In Hollywood, hair color is often a character in itself. For Margot Robbie—an Australian actress who rocketed to global fame as a dark-haired femme fatale in The Wolf of Wall Street —her various shades of blonde have become a career-defining visual language. When people search “Margot Robbie blonde,” they are usually looking for two things: her real-life, sun-kissed blonde look, and her stunning, period-accurate portrayal of Sharon Tate, the quintessential blonde icon of the 1960s.

The most artistically significant use of "Margot Robbie blonde" is her portrayal of in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019). This role required Robbie to embody a real-life blonde archetype: the beautiful, tragic ingenue.

"Margot Robbie blonde" is not a single shade—it’s a spectrum of storytelling. From her own sunlit waves to the tragic halo of Sharon Tate to the plastic perfection of Barbie, Robbie uses blonde as a narrative device. She has reclaimed the Hollywood blonde stereotype, proving that blonde can be intelligent, tragic, powerful, or absurd—often all at once. In her hands, blonde is never just blonde. It’s a masterclass in performance.