IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER

Vidal Sassoon’s groundbreaking hairstyles made him a legend. Then he sold out. Now his son, Elan, hopes to build on his vision.

By Christopher Muther, Globe Staff

Elan Sassoon was, for years, quite certain he had no interest in the family business. The hair salons, sleek beauty schools, and product lines that made his father, Vidal Sassoon, the best-known hairstylist in the world held little allure. Instead, the younger Sassoon graduated from college in 1993, raised $10 million, and started producing films.

adriana-elan-ariel-2000

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In a few years, his company, Skyline Entertainment, was making critically lauded indie movies with stars such as Blythe Danner, Peter Gallagher, and Lara Flynn Boyle. He was walking the red carpet at Cannes, hanging out with Gwyneth Paltrow and Ethan Hawke.

“I was Mr. On-the-Rise Film Guy,” Sassoon, now 38, recalls.But the demands of film schedules and festivals, while making him someone to watch in the movie industry, was putting stress on his marriage. He had to make a choice: film or family. He chose family. The decision drew Sassoon back to the family business, and in no small way. Next year, on Commonwealth Avenue near Boston University, he’ll open the Institute of Hairdesign by Elan Sassoon, slated to be the largest cosmetology school in the world, the first of four across the country. This month, he launches two high-end salons called Mizu, one here with his four business partners  at the posh Mandarin Oriental hotel, another in New York on Park Avenue. He’s partnered on a line of spas called Green Tangerine, and rolls out his own product line next year.

Choosing Boston

The decision to locate the academy in Boston was based, in part, on the city’s strong emphasis on education and its large student population. Boston appears to be a good fit for Sassoon, who confesses that he’s far more traditional and strict than his parents when it comes to marriage and family. Elan Sassoon was born in New York, grew up in LA, and spent a year at Berkshire Academy. But Boston became central to Elan’s world for another reason. In January 2007, his wife of 14 years, Adriana Sassoon, was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. A former ELITE model in her native Brazil, Adriana Sassoon endured a frustrating series of biopsies in Miami, where the family was living. In search of the best care, Adriana Sassoon quickly moved to Boston for treatment. Elan and their two children followed that May. The family lives in Chestnut Hill. Adriana Sassoon recently celebrated her first cancer-free year.

Adriana Sassoon has a Handbag Company with the focus in Minimalist Design. The main ingredient is to help a Ameamoroso Charity founded by her father and mentor as well as charities that work with children of developing countries”…“If I can make a difference by doing what I love and being able to help others in need, what a marvelous accomplishment!

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Photos Elan Sassoon &   Adriana Sassoon .

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https://adrianasassoon.wordpress.com

CORTES DE CABELO

Muda a estação, mudam também os cabelos. E para versões mais vaporosas carregadas de estilo e leveza para enfrentar o calor da temporada. Segundo a hair stylist do Soho Trianon Bruna Pires, as franjas – em voga desde o verão passado – continuam nesta estação. De acordo com ela, as novidades ficam por conta dos cabelos com tons mais frios e claros e formas desestruturadas, sejam para os curtos ou compridos.
 
Curtos.

Se você estava pensando em deixar suas madeixas curtinhas, agora é o momento. O verão 2009 traz versão super moderna para esse comprimento. “Nesta temporada, os curtos abusam das franjas alongadas com acabamento estilo militar”, diz a hair stylist.

No entanto, é preciso analisar atentamente o formato do seu rosto, antes de optar por esse estilo de corte. “Cabelos mais curtos são ideais para quem tem rosto mais fino e quanto mais arredondado for, o comprimento da franja deve ser no mínimo dois dedos abaixo do queixo para que possa dar a impressão de um rosto mais delgado”, alerta a profissional.

Os curtos de Katie Holmes e Rihanna exibem versões super modernas para o verão 2009.

TIARAS E PINGOS DE LUZ PARA ARRAZAR NAS FESTAS

A moda pede acessórios chique e simples nos penteados de Natal e Réveillon

Há menos de um mês para as comemorações de fim de ano, assuntos relacionados ao look para as festas e confraternizações rondam a cabeça das mulheres. Como arrumar o cabelo e usar a maquiagem adequada são dúvidas freqüentes de mulheres modernas ligadas nas tendências da moda.

A maquiagem depende muito do tom de pele. Com o intuito de passar uma imagem mais harmoniosa, a utilização de roupas chamativas e brilhosas pede uma maquiagem mais discreta, sem brilhos nos olhos e no rosto. Além disso, é importante adequá-la com os acessórios, a fim de causar um efeito chique e sutil no visual.

