Read The New Rules for Blondes Online
Authors: Selena Coppock
I had come on too strong with Lollipop Guild, and apparently great highlights do not a kind soul make. I felt like a tween boy who had just asked a girl way out of his league to be his date for the big school dance, only to be given the Heisman hard and fast. Like a good boxer or a bad glutton for punishment, I wasn’t down for long, though. Within minutes, I saw another figure approaching the door and was elated. I’d take what I had learned in that Lollipop Guild interaction and apply it here.
Be cool, Coppock,
I thought.
This time it was Angela from the overcrowded bunkhouse that was the second-floor apartment. Five girls crammed into a tiny apartment (bunk beds and all), and they seemed to resent Mary Beth and me because our apartment was so spacious. I wanted to explain to them, “We didn’t set up the room assignments, ya cunts. Just give me a chance—I’m fucking
nice
!”
As I anxiously watched Angela pull her key from the front-door lock and begin walking into the lobby, I thought back to my sole interaction with her. It was during our first few weeks in London, and all of the students living in the building were gathered in the first-floor apartment (home to Lollipop Guild and the Prudish Twosome
50
) for a party. Mary Beth and I had brought along a few cans of Strongbow because (1) our parents raised us well, teaching us that you don’t ever visit the home of a friend and arrive empty-handed
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and (2) we imagined that their idea of “enough alcohol for a party” was definitely not enough alcohol for a party, so we had to bring provisions.
After the standard initial pleasantries and greetings, Mary Beth and I found ourselves chatting with a few of the second-floor ladies, who already seemed to hate us for our dumb luck on the apartment front. Like a standup comedian doing “road material” (so called because it can be done anywhere for any audience, usually on the road), I initiated conversation about the astronomical cost of living in London. We can all agree that airplane food is bad, men and women are different, and living in London is pricey. Perfect! Let’s commiserate, second-floor ladies who resent me for my sick apartment.
“Oh my goodness, it’s ridiculous,” Mary Beth agreed. “My college back in the U.S. is in the middle of nowhere, Pennsylvania, so I guess I just got used to the prices and rent around there, ya know?”
“Yeah! Cigarettes in upstate New York are about five dollars right now, but here in London I have to spend five pounds on my Marlboro Lights, and that’s about seven fifty!” I chimed in.
“And the price of going out at night! You don’t have to pay a cover to get into a pub, but the more lively bars and dance clubs all have cover charges, then once you’re in there, the drinks are so pricey, too!” Mary Beth contributed.
“Yeah, well, that’s why we really don’t go out very much,” said Angela from the second-floor apartment. “I mean, I’d rather wear my money than drink my money,” she snapped and gave us a smug smile.
Mary Beth and I looked at her strangely while the wheels were spinning in my head and I thought,
Yeah, well, I’d rather experience London and explore neighborhoods and enjoy the nightlife than spend money on flimsy, poorly made clothes from Topshop that I’ll inevitably outgrow and get sick of. Also, what was with that icy one-liner? Had we unknowingly offended her by enjoying London nightlife and dating guys who wore leather pants? We were just going with the flow of la vida London!
Back in the freezing stairwell, I was desperate and ready to say whatever I had to say to get into a warm apartment. So what if Angela had sad hair and self-righteous logic, and was letting her London experience pass her by—I was locked out of my apartment and freezing. Time to turn on the charm.
“Hey, Angela,” I said as she looked over the assortment of catalogs and envelopes cluttered on the mail table.
“Hi, Selena—how are you?” she asked.
OK, this is good
, I thought.
We’re engaging in conversation. She doesn’t think I’m a total asshole, it seems. Maybe just a bit of a party girl but not an asshole. Let’s just stay calm and not compare this lobby to a carpeted jail or say the word “friggin’,” OK?
“Oh man, not so great. I got locked out of my apartment this morning—”
“This morning! It’s five p.m. now!” she exclaimed.
“I know! Brutal, huh?” I said, elated that Angela possessed emotions and a willingness to empathize with others, unlike Lollipop Guild. “I’m such a moron—I came down here to put money in the dryer, and I managed to totally lock myself out of my apartment! Mary Beth’s in class all day, and I’ve been stuck here freezing in these scrubby clothes,” I said, hoping that my acknowledgment of how gross I looked would prevent her from hating me for wearing a T-shirt whose premise was “ugly people = comedy gold.”
Just then, the magic words rolled off her Topshop-shopping tongue: “Do you want to come sit in my apartment until Mary Beth gets back?”
