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Coronavirus: Midnight opening for hair salon to mark France’s emergence from lockdown

‘I like to be the first,’ says eager hairdresser

Stephane Mahe
Monday 11 May 2020 08:14 EDT
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French hairdresser Marc Mauny tends to his first customer during the midnight reopening of his salo in Mayenne
French hairdresser Marc Mauny tends to his first customer during the midnight reopening of his salo in Mayenne (Reuters)

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So eager was Marc Mauny to reopen his hair salon after nearly two months of lockdown that he threw open its doors at the stroke of midnight on Monday and promptly received his first customer.

As France battled to contain the spread of the new coronavirus, Mr Mauny's salon in Mayenne, about 167 miles west of Paris, had to close under a government order that allowed only food stores, tobacconists and pharmacies to keep trading.

A scheme to gradually relax the restrictions means that starting from 11 May, other business can now reopen, providing they put in place safety precautions.

“I'm going to cut hair, I'm going to welcome people,” he said, just after opening. “Wow, I really want to.”

Hair salons are anticipating a rush of customers who have been waiting weeks to get a trim, or need a professional to repair the damage done by a do-it-yourself haircut performed at home.

Most stores reopening on Monday kept to regular business hours. Not Mr Mauny. “I like to be first,” he said.

His first post-lockdown customer, Caroline Corbeau, was ready for a new haircut. “I really needed it. It was great to have this opportunity,” she said.

Both she and Mr Mauny wore face masks and seat the and arm rests of the barber chair were covered in protective plastic.

Mr Mauny said beyond providing a service, he wanted to send a message of hope.

“I think there's a page of history that's being turned. There's been Spanish influenza, there's been the Hong Kong flu, cholera, the plague, now we have the coronavirus,” he said. “We don't know where we're going, but we're going there, we have to be positive.”

Reuters

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