ROYAL FAMILY
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Jo Hansford has been hairdresser to the Queen for 35 years, preparing her for some of the biggest events of her life and becoming a trusted confidante along the way.
She was among the first people to find out when Her Majesty became engaged to the then Prince of Wales 20 years ago, when she tinted Camilla’s hair ahead of the official announcement, and was also on hand before the royal wedding at St George’s Chapel in Windsor in April 2005.
Now, the Queen has rewarded Jo – dubbed “the best tinter on the planet” by US Vogue – with a prestigious Royal Warrant, one of only seven issued by Her Majesty and the first one ever awarded to a hair salon.
“It’s a great honour,” Jo tells HELLO! as she joins us for this exclusive interview and photoshoot at home in Hertfordshire alongside her daughter Joanna – the business’s managing director – and granddaughters Tierney, 16, who works for her as a Saturday girl, and Elsie, 18.
“When we started the business in 1993, the industry gave me three months because I was a woman. And I think: ‘Well, here we are, and this is what we’ve achieved.’ It’s amazing.”
Jo’s eponymous hair salons have been a celebrity destination since she started her business in Mayfair more than three decades ago, with her client list reading like a who’s who of Hollywood and high society.
Famous visitors have included Adele, Elizabeth Hurley, Dame Joanna Lumley, Dido, Georgia Jagger and Yasmin le Bon, many of them going unrecognised because of the clever layout, which is designed to ensure that clients don’t sit directly next to one another.
Quite often a client will say: ‘I never see anyone famous when I come in,’ and we say: ‘Well, actually, you were just sitting next to so-and-so,'” Joanna says.
Claudia Winkleman is “a bundle of energy and fun”, according to Jo, while Angelina Jolie was “unpretentious and lovely” when she was asked to lighten the actress’s dyed black hair for a Tomb Raider film.
Hugh Jackman, who came in for a perm for his role in stage musical Oklahoma, “made all the ladies swoon – he was very gorgeous”, she adds.
Meanwhile, an amorous Melanie Griffiths and Antonio Banderas had to be prised apart when they came to the salon before their wedding in London in 1996.
We couldn’t separate them on the doorstep,” Jo laughs. “We had to say: ‘Can you come in, please?’ They were really lovely.”
Dame Joanna Lumley, meanwhile, cuts and colours her own hair between appointments.
“She’s so busy and is away so much, so she does it herself,” Jo says. “She’s really good fun. She’s the sort of person who will go to the wholesalers and just grab a tube of tint and say: ‘That’ll do, darling.'”
Clients fly in from around the world, but Jo insists that everyone is treated the same, rich and famous or not.
She has certainly come a long way from Greenford, north-west London, where she left school at 15 with no qualifications and did a paper round to scrape together the train fare when she started as an apprentice at Vidal Sassoon.
“I had a very happy childhood, but my parents didn’t have any money and even when I got the apprenticeship, my mother was terrified because she couldn’t afford the train fare for me to come in to work every day,” she recalls.
“She let me have the front room so I could practise on friends and neighbours, who paid five shillings each.”
Today, it’s a very different story, with a cut and blow-dry at Jo’s salons starting at £150 and colouring ranging from £140 to £600.
Her relationship with the Queen goes back to when Jo was a partner at another salon, and the two have bonded over their love of gardening and shared experience of being mothers and grandmothers.