“Oh my goodness, would you mind!? That would be fantastic!” I tried to stop myself from appearing too excited.
We went up to her apartment, where I warmed up and ate some McVitie’s cookies. The second-floor bunkhouse looked just like Mary Beth’s and my apartment upstairs, just with more bodies per square foot. Their apartment was carpeted with the same indestructible dark-gray carpet as ours was. Their walls were almost blindingly plain white, and the living room had only a few pieces of dorm furniture that were so dinky and insubstantial that they felt like children’s furniture.
Angela took her personal mantra of “I’d rather wear my money than drink my money” quite seriously, as her tiny bedroom was filled with clothes from Topshop, Selfridges, and H&M. Everything was bland and made of synthetic material, not surprisingly. She was perfectly nice, and I began to feel a sense of guilt that perhaps I had prejudged this random girl from the floor below. Her system was to shop instead of party—that’s fine. She made an offhand, smarmy remark once, but she probably meant nothing by it and she just saved me from going insane in the lobby. Who knows how long I would have been stuck there if she hadn’t appeared? Lollipop Guild hadn’t been willing to help, but Angela had been and her kindness was touching and inspiring. The gratitude I felt toward Angela led me to stage five: acceptance. An odd calm came over me and I reveled in the fact that I was a brunette for a little while. What a kick! What a different, interesting experience.
About an hour later, Mary Beth arrived home, and after I told her the tale of my lockout, I went into my bedroom to look at some photos of me with dark hair. I didn’t look half bad, I thought. It looked very unfamiliar to me, but that didn’t make it bad. I just wasn’t used to seeing myself with brown hair—it was a shock to the system. But I needed to accept it. I hadn’t missed the Tube because of my brown hair. I had brown hair and I lived in London—people do it all the time! To quote Dr. Phil,
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I needed to get real with myself: I missed being blonde, and I was being a whiny brat about it. To quote another one of Dr. Phil’s myriad mantras: I had to name it to claim it. I just wanted to be blonde. Having dark-brown hair was a fun experience, but perhaps I should have just experimented with a wig. I knew what I needed to do: I needed to quit brunette life. We’d had a good run, but blonde hair is in my veins (not literally, but you know what I mean). I needed to get back to feeling like me. The lessons of my time on the dark side weren’t lost on me, though.
In my time spent walking down the boulevard of brunette dreams, I developed a great respect for bombshells such as Jane Russell, Cindy Crawford, Elizabeth Taylor, Penelope Cruz, and Ava Gardner. These women ooze(d) sex appeal without utilizing a drop of peroxide, and for that I was (and still am) in awe of them. Unfortunately, despite Cameron Diaz’s inspiration, I just couldn’t find a comfortable spot to lay my head in the brunette community. I rued the day that I bullied John the family colorist into making me almost raven-haired. But what was I to do? Hit up the British pharmacy Boots the Chemist and see if they had hair dye? Could I handle this dye job at home? What if I tried to go back to blonde but ended up orangey, like Brenda Walsh in that episode of
90210
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where she dyes at home, then is forced to wear a
Blossom
-style hat to West Beverly High!? I’ll take Dylan McKay as a boyfriend, but orange hair would be even worse than brown, I feared. What if I thought I was buying hair dye but it turned out to be something else, like the time when Mary Beth and I went shopping for pants (as in, clothing covering your crotch, ass, and legs that Lady Gaga rarely wears) and specifically asked a clerk for “tight pants,” only to learn that in Britain, “pants” is what you call underwear. Tight pants! We’d unknowingly been seeking snug undies!
Mary Beth had endured enough of my brunette bitching and finally marched me to Boots, where we bought two highlighting kits. Yes, Mary Beth decided to jump on the blonde-highlight bandwagon, too! We could only find kits that were the draconian pull-through cap system for at-home highlighting, but it would have to do. Thankfully, MB and I worked as a team, with her jabbing a metal hook into my scalp and pulling hair out through the plastic cap for me, and vice versa. Within the hour, I was a brunette with lots of blonde streaks, which, in some blonde-starved countries, passes for blonde.
My time as a brown-haired lady was brief—just six months. Yes, I managed to pass through the Kübler-Ross five stages of grief in only six months. Like an embedded reporter who experiences life in the trenches, I have fought the battle of brunette life and lived to tell the tale. I have war stories, London photos in which I’m barely recognizable, and a closet full of jewel-tone tops to show for it. I encourage you to experience life on the dark side firsthand, as a personal challenge to test out a new look, a tool to engender sympathy and understanding for your fellow woman, and a gutsy endeavor to prove your own strength to yourself (like people who do triathlons). Sure, adopting a head of dark hair is a tough task for the true blonde, but one must endure winter to experience the spring. Peering at the world through brunette-colored glasses will make you appreciate the attention, levity, and energy of life as a blonde. And if nothing else, brown hair is a good foundation on which to layer gorgeous caramel highlights.
