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  • Hard As Nails

    HARD AS NAILS

    The Evening Standard (London)
    January 27, 2010 Wednesday
    UK

    JESSICA VARTOUGHIAN IS THE EAST EUROPEAN REFUGEE WHO BUILT A BUSINESS
    EMPIRE FROM NOTHING. NOW 'THE QUEEN OF MANICURES' HAS CLIENTS SUCH
    AS JULIA ROBERTS AND DEMI MOORE

    LIZ HOGGARD

    You have dry, brittle nails," Jessica Vartoughian tells me sternly.

    "The nails are filed down too much at the side, you need to let them
    grow, and round them up as much possible, because that will support
    the length. And you have some peeling nails. You've got to keep polish
    on so the nail will be protected." Described by the New York Times as
    "the First Lady of nails", Vartoughian's A-list clients include Drew
    Barrymore, Julia Roberts and Demi Moore.

    She's the woman who invented the nail bar. But her team of "nail
    cultivists" do more than varnish and buff â~@¹ behind this business
    is a complete nail-care philosophy. "I've never wanted to just slap on
    a coat of varnish and push a cuticle back," she explains, "that's not
    a manicure. But with the proper products, a difference should be seen
    in six weeks, and in three months you will have long, healthy nails."

    Vartoughian's logo â~@¹ the double JJ â~@¹ is a marker of quality
    (like Chanel for fashion). Considered the world's foremost authority
    on natural nail care â~@¹ no artificial or acrylic nails, thank
    you â~@¹ she launched the world's first ever nails-only salon on
    Sunset Boulevard at the age of 23. And thereby created a new industry
    overnight. Before that, people simply went to a department store to
    have their nails trimmed.

    The biggest honour in Hollywood is to have a Jessica nail varnish
    named after you. There's a purple Barbra (Streisand), a red Elizabeth
    (Taylor), a brown Hillary (Clinton) and a crimson Sophia (Loren).

    She's currently mixing a champagne shade for Demi, which she promises
    to send me. Vartoughian introduced the French manicure to America. But
    her lightbulb idea was realising that, like skin and hair, nails
    are not alike. The Jessica System divides customers into damaged,
    dry, brittle or normal â~@¹ with different basecoats and treatments
    for a specific nail type. "For me, it started with Vidal Sassoon,
    who was the first man to have shampoo for different types of hair."

    Her flagship store is on Sunset Boulevard but since 1992 Vartoughian
    has had a London presence. You can book Jessica nail treatments at
    premier salons from The Sanctuary, Covent Garden, to Ultimate Spa
    on Westbourne Grove and Spa Illuminata on South Audley Street, where
    we meet.

    Now in her sixties, Vartoughian radiates old-style Hollywood glamour.

    She got her big break when Lucille Ball dropped by the salon incognito
    (and recommended it to her friends). She did Cyd Charisse's nails. For
    years she visited Nancy Reagan at the White House for a fortnightly
    application of Dusty Rose.

    And boy, she's strict. At first I'm terrified. But she turns out
    to be very maternal. And a fabulous gossip on everything from the
    state of the Obamas' marriage ("separate beds," she says confidently)
    to Princess Diana conspiracy theories.

    Today, she presides over a multi-million pound empire that distributes
    in more than 28 countries. But when the Romanian-born Vartoughian
    first arrived in America, aged 16, she didn't speak a word of English.

    Her Armenian father was a shoe designer. Her wealthy family lost their
    fortune under the communist regime. They arrived in America penniless
    after burying their jewellery beneath their house in Romania. "My
    ambition was to be a psychologist but my father said, Å'You have to
    make a living to help us'," Vartoughian says. Beauty was a bit of
    a comedown but the easiest way to learn English. And, coming from a
    European background, she knew how to take care of nails, hands and
    feet. "My mother was a well-groomed woman. My father had pedicures and
    manicures; he always went to the spa." At beauty college Vartoughian
    found she had a real gift for polishing nails. She started work in a
    department store in Beverly Hills, then opened her own store on Sunset
    Boulevard in 1969 â~@¹ "a tiny place for four customers. I had to line
    the walls with mirrors to make it look bigger." She developed her own
    range of polish and in 1978 started Jessica Cosmetics International.

    FROM someone who made her name in La-La land, the Jessica manicure
    is based on sternly natural principles. Vartoughian loathes nail art
    â~@¹ very vulgar. When it comes to red carpet glamour, she insists
    stars such as Nicole Kidman stick to old school colours â~@¹ pillar
    box red, neutral â~@¹ maybe at a push her Purple Essence.

