Of Indian Beauty Parlours and Maamis



Decided to check out an 'Indian' beauty parlour.  In the midst of the very urban and uber chic Orchard road, stood this 'plaza'. [One quick  observation - plazas in Singapore often comprise of small time shops - fake electronic goods, cheap watches, souvenier shops, Indian darzis,  etc.] This parlour was recommended by a Mallu friend , but I had forgotten the name of the shop, so decided to check  every floor till I come across a familiar sounding/Indian name. Sleepy massage parlours, a specialised 'males only' waxing place that offered Brazilian wax(!), and dimly lit tailor shops dotted the first floor. I was having second thoughts about this ' plaza' but instinct told me to continue my search . The escalater took me to the second floor and I smelt something familiar. It was a faint smell and I decided to give my olfactory nerves a chance. The smell got stronger and I soon knew it was insence and within seconds I was walking into a cloud of smoke. MS Subbulakshmi's Suprabhatam played in the background. Jesus, Mary, Ganesha, Aishwarya, Sonali Bendre, Kajol - all stared at me from their respective walls. . Pochampally bedsheets covered with plastic, assorted machines waiting to steam, clean, wash their customers, and a stack of Tamil magazines lay strewn in a corner. I waited for someone to emerge from somewhere. I was in no hurry. I looked at the plastic flowers in a vase . The place reminded me of the parlour next to our place in Hyderabad. Then she appeared- a lady, about 40... oiled hair, in a simple cotton salwar kameez.

She - 'ess. What do you want?'
Me- 'threading, please'.
She- 'come sit . whats your name?'
Me- Aparna
She -  ok ABARNA. New-aa? 
Me- erm yes. 
She- wait pleasss. 

Out of no where a very noisy person enters the parlour. An old lady,  gleaming bright, walks in and starts talking to the parlour's caretaker/owner. A barrage of words and sentences followed. I tried to keep pace with this lyrical outpour of very loudly and rapidly spoken language.  From whatever broken Tamil I understood, I realised she had come straight from the dentist after her root canal for 'henna dye'. Then followed a very animated  conversation with me in the middle, while she spoke to her -Aijjyooo, something something...parava illiya..something..seri..something something. Oooo 200 dollars aa? ..something something apadiya...aamaa, seri seri.

All this while, I was  listening to the whole thing, with a lot of interest. I forgot that I was asked to wait while she continued her banter with her friend. There was more talk - some neice of her's from America had lost a lot of weight. Maatram vegetables diet. 

'Ahem. Can I get my threading done please?' .

'Ess ess. One minute, can you sit. I will come in 5 minutes. Poor thing see, she got root canal. I will put henna and then do for you fast fast'. [she flashed the nicest smile. How could I say no?]

I settled down with a few magazines. Tried looking for a Femina or something in English. Found a half-Tamil half-English magazine called IMN (Indian Movie News). Got some beauty tips in a film magazine- on how to make your 'dandruff go off' and learnt how 'hair will shine superb'. A lady called Mahalakshmi Kamalakannan wrote this absolutely intense piece of beauty advice. Read a bit more about Mani Retnam's' Magnum Opus 'Ponniyin Selvan', and about this 'i'm too sexy for my shirt hero , Jeyram Ravi who acted in some Kaadhal movie (just curious, how many Tamil movies begin/end with that word?).

By this time, Suprabhatham was over, Bhavayami continued in background. I decided to close my eyes and listen. Just then,  I was summoned. 'Abarna. Come. Let us finish off with your eyebrosss!'. I came out and saw Maami with henna on her head. As she plucked my brow, Maami, began a new topic. I was too distracted (and in pain) to concentrate on what she said. She was done in 5 mins flat. Perfect!

As I left this plaza, I was strangely satisfied. [If only she had offered me a cup of filter Kaapi]. I was just so taken by this out of the blue Maami-outfit in the middle of Singapore's most happening street, that I had no time to be cynical. I laughed as I passed by Gucci, Guess, Hermes, Marc Jacobs...the usual boring stuff.  

Singapore, surprise me more pliss!

Comments

Rupz said…
absolutely hilarious !! i missed your posts !!
Scribbler :) said…
I like the sound of Singapore. Vibrant and exciting! Our lives are so clinically boring here.
neha vish said…
Where is the pik-chure of shapely eyebross? :)

Makes me wish I was in Singapore and not in London.
Joe Pinto said…
My dear KG,

Robert Lynd, the famous essaysist who was also a literary editor, wrote about Jane Austen's style, "She observed with her ears rather than with her eyes. With her, conversation was three-fourths of life. Her stories are stories of people who reveal themselves almost exclusively in talk. She wastes no time in telling us what people and places looked like.

"She will dismiss a man or a house or a view or a dinner with an adjective such as "handsome." There is more description of persons and places in Mr. Shaw's stage-directions than in all Miss Austen's novels. She cuts the 'osses and comes to the cackle as no other English novelist of the same eminence has ever done.

"If we know anything of the setting or character or even the appearance of her men and women, it is due far more to what they say than to anything that is said about them. And yet how perfect is her gallery of portraits!"

My dear KG, you have managed to capture this aspect of India in Singapore. I saw this also in your FB update on the "wet market".

Be our 'Jane Austen" in Singapore. Convey accurately the sounds of the place and the conversations of its peoples, and trust us to use our imaginations to picture Singapore.

Peace and love,
- Joe.

PS: Here is the link of Robert Lynd's essay on "Jane Austen: Natural Historian"
http://www.readbookonline.net/read/13880/33565/
chicha.in said…
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WWW.ChiCha.in
Hi, visiting your blog after quite sometime. Seems like you have moved to SG. Me too! If you haven't yet then go check out Orchard Midpoint. There are many Indian parlours there.

Priyanka

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