am