Tag Archives: Hair

HW Pick: Candaice Deabreu, Retail Salesperson

We love the swag of Candaice Deabreu, the retail sales associate we saw in a recent post of The Look Book in NYMagazine.com:

“I’ve changed my hair five times this year. You don’t need a head full of hair to be beautiful.”

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Walter’s World: Holiday Hair

By Walter Rutledge

With the holiday season wrapping up some of us are caught up in a whirlwind of activities. Making the smooth transition from the office to the office party or from the boardroom to the ballroom may present some challenges. Hair stylist Johnny Gentry has come to the rescue. He is offering custom made wigs to get you through the season with easy and style.

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Inmates Isolated for Long Hair

News

48 inmates in Virginia jails are being punished after authorities say they won’t comply with the state’s rules that requires hair to be kept above a shirt collar and prohibits beards.

The Associated Press previously reported in May that 10 Rastafarian inmates had been in segregation for more than 10 years for refusing to comply with the grooming policy, which calls for hair to be kept above the shirt collar and bans beards. Continue reading

Melba Moore’s “Book of Dreams”

Book

Melba Moore is a New York City girl, Harlem-born. At first, she thought she’d be a music teacher, but in 1967 she landed a chorus spot in that interesting cultural moment known as “Hair.” (She later replaced her cast mate Diane Keaton in the pivotal role of Sheila.) Moore was a standout from the beginning. With her liquid, Keane-like eyes and her Merman-strong, spunky voice, she became, shortly after winning a Tony, in 1970, for her role in “Purlie,” America’s first black sweetheart—and this during the Vietnam War. She did it by projecting her need to lift you past whatever glum thoughts or feelings you might be having. Moore has survived disco, dodgy business and personal relationships, and Oprah’s acknowledgment that “Peach Melba,” as she titled one album, is indeed a legend. And, like most legends, Moore has found another niche to pour herself into—gospel. Her latest solo record, “Book of Dreams,” is a perfect blend of the secular and Moore’s alternately big and intimate sound, which has always been about faith’s long-standing power anyway.

By Hilton Als for the The New Yorker