Vidal: A Jewish Soldier of the Hair Salons
Remembering the Struggles of Vidal Sassoon
The
hairstylist Vidal Sassoon, who died on May 9, reportedly of leukemia,
was more than just a fashion legend. Born in London in 1928 of
Ukrainian-Greek Jewish background, Sassoon created an architectonically
geometric updating of the short women’s haircut known as the “bob” for
such 1960s celebrities as the English model Twiggy, dress designer Mary
Quant, and actress Mia Farrow. These design prototypes are still highly
influential today.
In recent interviews,
Sassoon referred wryly to how the current high priestess of fashion,
Vogue’s Anna Wintour, and the tween pop singer Justin Bieber both sport
unauthorized adaptations of his signature styles. Yet unlike
the bob, an adaptation of a Paris style developed around the end of
World War I known as “la garçonne” (the “boyish girl”), Sassoon’s
achievement was not merely to liberate or emancipate women. Based on his
own experiences growing up as a Jew in anti-Semitic England, Sassoon
created hair visually appropriate for a symbolic tribe of women
warriors.
As revealed in the
2010 documentary “Vidal Sassoon: the Movie” released last year on DVD
from Phase 4 Films, and last year’s “Vidal: The Autobiography,”
(Macmillan) this bellicose inspiration may have been due in part to the
fact that there was nothing boyish about Sassoon’s life, not even when
he was a boy.
At age 5 Sassoon was sent to the
Spanish and Portuguese Jewish Orphanage in Maida Vale, London, after his
father had abandoned his mother. After seven years, he was able to
rejoin his family and at 14, he was
apprenticed to an East End wigmaker, Adolph Cohen of Whitechapel, who
provided local Orthodox women with their “sheitels.” This Dickensian
beginning instilled a fierce fighting spirit in him, as well as a sense
of commercial realities. Although passionate about architecture —
Sassoon later claimed to have been inspired by designs in the Bauhaus
spirit — he resigned himself to shampooing the hair of Cohen’s clients
as his only realistic career option.
The real
revolution in Sassoon’s sensibilities came at age 17, when he joined the
43 Group, which was formed by Jewish ex-servicemen who returned from
combat after World War II to find that London was still rife with public
events by supporters of Fascist anti-Semites, such as the notorious
Oswald Mosley. This Fascist-smashing 43 Group — named after the original
number of its members — was somewhat successful in tamping down the
postwar public flowering of UK Fascism
by those who were disappointed by Hitler’s defeat.
An
anti-Fascist fighter with a day job as a hairdresser, Sassoon was
certainly aware of the style example set by Hollywood icon Ingrid
Bergman in the 1943 movie “For Whom the Bell Tolls.” In it, Bergman
played Maria, an anti-Fascist Spanish guerilla with a much remarked-upon
short-cropped hairdo. Although Bergman’s style was technically termed a
“bubble cut” rather than a “bob,” the lesson for young Vidal was clear:
strong women fighters must be given shields of low-maintenance hair to
enhance their abilities.
This knowledge came in
especially useful after the full news of the horrors of the Holocaust
reached Sassoon and the rest of London’s East End. His reaction was to
make aliyah in order to join the Palmach, the elite force of the
Haganah, the Jewish paramilitary organization in British Mandate
Palestine. As Sassoon told The Jewish
Chronicle: “I wasn’t going over [to Israel] to sit in an office…. I
thought if we don’t fight for a piece of land and make it work, then the
whole Holocaust thing was a terrible waste.”
Sassoon’s
feisty descriptions in his autobiography of Israeli battlefield
experiences make the book read in parts like the memoirs of a retired
foot soldier, not anyone involved in the arts world. Although Sassoon
returned to England to help support his mother, his experiences in the
Holy Land remained an indelible part of his existence, inspiring his
creative life. As Sassoon added to The Jewish Chronicle
The
sense of what we’d done [in Israel’s armed forces] gave me an enormous
confidence, and I really felt as if I belonged. And, funnily enough, it
gave me a feeling of belonging in London, too. Or belonging anywhere:
this is our world, that kind of thing.
Working
intensely and
launching tireless publicity campaigns about his style innovations in
the 1950s and ’60s, Sassoon eventually managed to make the then-stylish
beehive hairdo look outmoded. By doing so, he created what English
fashion maven Hilary Alexander called in a memorial tweet the “most
radical hair shift since 1920’s.” Yet despite his all-consuming career,
Sassoon never forgot his early London experiences combating Fascist
thugs. In 1982, he established the Vidal Sassoon International Center
for the Study of Anti-Semitism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
And
the Center’s attempt to understand and historically document
anti-Semitism has borne fruit. The Vidal Sassoon International Center’s
noteworthy series of publications include Deborah Lipstadt’s “Denying
the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory” (Free
Press,1993); Cesare De Michelis’s “The Non-Existent Manuscript: A Study
of the ‘Protocols of
the Sages of Zion’”; and Vadim Rossman’s “Russian Intellectual
Anti-Semitism in the Post-Communist Era,”, both from the University of
Nebraska Press.
It is in such volumes, and a
lifetime of devoted concern for defending the Jewish people, that the
real legacy of Vidal Sassoon will remain, whatever hairdos Anna Wintour
or Justin Bieber may be wearing next year.
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