Ken Finn:
One night in
early 1968 age 14, I watched a chat show; a young Vidal Sassoon draped
in gorgeous Jean Shrimpton-esque models talked about the highlife of the
fashion and arts movement coming up from the working class. Blimey, it
was cool to talk the way I did. Almost as an exclamation I said, 'I fancy
being a hairstylist.' My mum got me a Saturday job with 'Etienne' in suburban
Walton that week but before long I was working in Londons Knightsbridge
and Chelsea with the most fashionable of the day.
It was the
start of my education; for the next twenty odd years while I styled I
talked to people from diverse walks of life and was blessed with conversations
that widened the narrow perspective of my childhood. I spoke with Film
Stars and Scientists, carved first wave Punk Mohawks and styled Princesses.
For a while
I got lost in an ambition to grow my own status but the answer was not
to be found in the kudos of my clientele or in any of the commercial achievements
I have attained since putting down my scissors in the early nineties.
Ive learnt that we can be what or whom we want to be; the real challenge
is being the genuine article. Im honestly trying.
|