Re: Autumn issue | Page 14

my chosen career, you know and I wasn’t thinking I’ve got to get to the top. I didn’t even know that existed in those days. What did your friends think of you leaving school and going in to a barber’s shop? Well, I made new friends in Ilford. Around the corner from my dad’s shop was a shoe repairer I became very good friends with - a guy called Eddie - and he was deaf and dumb and he introduced me to a load of his mates and I actually met a girl in that circle who was deaf and dumb and I went out with her for about a year, so, you know, I had to learn sign language and all of that. We never had an argument. Such a bad joke, isn’t it? It has been said that I’m not an argumentative person, because my recent wife – I’ve known her for eight years and we’ve been married three – well, we’ve not had one argument in all that time. I hate confrontation. So did you ever get any grief for your chosen career path? When did you decide to go into hairdressing? I worked with my dad for five years and you’ve probably heard the scenario that working with your family sometimes is not the best thing. I saw bits of my dad that I didn’t really care for. He liked women and I hated that about him because of my mum. Anyway, after five years I decided that I was going to quit barbering. I’d just had enough. I wasn’t stimulated or excited – it was just a bunch of men wanting a short back and sides - so it didn’t do any good for me creatively. I decided to apply for a job as a sales rep for Gillette razor blades and the only reason I wanted that job was because you got a car with the job. Needless to say, I didn’t get the job and I didn’t get the car, so it was at that point that I went back to my parents and said: “Look, I’ll stick at hairdressing but I want to learn ladies’ hairdressing”. So they sent me to a college in Baker Street, London, called the Richard Henry School of Hairdressing and I did a six-month course and on the last day the principal, a guy called Martin Gottlieb, said: “Trevor, I see something a bit special in you”. I didn’t know what he was really talking about. You don’t see yourself as any different to anyone else. And he said: “I think you should go to a really good salon like Vidal Sassoon”. Which I did and I only stayed there a month because I was living in Harlow and it was two hours to get to work and two hours back. I wasn’t being paid – they were just training me – and to be honest it was all these geometric haircuts and I just felt like I was a woman’s barber. 12 I wanted to put hair up, do feminine hairstyles. Vidal Sassoon was all very harsh and geometric. So I left there and I went to the suburbs and that’s where I really learnt hairdressing. I worked in a shop in Loughton, Essex, called Henri, or Henry, if you like. We had to say: “Henri, can I ‘elp you?”! I did that for about a year and then decided that I wanted to go back to Sassoon so I went back to them and said: “Can I have another go at working?” and they said okay. I took my final test and within 18 months became an artistic director for the company and that was the start of something more career-driven. I can stand on a stage in front of 5,000 people and I’m totally comfortable but when I meet people one on one I grow really nervous Did you work with Vidal, did he teach you? No, he was at the very end of his cutting career but I did some shows with him but there are certain things you say to yourself like: “I could never do that”. I could never jump out of an aeroplane even if I had ten parachutes. I just couldn’t do it. And I will never do a bungee jump – I’m so scared of heights. But, having said that, there are times when you think: “Hmmm, I reckon I could do that”. When I was at Sassoon’s I never used to sit in the staff room and bitch about the company. I’d just stand on the floor and just watch because at that time great hairdressers were working and I used to think: “I reckon I could do that”. If I worked hard and got focused, I reckoned I could get close to these top guys and that was an inspiration for me. I inspired myself I think, because I thought: “That’s a reachable goal, not an impossible dream” and that was how I saw it. You mentioned there was bitching . . . When you work for a company, everyone has some negative stuff to talk about. You know, they’re not paying me enough or this or that. Even in this company I’m sure behind closed doors there’s someone having a go at me or the company. But, when you employ 120 people, you’re actually employing 120 problems, because their problems become your problems, so – dealing with staff is the hardest part really, or keeping them happy. But having said that, I keep my staff. The longest-serving member of staff has been with the company 20 years and I’ve had my art director for 16 years. Assistants turn over because they can’t hack it but when I get a good stylist, they stay and in this business that’s rare because everyone thinks the grass is greener and invariably they find it’s not and some of them say: “I’d like to come back”. I say: “No, you made your choice. I don’t take people back. So if you wanna leave you’d better be sure you wanna leave” - only under exceptional circumstances if there’s an illness or something like that but if people think they can come and go that’s exactly what they’ll do and I just need to make a firm rule. It’s a discipline. I’m not very good at it myself but I think in my professional life I am and that’s the one thing that Vidal taught me and it’s the best thing I ever learnt. So were you close to Vidal? He was living in America for the most part. He was famous in America for his fitness videos. He digressed from hairdressing into fitness and health. But having said that - and this will mean very little to anyone that I say it to but it meant a lot to me - there was a documentary made about his life last year and there was a private premiere in the Mayfair Hotel. It had a 200-seat cinema and he had this book-signing and lots of VIPs and famous people there and I was sitting with one of my stylists watching the film. I saw Vidal come in at the exit or entrance and he was looking all round to see where he could sit and he spotted me and came up the stairs and sat next to me and said: “Alright, Trev?”. And there he was, my hero! I can’t believe he’s sitting next to me. It’s hard to explain when you have a real hero; someone that you want to aspire to be . . . if I could be half the man that he was. Here is an example. He came into my shop a few years ago and went round everybody – the receptionist, cleaners, all the assistants – and introduced himself to everyone. He went up to clients and said: “Good morning, I’d like to tell you that you’re in the best hairdressing salon in London apart from mine of course”. He’s just such a gentleman. I wish I could just naturally be like that. I can walk around here and go: “Hi, I’m Trevor Sorbie”, but it was so natural for him. I’d be embarrassed to do that because I’m quite a shy person actually. Funnily enough, I can stand on a stage in front of 5,000 people and I’m totally comfortable but when I meet people one on one I grow really nervous. You’d think 13