Emma Stone has revealed a dramatic new hairstyle at the 82nd Annual Golden Globe Awards.
Stone, 36, who has experimented with various hair colours over the years, has cut her burgundy locks short into a pixie cut.
The actress showcased the closely-cropped style on the red carpet of the awards being held at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills.
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The actress chose a stunning strapless red gown with a matching belted feature.
It isn't known if the new hairstyle is for a movie role, although it is believed she initially shaved her head for a recent role.
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Stone's latest project is believed to be Yorgos Lanthimos' Bugonia, which began production in the UK in 2024.
The actress previously collaborated with the director on his films Kinds of Kindness and Poor Things.
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There was speculation the actress wore a wig to the New York Film Festival, with InStyle sharing a clip on X showing the actress reportedly straightening it.
Stone is not nominated for an award tonight.
She did win a Golden Globe at last year's ceremony for her role as Bella Baxter in Poor Things, in the category of Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.
Click the photo below to see the stunning looks on the Golden Globes red carpet:
Also for Poor Things, she won her second Academy Award and BAFTA for Best Actress in addition to a Best Picture nomination.
Stone and husband Dave McCary welcomed their first child, daughter Louise Jean, in 2021, the same year they were wed.
Stone has shared her battles with both asthma and anxiety, saying she discovered she had asthma while filming a sex scene for early move Easy A.
"I had a little asthma attack, without any prior knowledge that I had asthma, during the scene where we had to jump up and down for hours and hours screaming and yelling on the bed," she told MTV.
She said acting helped her deal with her anxiety, telling NPR in 2024: "I started in therapy, I think around age eight, because it was getting really hard for me to leave the house to go to school.
"I sort of lived in fear of these panic attacks."
That all changed when she began acting at 11.
"I've told a lot of younger people that struggle with anxiety, that in many ways I see it as kind of a superpower," Stone said.
"Just because we might have a funny thing going on in our amygdala, and our fight-or-flight response is maybe a little bit out of whack in comparison to many people's brain chemistry, it doesn't make it wrong. It doesn't make it bad."
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