T'Keyah
Crystal Keymah is a hair pioneer. From the time she first stepped
foot on a sound stage for the pilot to what would become the Emmy
Award-winning comedy In Living Color, T'Keyah has worn
her hair natural.
"Fifteen
years ago, no one in prime-time was wearing natural hair, unless
they wore locs or a short afro," T'Keyah says of African-American
characters on television. She knew she was on to something when
she started getting fan mail specifically about her hair.
T'Keyah's
road to natural hair began like many little girls of African descent:
by straightening her curls to fit a beauty ideal that was unnatural
for her hair type.
"Growing
up, I had my hair pressed straight, and by college I was having
it permed," she says. "But when I realized that I would
have to get touch-ups while away at school from a hairdresser I
didn't know, I started cutting it out."
T'Keyah (pronouced
Ta-kee-ah) says her hair was just a few inches long and all-natural
by Christmas of her first year away from home, but that she gave
in and permed it again when she joined a sorority. It took a life-changing
trip to Africa before T'Keyah says she began to think differently
about her hair.
"While
in West Africa, I had my hair wire wrapped and hand-twisted,"
she says. "Even though the natural styles were foreign to me
at the time, I realized that perming was also foreign to my natural
hair type."
T'Keyah had
a new-found freedom in her natural styles and resisted the urge
to straighten her hair even when Hollywood came calling.
"While
shooting the In Living Color pilot, my hair was still damaged
from previous chemical treatments," she says, "so I could
only wear it braided flat to my head.
"When
the show was picked up, I started wearing my hair in twists. There
were no natural hairstylists on the set, so other than the million
wigs I wore, I usually did my hair myself," she says.
Fans of the
show loved T'Keyah's signature look and wanted to know how to get
it for themselves.
"The
letters kept coming," she says, "so I began researching
natural hair." |