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Carrie Coon Says That No One Recognizes Her When She's Brunette: 'People See Me in a Different Way'

- - Carrie Coon Says That No One Recognizes Her When She's Brunette: 'People See Me in a Different Way'

Catherine SantinoJanuary 13, 2026 at 11:33 PM

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Carrie Coon. -

Carrie Coon said she's only recognized when she's blonde, which she partially attributes to her role on The White Lotus

"People see me in a different way," she shared in Interview Magazine

The actress went brunette for her role in The Gilded Age and is currently rocking the darker hue in Bug on Broadway

Carrie Coon is living a double life, and it's all thanks to her hair.

While chatting with Justin Theroux for Interview Magazine, the 44-year-old actress said that her hair color greatly impacts the way she moves through the world."There is something about the platinum that makes people see me in a different way," she said of her blonde hair.

Coon continued, "You know what’s interesting? People don’t see me when my hair is dark. I would get recognized when I was platinum, probably because the bob in The White Lotus was platinum, but when my hair goes back to my normal color, that all goes away."

The actress also mused that people don't recognize her "because I’m a mom in Westchester in sweatpants who doesn’t brush her teeth."

"But I’m also out there representing what it means to be 44," she adds. "It’s interesting that those questions often come up in interviews with women. Things like, 'Why didn’t you get your nose fixed?' Things that your mother would ask you."

Coon, 44, sports brunette hair for her role as Bertha Russell on The Gilded Age, and is currently rocking the hue as she stars in Bug on Broadway.

The play is a psychological thriller written by Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winner Tracy Letts, who has been married to Coon since 2013, and directed by Tony winner David Cromer.

Namir Smallwood stars opposite Coon as Peter, a paranoid former soldier and mysterious drifter who meets her character Agnes, a lonely waitress. The pair become isolated in a rundown Oklahoma motel room as discussions of conspiracy theories ensue.A synopsis of the play describes their relationship as an “unexpected and intense romance” that becomes a “sexy psychological thriller."

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Letts, who previously appeared alongside his wife in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, has praised the current production for its intensity and immediacy.

“I love this production of Bug,” he said in a statement released back in August.. “It’s scary and funny and intimate, and it features five great stage actors working at the peak of their powers, under the direction of my long-time collaborator David Cromer. But what I love most about it is just how involving it is. When an audience is pulled into a story — when they lose themselves in it — it’s a kind of sorcery. And it only happens in live theatre.”

on People

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