Para os penteados, a tendência mostra que as mulheres são a favor do cabelo elaborado, porém com aspecto natural.

Segundo o cabeleireiro Leverson Lino, também do Spazio Personale, aqueles penteados conservadores totalmente presos estão fora de moda. “Hoje em dia, elas procuram algo diferente para os cabelos que fujam do efeito conservador, muito sério e duro de tanto laquê. Por isso, deixar as madeixas com ar natural, com movimento é a melhor solução para as festas de fim de ano”, afirma.

Além disso, Lino sugere a utilização de pingos de luz, presilhas, fivelas, tiaras gregas aquelas com flores, para chamar atenção nos penteados. “Esses acessórios garante um charme a parte no penteado”, conclui.

Presos ou soltos, as mulheres podem ousar na hora de arrumar os cabelos. A principal dica é, antes de mais nada, adequar os penteados com o estilo da roupa e com os acessórios.

Pele clara ou escura, cabelos lisos ou enrolados, o que vale é caprichar no visual e aproveitar as festas de fim de ano.

 tiara-2008

Desde que Miuccia Prada colocou as faixas nos desfiles, liberou geral a volta delas e das tiaras ao mundo da moda aqui uma das gêmeas Olsen, Ashley, usando uma das faixas da Prada.

 

Like the more popular tiara, bridal headbands are a great way to dress up your up do, or add a little glam to your hair down.

You can find headbands with pearls, crystals, diamonds, satin, lace or almost anything you can imagine to complement your gown, and in a wide range of prices from all the best designers.

Have you considered what, if anything, you will be wearing in your hair?

 

Elan Sassoon Opens Mizu Salons

 

 Partners with Mandarin Oriental in Boston and Bumble Vets in New York

BOSTON, October 16 /PRNewswire/ 

Mizu Boston, the first of two new salons by Elan Sassoon opens today in the new Mandarin Oriental, Boston hotel. Mizu New York will follow in early November at its tony Park Avenue locale, headed up by famed Bumble and bumble veterans, Damian Santiago and Michael “Vaughn” Acord, who partnered with Sassoon on the venture.

“My goal is to create the best salon possible,” Elan Sassoon, said. “We recruited a group of talented stylists who are guided and inspired by design, then created an environment that promotes peace, balance and an appreciation of beauty.”

Both locations invested in top architects-Niall McLaughlin Architects in Boston and Leslie Jill Hanson in New York-to achieve the desired salon aesthetic. Each space incorporates experience-enhancing technology like Myvu glasses that offer television and movie entertainment in the stylist’s chair, WiFi, and use of complimentary laptops available to every client. To further streamline the experience, at the end of an appointment, wireless check-out systems will complete any service and product transactions while sitting at the stylist station, shortening time spent waiting to pay at reception.

Mizu Boston and Mizu New York will offer haircutting, hair color/highlighting, blow dry, and up-do services starting at US$125 for a cut and US$250 for color. Plans are in the works for additional salons in Los Angeles, London and Dubai. A new salon academy, one of only two in the world to offer dormitories, is slated to open in Boston fall 2009.

About Mizu Salons

Created by Elan Sassoon, Mizu salons blend the finest talent in hairstyling with modern architectural aesthetic and function. Located inside Mandarin Oriental, Boston and at 505 Park Avenue in New York City, Mizu’s architectural design and international talent attract world-wide attention and celebrity clientele. By creating beautiful hair, providing intuitive service and staying ahead of industry technology, Mizu salons will mark a new era in hairstyling and the salon experience. For more information, hours, services and locations, visit www.mizuboston.com or www.mizunewyork.com.

Web site: http://www.mizuboston.com

Mizu Salon & Academy of Aesthetics

Elan Sassoon, what are you doing around here in icy New England? You’re an LA dude, reared on coolness, sunshine and beach parties. You’re the son of Vidal Sassoon. Yeah, Vidal. As in: “If you don’t look good, we don’t look good.” As in: You graduated from Beverly Hills High. As in: Your neighbor was Bob Dylan and his son, Jakob, your best bud. As in: What the hell are you doing here?
But here you are! You’re opening a swishy new salon, Mizu, in an even swishier new hotel, the Mandarin Oriental—tomorrow! You’ve bought space on Commonwealth Avenue to build the world’s first school of hair design and skincare, the Academy of Aesthetics by Elan Sassoon. You moved your wife and two children here to be freezing with the rest of us.

