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Gene Shacove, 72; Stars' Hairstylist

Obituaries

September 08, 2001|VALLI HERMAN-COHEN, TIMES SENIOR FASHION WRITER

A multitalented trendsetter, Shacove was as well known in private for his assured taste in interior design as he was in public for his hairstyling acumen. He was also a Harley-Davidson enthusiast who meticulously redesigned his bikes.

"He used to come to my house and bring all of his friends--on 50 Harleys," recalled Jeff Greene, owner of Hollywood Realty and a close friend for 20 years.


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A sometimes-brutal honesty helped Shacove earn the trust and respect of his many clients.

"He wasn't so caught up in the celebrity and vanity of L.A.," Greene said. "He'd tell you if you'd gained weight. You could trust him to tell you the truth."

Hefner and many others met Shacove at the Candy Store, the 1960s and '70s-era nightclub that Shacove operated beneath his Rodeo Drive salon, a move that made him the center of social L.A. but that some believe diverted his talents.

"Instead of putting his energy into opening more salons or products, he put his energy into being a celebrity," said Allen Edwards, a fellow salon owner and colleague. "He had only the one salon, but he could have been what [Vidal] Sassoon was. His work was so ahead of everybody. He created great haircuts that I still do today."

Sassoon developed an international hair salon and products business, while another Shacove contemporary, Jon Peters, leveraged his Hollywood connections into a successful producing career.

Though stars from Lucille Ball to Marlene Dietrich to Joey Heatherton trusted their tresses to Shacove, his niece, Arlene Familian of Las Vegas, learned to keep his famously aggressive shears from her head.

"He was obsessed with scissors," she said of his love for short, shaped hair.

As his skills helped shift the industry's focus away from styling and toward cutting, Shacove signatures become new standards. His loose cuts for St. John and Heatherton were the beginning of the chicly tousled look, Edwards said.

The legendary stylist was as quick to redecorate his homes as he was to redefine himself, a trait evident in one of Towne's favorite Shacove anecdotes.

Moments after he finished showing the hairdresser "Shampoo," Towne said: "Warren and I emerged from the screening room, and there was Gene. We [asked], 'What do you think?' and Gene went, 'Oh man, you guys waited too long [to do the movie.] Now I identify with Jack Warden,' the tired businessman."

Services were Friday at Mt. Sinai Memorial Park in Los Angeles. He is survived by sister Bobbie Cohen of Las Vegas, three nieces and two nephews.

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Times staff writers Louise Roug, Barbara Thomas and Shawn Hubler contributed to this story.

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