Demi Moore likes the idea of going gray.

Asked if she would ever consider silver tresses, she told People Magazine, “Oh, 100%.”

“I look at women who have that incredible gray, especially long, and I think it’s striking,” the star of “The Substance” said. “I would definitely do it.”

At this point, Moore said she still waiting to really be able to lean into the look.

“I just don’t have enough to make it interesting. Mine’s like a smattering that makes my hair look murky,” she said, adding, “I didn’t really start coloring my hair until I was, like, 55.”

Though Moore said she wouldn’t mind embracing a new hue, she also told People there are a few hair styles she’s not itching to go back to.

Demi Moore, here at the 2025 Vanity Fair Oscar Party in March, said she’s “100%” open to having gray hair in the future.

Lionel Hahn via Getty Images

Though she’s perfectly rocked a pixie cut and famously buzzed off all her locks for her role in 1997′s “G.I. Jane,” the star said she doesn’t see herself getting a dramatic chop any time soon.

“I don’t know, I feel fairly connected to my hair in a different kind of way,” the recent Oscar nominee told People. “There’s energy in hair, you know? But I never like to say never.”

Moore’s beauty confessions come in the wake of her critically-acclaimed turn in “The Substance,” a dark, funny, campy and gory take on the ugly side of vanity and aging.

Moore, here at the premiere of "Striptease" in 1996, also said she doesn't see herself chopping her locks off any time soon.
Moore, here at the premiere of “Striptease” in 1996, also said she doesn’t see herself chopping her locks off any time soon.

Ron Galella via Getty Images

Now 55, the star said she’s never follow the same path as her character Elisabeth Sparkle, whose quest to recapture her youth ends up taking a ghastly turn.

“I also have thought recently about this idea that aging and being old are not the same thing,” she said during the Time100 Summit earlier this week. “And somehow we’ve confused that and that aging actually is a tremendous gift.”

“I would not trade — you could not pay me to be 21,” Moore added. “As good as it might sound, it was torture!”

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