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The Duchess of Sussex has revealed that box hair dye left her looking like ‘Elvira’ during the pandemic.
Meghan Markle, 43, discussed the memory on the latest episode of her new podcast, Confessions of a Female Founder, alongside Kadi Lee, her friend and co-owner of hair salon Highbrow Hippie in Venice, California.
The mother-of-two explained how she first met Kadi in 2020, the year she stepped down as a senior royal with Prince Harry, through leading hairstylist Serge Normant.
Meghan had reached out to Serge that year for tips on how to rectify her ‘inky’ hair colour resulting from repeated boxed hair dye use, and he pointed her in the direction of Kadi.
The duchess said, ‘So, my family had just moved to California, and we were staying in our friend’s home, and because it was the pandemic, I kept ordering boxed hair dye.
‘I thought, ‘I’m going to look just like she does on the box’, and instead, it was this very inky, almost Elvira-esque black hair.’
The mother-of-two messaged Serge, who styled Meghan’s hair for her wedding to Prince Harry two years prior, explaining, ‘I had texted Serge, and he said you need to see Kadi, and you came over,’ and the pair, who have since developed a close friendship, haven’t looked back.
Kadi recalled Meghan and Harry greeting her with ‘big bear hugs’ at the time, adding that the couple instantly acted in a ‘warm’ manner.

The Duchess of Sussex said box hair dye left her looking like ‘Elvira’ during the pandemic (seen in Netflix’s With Love, Meghan)
Elsewhere in the third episode, Meghan said the original name for her lifestyle brand As Ever became a ‘word salad’.
Meghan originally introduced her latest business venture, which sells products like raspberry spread, as American Riviera Orchard in March last year.
But she faced trademarking setbacks and switched the name to As Ever in February, just weeks before the launch – with Netflix now a new partner in the business.
The Duchess spoke about the name in her latest podcast episode, saying, ‘I had secured As Ever as a name in 2022, and then as everything started to evolve last year, and bringing in a partner the size that it was, and it was just so interesting.
‘Because you remember, I said, ‘I like American Riviera as an umbrella,’ and then be able to have verticals beneath it. And maybe have the ‘Orchard’ really small. But when that’s not feasible… suddenly it became this word salad. I didn’t love that so much.’
‘I was like, ‘OK, well let’s go back to the thing that I’ve always loved. Let’s use the name that I protected for a reason that had been sort of under wraps’.

Meghan discussed the topic with hair colourist Kadi Lee on the latest episode of her new podcast – Confessions of a Female Founder

The Duchess is pictured in 2020 before addressing the keynote The Time is Now Women in Leadership Plenary
‘And then we were able to focus in the quiet and put our heads down and build on something that no one was sniffing around to even see about.
‘It was just really, really helpful to have that quiet period which you would know after spending so many years working on something, building it and the pivots that you had to take with it.’
Meghan’s guest Lee runs the Highbrow Hippie salon in the Los Angeles area of Venice, with her clients including Julia Roberts, Brad Pitt and Sigourney Weaver.
The Duchess revealed last November that she had invested in the company, telling InStyle at the time that she was ‘so proud to invest in her as a friend and as a female founder’.
Meghan also attended a launch event for the brand in Venice and posed for photos with Lee and celebrity hairstylist Serge Normant, who styled her hair for her wedding to Prince Harry in Windsor in 2018.
And the Duchess said of Lee in the podcast: ‘Look at you now, I mean the name Highbrow Hippie is no longer just a blog and a hair salon, it’s a product line too.
‘You have a hair supplement and hair serum that you just launched last year, and it’s already been named best hair serum by Oprah Daily.’
The Duchess described Lee in the podcast as a ‘dear friend’ and said people ‘can’t get enough’ of Lee’s products.

Pictured: Meghan Markle with Kadi Lee at a Highbrow Hippie event in Venice, California, last November

Pictured: Meghan with Kadi Lee and her hair stylist Serge Normant at the Highbrow Hippie event in Venice, California, in November 2024
Lee – who previously worked at the Aveda Institute in New York – and her friend Myka Harris founded their hair salon in 2019 following the success of a shared blog.
Their brand also promotes ‘conscious living’ and sells smokeless incense, California olive oil, Mason Pearson hairbrushes and magnesium food supplements.
In 2020, the pair attended a Black Lives Matter march and highlighted how they were the only black-owned business on their street.
In May 2023, the salon revealed that Meghan had booked in for a hair colouring session with Lee ahead of the Women of Vision awards in New York.
Their conversation is the latest instalment from Meghan’s new eight-part podcast with Lemonada Media, which promised ‘girl talk’ and advice on how to create ‘billion-dollar businesses’.
It follows the Duchess’s Netflix lifestyle series With Love, Meghan coming out last month and the launch As Ever, which is selling flower sprinkles and herbal tea.
In February, Meghan revealed she had renamed her lifestyle brand to ‘As Ever’ and posted a rare image of her young daughter Lilibet to accompany the announcement.
She said at the time: ‘Last year, I had thought ‘You know what, American Riviera, that sounds like such a great name, it’s my neighbourhood, it’s a nickname for Santa Barbara’.

Serge Normant styled Meghan’s hair for her royal wedding to Prince Harry in Windsor in May 2018
‘But it limited me to things that were just manufactured and grown in this area.
‘Then Netflix came on, not just as my partner in the show, but as my partner in my business, which was huge.’
The latest episode of Meghan’s podcast comes after she spoke about ‘juggling it all’ and nursing a poorly Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet at home in episode two last week.
Meghan revealed how, at the time of recording, one of her children had RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) – a common cause of coughs and colds – and the other influenza A – a form of flu.
The Duchess, talking about the challenge of being a working mother, said: ‘With that comes the woman who is juggling it all and doing it all from home, being confident enough to tell the truth about what’s going on, because you can’t give grace to someone in the same way if you just have no sense of it.’
Speaking to Reshma Saujani, founder of the not-for-profit Girls Who Code, she also touched on her experience of miscarriage and having to ‘let something go that you plan to love for a long time’.
Meghan had a miscarriage in July 2020, when her eldest child Archie was one, revealing her heartbreak in an article for The New York Times later that year.
In the first episode of the podcast, released a fortnight ago, Meghan said she suffered medical complications after childbirth, and had to cope with the ‘world’ not knowing.
The Duchess she had been diagnosed with post-partum pre-eclampsia following the birth of one of her children. Describing the condition, Meghan said: ‘It’s so rare. And its so scary.’
‘You’re still trying to juggle all these things and the world doesn’t know what is happening, quietly and in the quiet you are still trying to show up for people.
‘You’re still trying to show up, mostly for your children. But those things are huge medical scares.’
Whitney Wolfe Herd, founder of dating platform Bumble and the first guest on Meghan’s podcast, added: ‘They’re life or death, truly.’
The fourth episode of Confessions of a Female Founder will be released on April 29.