Some had cut their hair to fit into the Establishment they’d sneered about before having families. Inevitably, we went gray, or lost our hair to age or illness. The years passed, and those of us who came of age in the glory days got older. So even when I’m an old lady, I’m going to have it.” Her lack of hair became a rebellion against marketing women as commodities, not talents. “I don’t feel like me unless I have my hair shaved. Sinéad O’Connor went the other way entirely. Your hair might be short or long, but by God – it would be big! Who can forget the first time they saw someone on the streets who looked like this?īut we got past that phase … and straight into an era before global warming was an issue, and any self-respecting rocker used at least a can of hairspray per night to keep their massive hair in order. In a short period of time, hair was shorn, shaved, tie-dyed and lacquered.
He’ll let his freak flag fly, even though, “It increases my paranoia, like looking into a mirror and seeing a police car.” Crosby agonizes over cutting his hair, but then decides not to. In 1970, David Crosby, of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, recorded “ Almost Cut My Hair.” The lyrics captured how integral long hair had become to those who put personal expression and nonconformance above even their own safety. And most importantly, this was about attracting the opposite sex. What had started as a haircut had developed into a counter culture. After all, everyone knew that all hippies were drug users, right?īy the time the musical “ HAIR” burst onto Broadway in 1967, North America had embraced a new look. And hippies, with their really long hair, and funky clothes, could easily be targeted by cops and others straights. You were defined as either a straight or a freak by the length of your hair. Long hair was also the trademark of hippies. Men with long hair couldn’t get into Disneyland until the late 60’s – long haired freaky people need not apply! Reaction could range from being pointedly ignored, to being asked to leave town, or even to being physically attacked. As Lauber, his eyes filling with tears, screamed for help, Romney repeatedly clipped his hair with a pair of scissors.” ()Īnyone who rocked long hair had to be careful on road trips small towns, especially, weren’t partial to them dirty hippies. Just look at him!” Romney kept complaining, and a few days later led a “prep school posse” that “came upon Lauber, tackled him and pinned him to the ground. Romney’s friend at the time, Matthew Friedemann, recalls that Romney said of Lauber, “He can’t look like that. Lauber generally got teased for looking different and seeming gay, though he was not out. One now famous incident: “ in 1965, (Mitt) Romney came back to Cranbrook, his all-male private school in Michigan, and noticed that John Lauber, a new student a year younger than him, was wearing his hair bleached blond and hanging down over one eye. Some people really, really didn’t like guys growing long hair. Schools began issuing regulations about hair length. Some took up guitar, others just adopted the look.
Guys and girls alike wanted to be like the Beatles. Whether you wore it shorter or longer, your hair was the flag that defined you and your generation as hip and cool. Even the pop stars of today – Justin Bieber anyone? – wear some variation of the timeless cut. That singular haircut was the foundation upon which rock n roll hair was built. Wish I could find that clipping! And if I still had my wig hanging around in the original packaging, it would be worth a fair bit of money. of New York was licensed to make “the only AUTHENTIC Beatle Wig.” My mum worked at The Hudson’s Bay back then, and got her picture in the Edmonton Journal, modeling one. It was a thorough and sudden change, a new definition of ‘cool.’ How fast could you grow your hair? If you could get your hands on a Beatles wig, you could jump the gun. They brought us the music, a cocky attitude, and a look we’d never seen before. (also known as the Tony Curtis cut.) Now honestly … would you have lost your mind over these guys? I blame The Beatles and their ‘mop tops.’ Pre-Beatlemania, men mainly favored shorter hair, arranged in a pompadour, a crew-cut, or the d.a. What began as personal expression appeared to trigger some deep fears in our elders. No other adornment seemed to cause as much anger in parents or conservatives during the 60’s and 70’s as kids with long hair. “Let them brush your rock and roll hair.” You knew it when you saw it, a great mop of hair that just screamed “I wanna rock!” From pompadours to mop tops, mullets to shags, spiked, layered, tossed like a salad or greased back in a duckass – for the Baby Boomers, the hair was the thing.