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  • Texas | Columns | "True Confessions and Mild Obsessions"

    Catastrophic Coiffures

    by Frances Giles
    Page boy, neckline, poodle cut, shag, pixie, ponytail, all of these hairstyles were popular in the 50's, and I didn't escape any of them. I was blessed with heavy, coarse hair. I was not blessed with the ability to keep most of these styles looking neat and tidy on my own, save for the pixie, maybe. That required no care whatsoever, except shampooing. Occasionally my mother got a wild hair to change my look, although I wasn't often terribly interested in this process. She would start to home in on me when she got home from work, slowly circling as I stood in my rumpled school clothes after a hard day of geography, kickball and the walk home in Beaumont's heat and humidity. She'd run her fingers through my gobs of hair muttering things like “coarse as a horse's tail”, and “what a mess”, and “just like a yarn mop” while perhaps looking at some hairstyles in magazines.

    Mama and many other mothers across the US got a good bit of help in corralling their daughter's manes, namely in the form of the Tonette home permanent. It was the junior miss version of the grown up Toni for older girls and women. I believe it was supposed to use milder chemicals to melt, torture, burn and reconfigure hair shafts in the kiddie set, but so far as I could tell, it smelled just as awful, itched and burned my skin and scalp and caused my eyes to stream buckets of tears as much as the Toni and other perms did.

    The person who always gave me my permanent waves was my Aunt Lydia, aka Aunt Pee Wee. Mama was not skilled at this, and now I shudder to think how much worse I might have looked if she had tried. There were basic rules concerning waves, such as, don't cut the hair until a couple of weeks after the perm is in. Don't wash hair for a week after the perm, meaning my head smelled like a diaper pail for a week or longer, since it didn't ever seem to wash out the ammonia odor for weeks and weeks. The end result, on my head, at least, was almost never poodle-ish, or Marilyn Monroe-ish, as Mama once tried to lure me into cooperating with yet another Tonette by telling me I'd look like the famous blonde bombshell. I ask you, what eight or nine year old girl wearing thick little cat eye glasses, Kate Greenaway Chubbette school dresses tied in the back and sturdy saddle oxford shoes is ever, really and truly, likely to look like a Hollywood femme fatale?

    As I said, I have always had coarse hair, and apparently it “grabs” curling solution in about a millisecond. The directions in the box were somewhat generalized, so my poor mane was allowed to process longer. The extended effects on my childish locks, appearance wise, ranged somewhere between a brand new Brillo scrubbing pad and a thermonuclear explosion, depending on the length of my hair pre perm. The curliness, or more accurately, frizziness, from a Tonette seemed to last about 6 months, so thereafter my hair and scalp was greased with a sweet smelling, very thick, white paste called Vitapointe hair dressing. There was no way to get a brush through the Big Thicket of hair do's, otherwise.


    © Frances Giles
    "True Confessions and Mild Obsessions" December 2, 2012 Column
    Related Topics: Beaumont |
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