IT'S SHORT but it's growing
YOU South Africa
|19 June 2025
He started to go bald in his 20s, but thanks to a hair transplant actor Clint Brink says he'll soon be sporting luscious locks again
You’d think with his impressive resume and on-screen appeal he wouldn't have to change a thing about his looks.
Yet after years of sporting a clean-shaven head, Clint Brink, who starred in hit TV shows Backstage and Generations, found himself at a crossroads when he decided to leave the popular soap Binnelanders to focus on his family and explore new opportunities.
And one opportunity presented itself quite unexpectedly – the chance to change his hair game completely. And for the 44-year-old, it was quite a thing.
“When I was younger I had a full head of hair - small brown curls,” he tells YOU. “For one storyline in Generations, I had to braid my hair tight against my head. When that storyline ended and I loosened the braids, my hair began to fall out.”
That was 20 years ago and, like many men facing hereditary hair loss, Clint took the decisive route.“I remember I was very angry at first,” he says. “I knew becoming bald was in my genes because my dad was bald but I was still in my 20s. So I got annoyed and just shaved everything off.”
He eventually embraced it and the bald look became part of his identity. But when he left Binnelanders, his wife, Steffi, gave him an unexpected gift – shed arranged a hair transplant sponsorship for him.
“She loves my bald head,” Clint tells us with a smile. “But she thought it would be good for me professionally. 'Other roles might expect a head full of hair,' she said. 'You'll get more opportunities”.
Esta historia es de la edición 19 June 2025 de YOU South Africa.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE YOU South Africa
YOU South Africa
THE WINDS OF CHANGE
A fresh approach for a modern monarchy – that's William and Kate's mission, but it's set them on a collision course with the more traditional King Charles
5 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
HOW AI IS CHANGING THE WORLD
Here's a look at some wins and some worries.
3 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
GOING TO EXTREMES
When you're sick of visiting luxury resorts and even climbing Everest is too 'mainstream', what's next? Whether they're skydiving to dinner at the North Pole, racing up volcanoes or camping on remote rock towers, the super-rich are now competing to see who can have the most unusual holiday
8 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
PRINCE OF PLANTS
Yet again Leon Kluge is the toast of SA with his continued success at the Chelsea Flower Show, where chatting to King Charles is all in a day's work
6 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
LITTLE MAN.BIG MOVES
It's no surprise he delighted the crowd at the Rugby Sevens final or that the feel-good moment went viral - this keen dancer was born to entertain!
4 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
HOME TWEET HOME
WHEN TWO FAMILIES BOTH CLAIMED THE SAME PARROT AS THEIR OWN, THE RESULTING DRAMA BECAME THE TALK OF MBOMBELA
5 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
A CHRISTMAS TO REMEMBER
YOU's Glam Gran Amanda Cloete is looking forward to a special festive season surrounded by all her loved ones
5 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
SO MUCH TO CELEBRATE
This Joburg couple's wedding plans were on hold for four years as their little girl fought cancer – now they're married and she's in remission
4 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
OPEN YOURSELF TO JOY
You can find more happiness by shifting how you think and implementing some science-based strategies, says a new bookAPPINESS is a direction and not a destination, says Harvard professor Arthur C Brooks.
6 mins
25 December 2025
YOU South Africa
Everest's endless appeal
YOU'D think after 70-plus years of people climbing Mount Everest there wouldn't be anything new to do up there, but the mountain still holds fresh challenges.
2 mins
25 December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

