Waterloo Region Record

Hair raising: Saint-Henri offers $1,000 shave

- Giuseppe Valiante

MONTREAL — Businessma­n Corey Shapiro bought some flakes of gold one night to garnish his sushi — and then he had an idea.

Instead of eating the gold, Shapiro thought, why not infuse it into shaving cream?

“We wanted something that was a little more ostentatio­us and memorable than any other barbershop in the world,” Shapiro said during an interview inside the Notorious men’s salon he co-owns in Montreal’s Saint-Henri neighbourh­ood.

“Ostentatio­us” can be applied to most things Corey Shapiro, whose name and look have become well known in some circles — yet controvers­ial — in a city hesitant to celebrate conspicuou­s consumptio­n.

“We called the barbershop Notorious because anything that me and my business partner do — we’re rather notorious with going all the way,” Shapiro said.

His partner is Patrick (PThugg) Gemayel, one half of the electro-funk duo Chromeo, and together the two men are part of the transforma­tion of Saint-Henri from a neglected neighbourh­ood in the shadows of downtown skyscraper­s to a district of choice for shoppers and foodies.

Shapiro, 34, wears a thick, black velvet T-shirt over his portly frame, along with shorts coloured peachy cream. He has two, gold Cartier bracelets speckled with diamonds on his right wrist and matching gold rings — also dotted with diamonds — on each hand.

On the other wrist is a Rolex and hanging on his neck — not to be outdone by the bling on the rest of his body — is a 2.5-centimetre­wide, gold necklace.

“You pay $1,000, you get a shave,” says Shapiro, who sports a full beard that climbs up his cheekbones, almost reaching the bottom of his rose-tinted frames. “You get one shave.” But not just any shave. The gold-infused cream used in this special shave takes on a “charcoal-type property,” Shapiro says.

Next, a barber will take out one of the 10-karat gold razor blades made specially for the barbershop.

When the shave is done the barber will dull the blade, puncture it, and offer it to the client as a necklace.

Shapiro says 14 people have paid for the experience since Notorious opened two-and-a-half years ago.

He has to order more razors, though, because they’ve run out.

“We’re out of gold,” he says, before quickly clarifying — “Not me, personally.”

Before Notorious, Shapiro became well-known in Montreal and around the United States for his Vintage Frames company, an eyeglass specialty store, which outfits some of the most celebritie­s in the world.

Shapiro also quickly became acquainted with local police when he first started driving his goldpainte­d BMW around town.

The businessma­n says police pulled him over five times in four days in early 2015. He took to Instagram at the time and recounted how the police insulted his car, asked him why he was driving it and suggested he was setting a bad example for his child.

His success in the neighbourh­ood has also made him a target for anti-gentrifica­tion activists, who lament rising rents and increasing property values.

“Just the other day someone wrote ‘Kill Shapiro’ with an anarchist sign in the underpass,” he said referring to the aging structure down the street. “It’s not the first time.”

But Montreal is home, says the unmarried father of a five-year-old boy named Cash and an 11-monthold daughter, Bowie.

Shapiro, like many successful anglophone­s, can leave Montreal and likely make more money reaching a larger, more welcoming and wealthier market elsewhere on the continent.

But, also like many in the English-speaking community, he finds it hard to leave.

“My grandparen­ts, one is still alive and it’s very important (I’m here),” he said. “Montreal still has a quality of life that is very hard to achieve anywhere else in the world. It’s a nice place to raise a family.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Businessma­n Corey Shapiro is working to improve his depressed Saint-Henri neighbourh­ood with his upscale hair salon.
PHOTOS BY GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS Businessma­n Corey Shapiro is working to improve his depressed Saint-Henri neighbourh­ood with his upscale hair salon.
 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A shaving brush, razor and baseball cap hang together at Notorious barber shop in Montreal, where patrons can get shaved with gold-infused shaving cream and a gold razor.
GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS A shaving brush, razor and baseball cap hang together at Notorious barber shop in Montreal, where patrons can get shaved with gold-infused shaving cream and a gold razor.
 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A Versace barber pole hangs outside Montreal’s Notorious.
GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS A Versace barber pole hangs outside Montreal’s Notorious.

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