Welcome, guy! You’ll fit in. You have that Yankee work ethic, for sure. How could you not? Your dad was sent to an orphanage in England, just doors away from his mother, who sent him there because she could not afford to feed him. When he was 14, she took him to a neighborhood barbershop to get a job. “We don’t have any jobs,” the owner said. “Thank you, sir,” young Vidal replied. “I understand.” After which he took his mother’s hand, opened the door for her and escorted her. “Wait.” The owner said. “I like your manners. I think we can find work for you here.”
And so begat the gazillionaire empire of Vidal Sassoon, a collection of international salons, products and the infamous geometric “bob.” Vidal bore four children but only took one of them on industry trips to fashion weeks and shows—you. And despite the mansion and trappings of new money, your father insisted his kids work. Hard. You and your brother David worked construction, pouring cement in the summer. You were expected to earn their own money to buy things.

After graduating from American University, you chased Hollywood. You produced nine films, starring actors such as Sam Gallagher and Lara Flynn Boyle, and were nominated for an award at Cannes (losing to Ed Burns “The Brothers McMullen.”) But you couldn’t leave your roots behind, could you, Elan? Hair. You had a thing for hair.
So tomorrow is a big deal for you. It comes after years working in the beauty-care industry (you headed up Louis Vuitton’s salons, and started and sold a product line with your mom, Beverly). And it comes with great pride. It’s not just that you’re continuing the work your dad began. You have plans for eight more schools and a product line. It’s that you’re doing it on your own. We’re glad to have you with us, Elan. Now maybe you can convince your pal Jakob to move here, too.  

 
Mizu
Mandarin Oriental Hotel
776 Boylston Street
Boston
(617) 585-MIZU
www.Mizuboston.com

The stylists were given a major dare in the final challenge: They had to copy one of Vidal Sassoon’s most famous bobs — with Sassoon as the guest judge. Yes, Vidal Sassoon, the rock star of haircutting, the man who liberated women from the tyranny of weekly hairdresser’s appointments in the 1960s by creating geometric haircuts that were truly wash and wear. This is the guy who gave Mia Farrow her Rosemary’s Baby pixie — another cut that pushed the envelope and redefined femininity. Can you imagine how nervous the stylists were? They may have acted calm — but they were shaking in their shoes.

The stylists also had to create two other cuts — and all of the looks had to tell a story. I know, it’s complicated. I can’t say it was easy for me to follow, either. And to top that off, they had to be sure the cuts flattered the models and their dresses. Oh, and they had to accomplish it all in three hours.

http://video.aol.com/video-detail/finale-vidal-sassoon-blog-pt1/31703643/?icid=VIDURVENT01

 

 

 

 

 

In the name of the father

Vidal Sassoon’s groundbreaking hairstyles made him a legend. Then he sold out. Now his son, Elan, hopes to build on his vision.

By Christopher Muther, Globe Staff
October 2, 2008
Elan Sassoon was, for years, quite certain he had no interest in the family business. The hair salons, sleek beauty schools, and product lines that made his father, Vidal Sassoon, the best-known hairstylist in the world held little allure. Instead, the younger Sassoon graduated from college in 1993, raised $10 million, and started producing films.

In a few years, his company, Skyline Entertainment, was making critically lauded indie movies with stars such as Blythe Danner, Peter Gallagher, and Lara Flynn Boyle. He was walking the red carpet at Cannes, hanging out with Gwyneth Paltrow and Ethan Hawke.

“I was Mr. On-the-Rise Film Guy,” Sassoon, now 38, recalls.

But the demands of film schedules and festivals, while making him someone to watch in the movie industry, was putting stress on his marriage. He had to make a choice: film or family. He chose family.

The decision drew Sassoon back to the family business, and in no small way. Next year, on Commonwealth Avenue near Boston University, he’ll open the Institute of Hairdesign by Elan Sassoon, slated to be the largest cosmetology school in the world, the first of four across the country. This month, he launches two high-end salons called Mizu, one here with his four business partners  at the posh Mandarin Oriental hotel, another in New York on Park Avenue. He’s partnered on a line of spas called Green Tangerine, and rolls out his own product line next year.

