Most Americans recognize Tippi Hedren for her starring role in Alfred Hitchcock’s horror film The Birds—but
among the Vietnamese American community, her reputation is for
something a little more serious: being a cornerstone of the immigrant
community's economy.
Forty years ago, the Hollywood actor traveled to Hope Village, a Vietnamese refugee camp near
Sacramento, California, to meet with a group of women who had recently
fled the takeover of South Vietnam by the armed forces of Communist
leader Ho Chi Minh. Hedren was aware of the difficulties the refugees
had faced and had been trying before her visit to think of a skill or
trade she could help the women learn so they could support themselves in
their adopted country. When she met with the group, she was surprised
to find they were enamored with her manicure.
“We
were trying to find vocations for them. I brought in seamstresses and
typists—any way for them to learn something,” she told the BBC. “And they loved my fingernails.”
Thuan
Le was there for the lightbulb moment. “A group of us were standing
close to her and saw that her nails were so beautiful,” she recalled to
TakePart. “We talked to each other and said they looked so pretty. I
looked in [Hedren’s] eyes and knew she was thinking something. She said,
‘Ah, maybe you can learn nails.’ And we looked at each other and she
said, ‘Yes, manicures!’ ”
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great story - love her work with the animals, too
ReplyDeleteThanks and you would think I had heard about this before.
DeleteThat must mean that Tipi kept a low profile in her good works. ;)
ReplyDelete:)
Deletehttps://youtu.be/baDJ-ZIvYy0?t=4m30s
ReplyDeleteHehehe. She's got the voice down.
And the sparks fly up.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nationaljournal.com/energy/nail-salons-cuomo-mccarthy-epa-20150512
They did too well; so here comes the gov't to target them.
Really. Thanks.
Delete