    Her products are specifically developed to maximise the natural
    healing powers of the body and promote well-being. She keeps an eye
    out for signs of surgery, stress and hormonal changes. "The nails
    are the mirror of your health. White spots signal dryness. If you
    have ridges or suddenly have yellow blushes, as Mrs Reagan did,
    I'd recommend you see a dermatologist. Sure enough, she had a sugar
    problem." Protein is very important, plus lots of water. And, yes,
    she can tell if her clients have been drinking or taking drugs.

    Vartoughian was the first to use heated mittens and booties to
    soften and soothe skin. She shows me her special electric wand â~@¹
    which smooths the cuticles back instead of using nasty sharp metal
    instruments. Cuticles at Jessica are never trimmed, just softened and
    pushed back. The nail is filed sensibly round, the nail bed massaged
    and strengthened with whichever treatment is deemed necessary. There
    is a rejuvenation formula for dry nails, a restoration one for damaged
    nails, and so on. And the Phenomen Oil (£12.55) he gives me for my
    faulty cuticles is brilliant on dry feet and elbows.

    Most excitingly, Vartoughian invented the Natural Nail Transplant. If
    Demi breaks a nail skiing, she saves the broken portion and brings it
    straight to Jessica's elves for an immediate glue-on. For those who
    can't find the lost tip, one can be attached invisibly with clippings
    from the clinic's nail bank (many donated by celebrity clients).

    Vartoughian doesn't do nails any more (I am very privileged today). As
    the CEO of her company, her main role is as educator and lecturer.

    It's an enviable lifestyle. She has a son and a daughter and lives in
    the Hollywood Hills. She wears Armani and Chanel and killer shoes. Her
    weakness is white orchids.

    There have been painful challenges. In 1993, an acrimonious divorce
    from her husband of 25 years, another Armenian, left her with nothing.

    "If you earn more than your husband, you must be sure that he's a
    secure person. I paid the price for that. I made him a king but he
    didn't know how to keep his kingdom."

    But Vartoughian rebuilt her company. She comes from tough stock. Her
    father designed shoes at night and worked as a busboy in restaurants.

    "After four years in the States, my father owned a shoe store in
    Beverly Hills. What he achieved was incredible." It's fascinating how
    many beauty icons have East European roots â~@¹ Helena Rubinstein,
    Dr Hauschka, Eve Lom. And Vartoughian is like a heroine from a Harold
    Robbins novel. She made the American dream come true. But she never
    wanted clients to be her friends. "I stayed very respectful. That's
    my European training. Or perhaps I'm very shy." She knew Princess
    Di â~@¹ "She had no nails, she bit them through nerves. I trained
    her manicurist" â~@¹ and cried buckets when she died. And men
    â~@¹ including Michael Douglas, Bruce Springsteen and Seal â~@¹
    trust Jessica. "We do a lot of men; it's chic. It shows they have
    self-respect. I have designed a matt polish especially for them." Demi
    comes to the salon once a week with the whole family â~@¹ "She comes
    with Bruce, her ex-husband, and his new wife and their girls. And they
    all sit like this" â~@¹ Vartoughian throws her hands in an expansive
    gesture. "They get along. She's a very special woman, very down to
    earth. And a fabulous body," she says with that forensic look.

    She applies polish and topcoat to my nails; I need to wait an hour
    before I can open my bag or find my keys. "Ask a man for help,"
    she advises. I sense we are from different eras.

    But it's lovely to be pampered. "When you touch someone's hand you
    have to be very gentle because it goes all the way to your soul," she
    explains. "Who else holds your hand for an hour and 15 minutes? It's
    tender loving care."

    www.jessicacosmetics.co.uk

    NAIL TIPS

    File in one sweeping movement and the sides should be rounded at
    45 degrees.

    Apply basecoat, two coats of colour and top coat every two or three
    days. Tap fingers regularly often on a hard surface â~@¹ nails
    are nourished by blood flow. Wear polish â~@¹ it protects nails as
    they grow.

    FIVE BEST NAIL BARS

    Glow Urban Spa Cindy gives the most precise manicures around and
    it's the only salon to offer one colour on top and a flash of
    vampish red underneath. 8 Motcomb Street, SW1 (020 7752 0652,
    www.glowurbanspa.co.uk)

    Bliss London Quick enough to fit in your lunch break and polish
    will last a good week. 60 Sloane Avenue, SW3 (020 7590 6146,
    www.blisslondon.co.uk)

    Neville Try Gwyneth Paltrow's matte manicure. Great hand massage too.

    5 Pont Street, SW1 (020 7235 3654, www.nevillehairandbeauty.net)

    Anita Cox Glam winter nails in just under an hour. Also big fans of
    Jessica's colour range. 55 Old Church Street, SW3 (020 7751 4527,
    www.anitacox.co.uk)

    Leighton Denny Studio Cancellations are rare here so be prepared to
    wait. Urban Retreat, 5th Floor, Harrods, SW1 (020 7893 8333)
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