E
arlier we discussed the brassy-vs.-ashy phenomenon. If you aspire to be an ashy blonde, Grace Kelly, ice queen type, then you’d better review your Emily Post etiquette book because women like that wouldn’t be caught dead using the wrong fork. Grace Kelly and other cool, withholding blondes all have one thing in common (other than their use of purple shampoo): class. Your class is revealed to the world through your clothing, behavior, activities, and disposition. In Europe, where the classes are extremely stratified, manners and etiquette are hugely consequential. In the United States, the American dream is built on the concept of class ascension. As Americans, we believe that anyone can move classes and quite easily marry up or marry down. It’s not just for socialites anymore! As a by-product of that, manners and etiquette are given less weight in the United States. This difference between Europe and the United States means that Americans traveling in Europe can easily offend or horrify Europeans by lacking manners and being ignorant of etiquette. And as my mother says about etiquette gaffes, “There’s really no recovery from that. You are expected to know how to behave—especially in Europe.”
My parents frequently lament the loss of manners and social graces in American society, and I learned everything I know about manners from them. When I was a kid, my parents, sisters, and I ate dinner together every night, and we’d all talk about our days and catch up. My sisters and I weren’t permitted to leave the dinner table until we asked to be excused, and we were expected to help with clearing plates, loading the dishwasher, and the like. When my parents had friends over to the house, the three of us daughters were put to work greeting guests, putting away coats, passing hors d’oeuvres, and generally learning how to be polite. I didn’t realize it at the time, but these family rituals taught me how to be a well-behaved kid and I grew into a classy blonde. When we reached our teen years, my father bought tome-like etiquette books for my sisters and me, and these books have served as useful reference manuals. Both of my parents are very gracious and know a lot about the appropriate things to do and ways to carry yourself based on the circumstances, and they passed that down to my sisters and me. My mother spouts off un-PC and hilarious advice and tidbits about manners. Some of her greatest hits include: “When a person snaps her gum, it’s as though she is telling the world, ‘I’m dumb, I’m dumb, I’m dumb.’ ” “Cruises are horrible.” “Red Lobster is seafood for landlocked idiots.”
I sat down with my ashy blonde mother and grilled her about assorted tidbits for keeping it classy that you might not find in your standard etiquette book. My mother was educated at a Swiss boarding school (just like that mean, icy blonde stepmother threatens in
The Parent Trap
) and at an all-girls school on the Upper East Side of Manhattan (just like
Gossip Girl
). If anybody knows about hostess gifts or the proper way to RSVP to a wedding, it’s Susan Coppock.
When I sat down with my mother to receive her data dump of etiquette rules accrued over her sixty-plus years as a classy blonde, the first thing on her mind was finger bowls. Yes, finger bowls. An antiquated part of a black-tie place setting, a finger bowl is a bowl of tepid water with a circle of lemon floating in it perched atop a small plate with a doily on it. You are meant to submerge your fingers into the water between the main course and dessert. A finger bowl is tantamount to a tiny, lemony sink that is delivered to each place setting—the old-timey equivalent of antibacterial hand gel. Outside of a manicurist’s salon, I have never encountered a finger bowl. I suspect that they were pulled out of rotation around 1968, but it was my mother’s first thought. Keep in mind that at her Deb ball at the Plaza Hotel in New York City, she had to perform a dramatic public curtsy and was escorted by not one but two males. Her father was a Victorian—born in the late 1800s—no joke. She’s from a different era, when propriety was paramount.
“Finger bowls—first thing you should have in this chapter. It’s about how to be classy? OK. At a fancy dinner, when a finger bowl is placed at your setting after the entrée, it will be placed on a paper doily and a plate. When you are done using the finger bowl, pick up the bowl and the doily and move them away from you and to the left of the plate that remains in front of you. Put it where your bread plate had been before,” she instructed me. So, should you travel back in time to a black-tie dinner circa 1940, you’ll be all set. But let’s go occasion by occasion and review some etiquette advice that my mother shared with me over the years. These are tips that you might use in the present day told through the precious lens that is me.
Dinner Parties
Weddings