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New York Beauty School
In New York recently, in the foyer of the Mercer Hotel while
my two year old jumped on the orange leather Van der Roe day beds,
I leafed through a biography of Elsa Schiaparelli. When I was
a child my mother had a stall selling old clothes (the kind of
garments that are now grandly labelled 'vintage') and once she
returned from one of her 5am buying trips with an unworn Sciaparelli
evening jacket covered in electric blue paillettes. As she laid
it out for me in hushed tones, explaining the work that had gone
into it and why it was better to prefer Sciapperelli to Chanel,
something terrible pretty quickly became apparent- the jacket
was lacking an arm. That week many people called round to see
the garment, cooing at its cut and colour, fingering its cool
blue scales . Speculation was rife as to how it had sustained
its injury and when the following week I accompanied my mother
to Brick Lane and spied the lustre of blue sequins under a pile
of old jumble and tugged at it and unearthed the missing limb,
the levels of jubilation that followed were sky high.
Slumped in my chair at the Mercer, with my daughter using the
Christian Liagre glass topped wenge stools as stepping stones
and John Malkovich chatting decoratively in the background, I
read about Schiaperelli's first outing to a maison de couture
with a rich American friend who was on a shopping spree in Paris.
When Sciaparelli discovered a coat of loose-cut black velvet,
lined with bright blue crepe de chine, she could not resist slipping
into the garment . When she turned round she saw that the couturier
Paul Poiret himself was looking at her, encouragingly.
'I cannot buy it. It is certainly too expensive and where would
I wear it?' Schiaparelli said.
'Dont worry about money,' Poiret replied, 'and you could wear
anything anywhere.
Is this our ultimate fantasy when we shop? Huge compliments
and everything for nothing? That afternoon I braved the New
York
department stores with this image in mind. In the cosmetics halls
I let the trill of beauty banter wash over me, the voices bright
and taut as if even they had been subject to cosmetic procedures.
-What people forget is the skin is the only garment you wear seven
days a week.
- It's a mix of white florals with a gardenia base with strictly
no citrus, so after an hour or two put it this way your'e not
going to smell like a lemon.
-This cream will take twenty five years off like THAT.
Immediately I felt myself scrutinised by a hundred eyes, my every
garment judged and priced. l flattered myself I was a tricky case
because although I Iooked greasy- scruffy I had a good handbag
and my daughter was beautifully dressed. I must have been declared
attention-worthy because just then a wrinkle free grandma swooped
at me from nowhere and grabbed my arm, 'Come- I have the perfect
eye cream for you.'
'Ice cream?' my daughter echoed her eyes widening but before I
could reply I was whisked off in another direction by a glamorous
perfume salesman.
'She's so beautiful' , he whispered, his fingers in mine, as
he fought off a rival salesperson who was trying to spray scent
on my head 'I can see where she gets her looks.'
'Hey there!' an angular New York maven shouted at me her head
emerging from under a counter arrayed with gold bottles, 'Your
daughter should be a model. She belongs in Vogue. IN VOGUE.' She
reached over and started brushing some gloopy mauve cream onto
my arm. 'This IS you', she pronounced. But another saleslady was
already leading me back to her counter. The place was Bedlem.
There truly would have more respect of persons in a Souk. This
woman sat me and Mary down at her counter on high stools and then
glanced at my face. Slowly, the corners of her mouth went down.
You look so...English, she said with heavy sympathy.
It wasn't meant to be like this I protested inwardly as I paid
for my Laura Mercier Lavender and Basil scrub and my Bliss Rosy
Toes to keep you rosy when you mosey. But what can you do?
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