Elan Sassoon is not a hairstylist. He’s a businessman, one with a clear motivation for diving back into the industry he grew up with. He’s determined to expand upon his father’s vision – a vision that changed the beauty industry and the salon world, a vision that Vidal Sasson created, nurtured, and then, in 1983, sold for tens of millions of dollars, losing control of his name in the process.

“My dad didn’t really want to sell in the first place, and it’s something that he always regretted,” Sassoon says. “I want to finish what he started.”

A cut above
Vidal Sassoon built an empire based on his famed geometric cuts and the omnipresent catchphrase “If you don’t look good, we don’t look good.” In the 1960s, Vidal ran in the same celebrated, swinging London circles as the Beatles and the Rolling Stones.

In 1968, Vidal Sassoon was paid $5,000 to cut Mia Farrow’s hair on the set of “Rosemary’s Baby” while dozens of photographers captured the moment. Her pixie cut became as emblematic of the era as miniskirts and bell-bottoms. Sassoon’s haircuts were so influential during this period that the designer Mary Quant declared him “the Chanel of hair.” The first celebrity hairstylist, he had his own TV show in the 1980s, “Your New Day.”

The younger Sassoon says he’s building his brand through business acumen. But it doesn’t hurt that he has the most recognized last name in the salon business and grew up immersed in the culture. His father regularly pulled him out of school to travel to international salons and fashion shows.

“I learned a lot about that world because it was all around me, and it was great,” Elan says over a cup of English breakfast tea at the Bristol Lounge last week. “But it wasn’t where I thought I would end up.”

With a laid-back California lilt to his speech and shoulder-length auburn hair, Elan grew up in a world of bigger-than-life Hollywood parties and celebrity classmates in Beverly Hills. While his sisters loved the glamour of a splashy entrance, the shy Elan and his younger brother would avoid the red carpet and slip into events through the back door.

His mother is actress Beverly Sassoon (nee Adams), best known for her recurring role as Lovey Kravezit in the Matt Helm series of films with Dean Martin. After his parents divorced in 1980, Elan lived with both parents, but he was so shy that even his mother’s celebrity boyfriends couldn’t draw him out of his shell.

“My mom was dating Erik Estrada for a while, and he would pick me up from school on his ‘CHiPs‘ motorcycle,” Sassoon says of the ’70s TV heartthrob. “I was so embarrassed I would tell him to park a few blocks away and I would get on there so the other kids didn’t see me.”

Childhood friend Jason Goldberg, who formed Katalyst Media with Ashton Kutcher and produced “Punk’d” and “Beauty and the Geek,” says even though Elan grew up surrounded by decadence, he’s always been remarkably grounded.

“Even when he was a kid, he wasn’t fazed by any of it,” Goldberg says on the phone from Los Angeles. “Here was a guy who always had a good head on his shoulders. He has the business sense and the level of style and taste to pull off just about anything.”

The one business venture Elan couldn’t pull off was the one closest to his heart. In 2002, he tried to buy back his father’s beauty schools and hair salons. Shortly after his parents’ divorce, his father sold his line of hair products to Richardson-Vicks (later acquired by Procter & Gamble) and the salons and beauty schools to his three top salon managers. The way Elan tells it, his father did not want to sell when Richardson-Vicks made its $125 million offer, but he was outvoted by his shareholders. More than two decades later, Elan Sassoon secured financing to buy back the Vidal Sassoon salons and schools, and worked out an agreement with P&G, which owns the Vidal Sassoon name. But his offer was rejected. The salons were sold to the Regis Corp.

“That took six months of my life to plan and put together,” Elan says, still stung by the loss. “It was a pretty big blow when it was sold to Regis.”

He decided then that if he couldn’t buy back the salons and schools his father started, he’d open his own.

What price beauty?
Elan Sassoon’s state-of-the-art school – with tuition of $19,500 a year – will be one of the priciest beauty academies in the country, and only the second with on-campus housing. The 600 students will also undergo more hours of training than any other Massachusetts cosmetology school. Sassoon says his students will graduate with a far broader knowledge of hair cutting and styling, a concept that other salon owners in Boston applaud.

“They are trained to do the basics,” says Serge Safar, owner of Safar Coiffure on Newbury Street, of the students coming out of beauty schools. “But we end up having to train them another year or two before we can put them on the floor. A more complete education would be a huge benefit.”

Sassoon says he’s commissioning new textbooks that will provide a history of beauty. He’s bringing in experts such as Patrick McGinley, who worked as creative director at the Vidal Sassoon salon on Newbury Street, to craft a curriculum.

