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Interview With Victoria Gotti

By Jennifer
Bahney
Longhairovers.com
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Victoria Gotti is
nearly as well known for her cascading blonde hair as
she is for her family name.
“My father always loved long hair,” she says of the late
John Gotti, who died in prison in 2002.
In case you're somehow not familiar with the Gotti name,
here's a brief history: John Gotti – a.k.a. The
Teflon Don or The Dapper Don – was convicted
in 1992 on racketeering charges and sentenced to life in
prison. |
As the
purported boss of the Gambino crime family, John's power shifted
to his son, John Jr., who pleaded guilty in 1999 to his own
racketeering charges. Victoria's ex-husband, Carmine Agnello,
was also sentenced to a 9-year sentence for racketeering and tax
fraud.
Regardless of what has gone on in the Gotti household, Victoria
has always been extremely close to her father. She has called
him her best friend and “the most dynamic, charismatic man” she
has ever known. So it stands to reason that her decision to keep
her hair long stemmed from her desire to please him.
“I've
always had long hair. Then as a teenager, I let my friends cut
my hair short with a D.A. in the back. It was essentially a
man's hair cut. I cried afterward and when I got home, I thought
my father was going to pass out. I never had the urge to cut it
again.”
Victoria
Gotti grew up in Brooklyn as the second of two girls and three
boys born to John and her mother, also named Victoria. At first,
John was said to have been disappointed that the young Victoria
was a girl. But all that “evaporated when he saw my black hair
and green eyes. He called me his mini-Elizabeth Taylor,” she
wrote in a tribute to her father in the New York Daily News.
“I have
very curly, thick, ethnic Italian hair,” she says. To create the
straight blonde look she loves, Victoria relies on Louis Licari
in Manhattan and the Ambiance salon on Long Island.
At home,
Victoria swears by Pantene products to keep her nearly
30-inch-long mane in top shape.
“I'm a
die-hard Pantene person,” she says. “Their conditioner is the
best product out there.”
Victoria's other hair secrets include shampooing every other day
(“I think it looks nicer and better on the second day”), deep
conditioning once a week, and donning a satin scarf at night.
“I
literally tie my hair in a knot with the satin scarf and it
smooths my hair as I sleep,” she says.
As she
gets older, Victoria says she doesn't believe in the old adage
that women “of a certain age” should crop their hair.
“Long
hair makes a woman look sophisticated,” she says, “while shorter
hair makes her look older. Why put yourself in the category of
being an 'older woman' by cutting your hair? Perhaps it's
because women don't have the patience or the time it takes to
care for longer hair.”
If
anyone is pressed for time these days, it's Victoria. She writes
a column for Star Magazine, has been named editor of
Red Carpet Magazine, has written a book on women and heart
disease, and finished four novels. As if that's not enough, she
stars in her own reality show,
Growing Up Gotti, with sons Carmine, Frank and
John.
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