fright wig

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See also: fright-wig

English[edit]

A fright wig

Alternative forms[edit]

Noun[edit]

fright wig (plural fright wigs)

  1. A wig, usually worn for humorous or novelty effect, having voluminous, frizzy, long hair, suggesting the hair "standing on end" of a person who is extremely frightened or who has experienced a powerful electric shock.
    • c. 1920, Rex Ellingwood Beach, A Bitter Root Billingsrbiter:
      There's an awfulness about the voice of a blood-maddened club-swingin' mob; it lifts your scalp like a fright wig, particularly if you are the clubee.
    • 1989 November 3, Janet Maslin, “Film Review: Second Sight (1989)”, in New York Times, retrieved 6 June 2014:
      Mr. Pinchot, wearing a long-haired fright wig, plays a guileless nut named Bobby McGee who has been struck by lightning and turned into a psychic.
    • 2006 January 19, Arifa Akbar, “Warhol's final self-portraits reveal his darker side”, in The Independent, UK, retrieved 6 June 2014:
      Six months before Andy Warhol died of a heart attack, he finished painting his last series of self-portraits. . . . In the images, set on an inky black background, his bald head is covered by his famously disconcerting "fright wig".

References[edit]