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2015年4月12日星期日

January Jones Believes Girls Should 'Be Proud' Of 'Funky' Haircuts

January Jones is no stranger to Violet Grey magazine's The Violet Files.
Posing for the second time, the "Mad Men" actress was photographed for the magazine's latest issue wearing six dramatically different looks. Makeup artist Rachel Goodwin and hairstylist Mara Rozak transformed Jones into various personas including an edgy party girl wearing greasy hair, burgundy lips and chunky rings, and an au natural beauty with soft waves and glowing skin.
In the interview, Jones spoke candidly about self-acceptance. She referenced the amazing photo she posted on Instagram for Throwback Thursday, which depicted her 9-year-old self with a mullet.
“I was at my most confident as a kid,” Jones said. "It actually wasn't until I got into high school and started to get quote-unquote pretty that my confidence started to disappear."
Jones added that she wants women and girls who feel weird about their hair to still feel great. "I want to give the message that girls can be proud and self-assured no matter what funky haircut they have," she added.
Take a look at Jones' amazing photos for The Violet Files below, shot by Alex Caley. Check out the interview and comments from the makeup artist at VioletGrey.com.
  • Alex Caley for The Violet Files
  • Alex Caley for The Violet Files
  • Alex Caley for The Violet Files
  • Alex Caley for The Violet Files
  • Alex Caley for The Violet Files
  • Alex Caley for The Violet Files

James Best, 'Dukes Of Hazzard' Star, Dead At Age 88

JAMES BEST DEAD James Best with Flash during Ron Galella Studio Headshot for Special Assignment, United States. (Photo by Betty Galella/WireImage) | Betty Galella via Getty Images RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Prolific character actor James Best, best known for playing the giggling and inept Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane on "The Dukes of Hazzard," has died. He was 88.

His wife of 29 years, Dorothy Best, said that Best died Monday night in hospice care in Hickory from complications of pneumonia.

Best starred on the television series that ran from 1979 to 1985. He was the lawman futilely chasing the Duke boys, often in the company of his droopy-faced basset hound Flash. Best employed a battery of catch phrases in the role, as well as memorable laugh that was comically villainous.

"I acted the part as good as I could," Best told The Charlotte Observer in a 2009 interview. "Rosco, let's face it, was a charmer. It was a fun thing."

During a wide-ranging career of several decades, he also acted in movies including "The Caine Mutiny" and "Rolling Thunder," and he appeared on television shows including "Gunsmoke" and "The Andy Griffith Show."

"I was fortunate enough to call him my friend since the day he walked on the set of 'Gunsmoke' back in the early '60s," actor Burt Reynolds said in a statement. "Onset or off, behind the scenes, in front of a class or just as a friend, his name was so fitting because he was truly the 'best' at whatever he did. My heart is heavy, and I miss him deeply."

Best was an acting teacher who helped several future Hollywood stars learn how to appear more natural on camera.

"I learned more about acting in front of a camera from Jimmie Best in an afternoon than from anyone else in a year," said Dukes of Hazzard co-star John Schneider, who played Bo Duke. "When asked to cry on camera, he would say, 'Sure thing . which eye?' I'm forever thankful to have cut my teeth in the company of such a fine man."

Best was born in the western Kentucky community of Powderly, the youngest of eight brothers and a sister. After his mother died when he was a toddler, Best was adopted and raised in Indiana. He served in the U.S. Army in World War II and started acting in a military theater company, according to his website.