Hi Everyone!
Stopping by to share with you an excerpt from a new Novel, out today! Be sure to check it out :)
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Stopping by to share with you an excerpt from a new Novel, out today! Be sure to check it out :)
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From Rouge: A
Novel of Beauty and Rivalry. Copyright © 2019 by Richard Kirshenbaum and reprinted with
permission from St. Martin’s Press.
Chapter
1
HOLLYWOOD DREAMS
New
York City, 1933
A
Technicolor sky hung over the city even though it was only early May. At times,
even New York City seemed to have caught the bug. The pear trees that bloomed
like white fireworks every April may as well have sprouted palm trees.
Everyone, it seemed, had just stepped out of a Garbo movie, and Josephine Herz
(née
Josiah Herzenstein) would be damned if she would not capitalize on this craze.
A
young, well-kept woman was the first to grace her newly opened, eponymous salon
on Fifth Avenue. With bleached-blond “marcelled” hair, a substantial bust, and
a mouth that looked as though it had been carved from a pound of chopped meat,
her new client had all the ammunition to entrap any man in the city, to keep
him on the dole, and her cosmetic hygienist, in this case Herz Beauty, on the
payroll. She lowered herself onto the padded leather salon chair like a
descending butterfly and batted her eyes as though they too might flutter from
her face.
“I
want thickah,” she whined. She said this in a Brooklyn accent that would
have killed her chances had she been an actress transitioning from silent to
talkies.
Josephine
nodded and reached into her arsenal, procuring the favored Herz moisturizer for
a dewy complexion. She removed and unscrewed the glass jar, leaned over her
client, and began to apply it to her cheekbones in soft, round swirls.
“No!”
The client swatted her hand away as though to scold and dispose of a landed
bug. “Not my skin,” she said. “My lashes.”
“Oh.”
Josephine withdrew her hand and held it, poised high above her client’s face,
as though hovering a spoon over a boiling pot.
“I
want thicker lashes,” said the blonde. “Like Gloria.”
“Gloria?”
Josephine was perplexed.
“Swanson!”
the client said, shaking her head, miffed that she was not understood.
“I
see.” Josephine replaced the glass jar in her holster bag and procured a
separate, zippered case. “For the thick-eyelash look, you have two options:
tinting or application.” She removed both a small black cake and a moistened
brush to apply the pigment and a plastic box of spidery lashes and displayed
them as though they were a cache of jewels. The tube of adhesive gum came next.
The
blonde’s eyes widened. She shook her head and sat bolt upright on her chair. A
convalescent, revived from the dead. “Ya don’t mean you want to glue them on?”
Josephine
took a long, deep breath. “How else do you think women get them?” she said. “If
there were a drink ve could drink to grow them, I assure you I’d let you know,”
she said in her Polish-tinged English.
“I
just assumed…,” said the blonde. Miffed, she reached into her pocketbook and
produced a magazine clipping from a crumpled stash. She unfurled a luminous, if
wrinkled, image of Gloria Swanson, the Hollywood glamour girl, from the latest
issue of Motion Picture. All lips, pouting like a put-out princess. She
had the brow of an Egyptian goddess, the same distinctive beauty mark, and the
eyelashes of a jungle cat. “Like that,” she said, pointing at her eyes. “I want
to look like that for a party tonight.”
Josephine’s perfectly lacquered blood-red nails grazed the
wrinkled page. She studied Gloria’s fabulous face, the brow, the lash, the
pout.
“Application,”
Josephine said, returning the image.
“Geez,”
said the client. “You’d think by now you people would come up with something
better than that.”
It
was her duty, Josephine had come to feel, to tolerate stings and slights like
this. But a new thought occurred to her as she prepped the lashes for
application, as she meticulously heated and applied the adhesive gum. Her
client was right. She often worked the floor to do just that: to listen to her
patrons, her clients. And now that she was in New York, she knew enough never
to be too far away from what real American women wanted. And so she took in the
woman’s request with deep reverence, as she knew nothing was more important to
her future sales than her clients’ needs. Blanche or Betty—or whatever the
tacky blonde’s name was—was right. It was high time someone came up with
something better. Josephine was certainly up to this task. The only problem was
that across town, a woman named Constance Gardiner was doing the very same
thing.
*
* *
Josephine
Herz was not, of course, the first to invent mascara. But she would be the
first to invent one devoid of mess and fuss and to make it available to the
masses. As early as ancient Egypt, women found their facial fix. Considered to
be a necessary accoutrement in every woman’s and man’s daily regime, kohl, a
combination of galena, lead sulfide, or copper and wax, was applied to the
eyes, the eyebrows and lashes, to ward off evil spirits and to protect from sun
damage. Most any image of Egyptian gods or goddesses will reveal hieroglyphs,
not only on pyramid walls but on the Egyptians’ faces. The bold, black lines on
the female face lost fashion over the centuries, especially in more recent
times when Victorian ladies eschewed color of all kind on the face. But it was
not long before women craved—and chemists created—a new brand of adornment for
the eye. Coal, honey, beeswax—all the traditional ingredients had to be tested
and tried. Josephine could smell a market maker from a mile away, and in this,
she sensed a new moment for the eye. From Los Angeles to Larchmont, women were
craving new ways to look like the stars of the silver screen, new ways to
dress, look, and behave in a modern woman’s ever-changing role. These women
needed a product that would make them look and feel like Garbo or Swanson,
something simpler, cleaner, and quicker than the application of false eyelashes
every six to eight weeks. These women needed a product that was cheap,
fuss-free, and less mess than the old option made from charcoal, which, in the
very worst cases, caused blindness.
Copyright
© 2019 by Richard Kirshenbaum
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR:
RICHARD KIRSHENBAUM is the author of Rouge: A
Novel of Beauty and Rivalry (St. Martin’s Press).
He is CEO of NSG/SWAT, a high-profile boutique branding agency. He has lectured
at Harvard Business School, appeared on 20/20, was named to Crain’s
New York Business’s “40 under 40” list, and has been
inducted into the Advertising Hall of Fame. He is the author of Under the
Radar, Closing the Deal, Madboy, and Isn’t
That Rich?
and the New York Observer's "Isn't That Rich?" column. He
lives in New York City with his wife and three children.
Happy Reading!
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