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- <text id=90TT3303>
- <title>
- Dec. 10, 1990: The Long And Short Of It
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 10, 1990 What War Would Be Like
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FASHION, Page 74
- The Long and Short of It
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Male ponytails hang in there as a style for all seasons
- </p>
- <p>By EMILY MITCHELL--Reported by Kathleen Brady/New York and
- Margaret Emery/San Francisco
- </p>
- <p> Fashion fortune tellers peered into their crystal balls and
- predicted a brief life. Men wearing ponytails, they said,
- that's just a momentary fad. Another trend will appear and--snip! But the style gazers were wrong. The ponytail is not only
- hanging in there but also showing up in new and popular
- variations.
- </p>
- <p> What grows around goes around. In the 1960s down-to-there
- hair was the counterculture's banner. It was extolled in a
- musical named--what else?--Hair as "long, straight, curly,
- fuzzy, snaggy, shaggy, ratty, matty." Baby boomers, who now
- occupy the midlife establishment scorned by Hair, took up the
- ponytail as a way of being nostalgic while subjecting their
- flowing locks to a certain adult discipline.
- </p>
- <p> Wally Rubin, 35, an assistant in the office of Manhattan
- borough president Ruth Messinger, has grown his hair for a
- year, partly, he says, "because it was practical." It was also
- his way of keeping alive the Age of Aquarius. While Michael
- Aymar, 32, was on Wall Street as a bond trader, he kept his
- hair short, following an unwritten code. But last year,
- yearning for his student days, he asked his bosses at an ad
- agency if there was a policy on hair length. He got no reply,
- and today his ponytail is 4 in. long.
- </p>
- <p> In the meantime, the Founding Fathers' favorite hairstyle
- had reappeared on the mainstream American fashion scene as a
- European import that went companionably with well-heeled 1980s
- glamour. Shampooed and conditioned, it no longer had the
- scruffiness of the hippie look, and instead was associated with
- Old World hipness. "It's safely deviant," explains Michael
- O'Loughlin, 31, an editor of the San Francisco Examiner, who
- recently cut off his 6-in. ponytail and got a longish crewcut.
- </p>
- <p> Since ancient times people have believed that long hair
- bestows power and an aura of sensuality. Cliff Aron, 34,
- president of BEI, an energy-services firm based in New York
- City, has a ponytail that ends an inch below his shoulders.
- When people see it, he says, "they know they're dealing with
- someone special. They have to feel that I am successful if I
- can get away with this." Bob Rolke, 18, a varsity swimmer at
- Washington's American University, has barely had a trim in the
- past two years and says of his mass of bronze curls, "The girls
- like it." The ponytail's most notable practitioner is
- undoubtedly Hollywood's Steven Seagal, the impassive karate
- black belt whose hit movies Hard to Kill and Marked for Death
- helped popularize the style.
- </p>
- <p> The ponytail of the past, held back with an elastic band,
- has been joined by plaits, queues and thin, razor-cut hanks of
- eccentric design. Gary Margolis, 45, director of a counseling
- center at Vermont's Middlebury College, believes that hair has
- once again become a font of Zen expressionism: "How you wear
- your hair speaks of the inner self." The message may be
- simpler. For many men, it may just be "I don't have to put up
- with haircuts anymore." The tyke who protested when he was
- first lifted into a barber's chair may be the ponytailed man
- in the power pinstripe suit who has a big chair of his own in
- his fancy office or even at the head of the boardroom table.
- </p>
- <p> The ponytail may be a style for all seasons, but new
- coiffures are coming up on the outside. Among them: a Hell's
- Angel look and what Supercuts haircutting chain calls "gangster
- chic." The first, a greasy down-and-dirty tousle once displayed
- by actor Mickey Rourke, can be achieved by gel overload or
- shampoo avoidance. For the gangster look, men can turn for
- inspiration to the oily Mafia sleekness seen in GoodFellas and
- the forthcoming Godfather III; actor Andy Garcia is its patron
- saint.
- </p>
- <p> What could be next? Appropriately enough for an aging boomer
- generation, the shiny pate is becoming acceptable, even noble.
- Cheers' Ted Danson has gone public with a hint of skin gleaming
- through his thinning strands. Television luminaries Charles
- Kuralt and Joe Garagiola are boldly bald, so who knows? Maybe
- it will soon be time again for the Yul Brynner look.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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