But one person who will not be teaching at the academy is Vidal Sassoon himself, now 80. When he sold his name, products, and schools, he signed agreements not to re-enter the beauty world. But he has little doubt that his son’s plans will succeed.

“He’s teaching the old man a thing or two,” the elder Sassoon says on the phone from his home in London. “Hair styling has always been a very exciting world. I wasn’t exactly quiet. I guess he saw what was going on and thought, ‘I can do better than him.’ And I honestly think he will.

“I mean, his whole marvelous idea of adding rooms for people to stay while they’re at school – that was his original idea. I never thought of that. We had schools and never did that. He’s a thinker and a visionary. I’m more than pleased.”

Choosing Boston
The decision to locate the academy in Boston was based, in part, on the city’s strong emphasis on education and its large student population. Elan Sassoon was born in New York, grew up in LA, and spent a year at Berkshire Academy.

But Boston became central to Elan’s world for another reason. In January 2007, his wife of 14 years, Adriana, was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. A former ELITE model in her native Brazil, Adriana endured a frustrating series of biopsies in Miami, where the family was living. In search of the best care, Adriana quickly moved to Boston for treatment. Elan and their two children followed that May. The family lives in Chestnut Hill. Adriana recently celebrated her first cancer-free year.

Boston appears to be a good fit for Sassoon, who confesses that he’s far more traditional and strict than his parents when it comes to marriage and family. He was married at the age of 24 and after seeing the result of divorce growing up, his priority is making his marriage work.

“It wasn’t a good situation,” he says of the years after his parents’ divorce. “The boyfriends and the girlfriends and all these people coming into the picture. It’s nice today because I’m still friends with a lot of them. My mom went out with Senator Bill Cohen for three years, he was the secretary of defense. And we’re still friendly.”

Over lemon chicken at P.F. Chang’s a few days later, Sassoon tells stories of a recent New York City media blitz, where magazines such as Men’s Vogue and Details met with him for upcoming feature stories on the low-key and charismatic man and his budding hair empire.

“It’s a little different these days from when I was a kid,” he says. “I think I’ve definitely gotten over my shyness and fear of the red carpet. I kind of enjoy it now.”

Christopher Muther can be reached at muther@globe.com

Elan Sassoon, owner of Mizu Salon
The son of legendary hairstylist Vidal, Elan Sassoon this month unveils Mizu, a 3,300-square-foot salon on the Mandarin’s second floor. The Asian-inspired hotel, he says, allowed him to eschew typical salon amenities in favor of a “high-tech Zen” vibe with white Italian furniture, gold folding screens, and iPods on which clients can watch movies. Sassoon applies the same level of perfectionism in selecting his staff: All 30 Mizu stylists, who offer cuts starting at $125 and single-process color beginning at $70, have been handpicked from the city’s top salons.                  617-585-6408          ,

Sassoon’s Hair Apparent

His dad is possibly the world’s most famous hairstylist. Now Elan Sassoon, 38, says he’s building what will be “The Harvard of hair schools.”

October 2008

 

 

His father is possibly the world’s most famous hairstylist, and he’s already run a chain of high-end medi-spas, so it was only a matter of time before Elan Sassoon—son of Vidal—started building his own beauty empire. Sassoon, 38, will open the Mizu Boston salon at the new Mandarin Oriental hotel in September, followed by Mizu New York on Park Avenue in October.

The salons, which have all-white interiors set off by gold Asian-style screens, aim to entertain as well as beautify customers by providing them with iPods (to tune out the blow-dryers) and high-tech goggles that screen movies.

Sassoon also has another major Beantown project in the works. Though he’s not a stylist—preferring to concentrate on the business end of operations—he’ll open what he describes as “the Harvard of hair schools” next year. The $22 million academy will be the first in the U.S. to offer dormitories and will also boast a 200-seat auditorium. “Most hair schools use textbooks that talk about tools that the cavemen and the ancient Egyptians used to barber,” he said. “There’s nothing in them about the last 150 years, about Michael Gordon, Trevor Sorbie or my father.”

And what advice does the legendary coiffeur give his son? “Technically he’s not allowed to,” Sassoon said with a laugh, referring to the noncompete agreement that the elder Sassoon has with Procter & Gamble, which owns the rights to his name. He does, however, offer “good one-liners from Winston Churchill,” said Elan, citing “Success consists of going from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm” as one of them.