B&B's Krista Allen Is "So Excited" To Finally Ditch Taylor’s Wigs! (2024)
The moment that soap hopper Krista Allen has been looking forward to for months finally arrived: She no longer has to wear a wig while playing THE BOLD & THE BEAUTIFUL’s Taylor! “I have been waiting for this day since I aired on Dec. 10,” the actress tweeted. “Thank you to every single one of you that complained in outrage! We did it!”
Wearing a wig on B&B wasn’t a fashion choice that Allen made when she took over the role, but rather a wardrobe necessity. “Right when I got cast for this part, my hair was a short, blonde pixie,” Allen explained during a live chat with the soap’s supervising producer, Casey Casprzyk. “It’s been growing, but it was blonde, and I started working within a week. So, we didn’t have time. I had to take my hair back from blonde to dark brown. So, we needed a little bit of time.”
Making that kind of drastic change without damaging one’s hair can be a slow process that takes several visits to the salon. While Allen was having her hairstylist work magic on her tresses, she had to wear long, dark brown wigs while in character as Taylor. It took trying several wigs before the hair department found one style that worked better than others. And along the way, viewers had strong opinions about her faux hair, constantly telling Allen on Twitter and Instagram that she needed to ditch the wig!
By the time the soap resumed taping after the holiday break, Allen was sporting her natural tresses — and her dark brown bob was the mane event in the Feb. 4 episode. “I just found out that my hair is debuting on The Bold & The Beautiful with no wig today,” the actress exclaimed in a video clip that accompanied her tweet. “Oh my god, I’m so excited. I’m so excited!”
Now that Allen never has to wear a wig on-screen as Taylor ever again, she joked on Twitter about having a wig-burning ceremony for all of the discarded hair fails. “RIP wigs.”
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You can try using platforms like Goodreads, BookBub, or even search engines like Google. Just describe the plot or any specific details you remember, and they will provide you with book recommendations that match your description.
For when you can only vaguely remember what the cover looks like, try Big Book Search. If you can include a keyword from the title, you'll be more likely to find what you're looking for.
On this page, you'll see several tabs located under the Discover Authors header, one of them being the “Search” tab — click on this tab to start searching for your favorite authors. Once you find the author you're looking for, you can view their BookBub page by clicking on their name.
Sometimes a secondary character adds a subplot. A goal that won't interfere with or overshadow the main plot. If your B plot bogs the story down, seems like filler and the story would be okay or better without, leave it out.If it adds something meaningful, leave it in.
“Don't be mistaken; there is a plot,” one commentator clarified on a “no plot, just vibes” BookTok roundup. “It's just inside the characters.” What the novels often lack in a plot-driven narrative, they make up for in insightful conversations between characters or their internal monologues.
Open Library (Internet Archive) The site is a project of the Internet Archive and is intended to create “one web page for every book ever published”. ...
This will probably be obvious to you, but the book description should always be in a third person objective voice, and never your author voice. It is always written as someone else describing your book to potential customers.
One of the reasons we forget information is because we're trying to process too much at once. Our working memory can only handle so much information at a time, so if we're bombarded with too much information, we're likely to forget most of it. One way to combat this is to chunk information together.
Become familiar with the topic. Blogger and web developer Ryan Battles recommended gaining some background knowledge before you dive into a particular text. ...
If no author or creator is provided, start the citation with the title/name of the item you are citing instead. Follow the title/name of the item with the date of publication, and the continue with other citation details.
In addition to book shops, you can also find nice older and/or collectible books at antique shops, flea markets, garage and estate sales, thrift stores (Good Will Stores, Salvation Army Stores, etc).
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Introduction: My name is Virgilio Hermann JD, I am a fine, gifted, beautiful, encouraging, kind, talented, zealous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
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