Photo: Getty (2)

Raise your hand if you’ve ever thoughtHalle Berrylooked like …Reba McEntire?
Earlier this week, one Twitter user made the connection when they dug a photo of Berry out of the vault andcomparedher strawberry blonde hair from the 1990s to the country singer’s famous ginger locks.
“Halle looks like she about to sing ‘a single mom who works too hard, who loves her kids and never stops,'” the user wrote, referencing McEntire’s 2001 song “I’m a Survivor,” which also served as the theme song for her WB/CW sitcomReba.
Berry, 55, couldn’t resist getting in on the joke. (After all, who would mind behind compared to McEntire, 67, who is one of music’s most beloved artists — andstylish to boot!).
On Wednesday, theCatwomanstarquote-tweetedthe original post with a brief but hilarious response: “… and what about it? 😂.”
And while the Berry/McEntire comparison is admittedly spot-on, we can’t help but call another famous hair icon to mind:Lisa Rinna!
The Real Housewives of Beverly Hillsstar is iconic in certain circles for her time-tested hairstyle, which she maintained for decades since her early run onDays of Our Lives.
Charles Sykes/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty

And though Rinna, 58, has been more adventurous with her ‘do in the last several years, when anyone mentioned the words “Rinna” and “hair” in the same sentence, there’s only one go-to style fans will call to mind.
Meanwhile, Berry recently debuted adaring new ‘do at the 2022 Critics’ Choice Awardson March 13. The cut featured buzzed sides and a platinum blonde swoop down the side, perhaps something of an update to her famously two-toned hair as Storm in theX-Menfilm series.

When theMoonfallactress revealed her new in March, she told fans onTwitter, “this is for YOU! This is for all my beautiful fans that have wanted my short hair back ! 💥”
Whileaccepting the SeeHer Award at the Critics’ Choice Awards, Berry spoke about storytelling has helped her step back from judgment. She urged her fellow entertainers to “raise our consciousness and help us think outside of ourselves and our individual circumstances.”
She continued, “I realized that we truly need to see each other’s reality — no matter how uncomfortable it makes us — so that we can stop judging and stop pointing fingers, but rather find compassion and empathy for the others.”
source: people.com