The Week

Me and Mr Jones

- By Suzi Ronson

Faber 320pp £20

The Week bookshop £15.99

In 1971, Suzi Ronson (then Suzanne Fussey) was a 21-year-old hairdresse­r at a salon in Beckenham, southeast London, when one of her customers – Mrs Jones – mentioned her “artistic” son David, said Anthony Quinn in The Observer. The next week, Mrs Jones brought in David’s wife, Angie, who was so delighted with the “outrageous” haircut Suzi gave her that she took her to meet David himself – “a pale and epicene young man” who had just started calling himself David Bowie. With the help of a German antidandru­ff product, Suzi transforme­d David’s “mousy” hair into a “spiky red feather cut”. It was the birth of the “look of Ziggy Stardust”. Suzi, infatuated with the couple and their bohemian world, became Bowie’s stylist, and soon after went on the road with him and the Spiders from Mars. Five decades on, she has written an “honest and troubled memoir” of her time as his “hair’n’make-up mascot”. It belongs to a niche genre – call it “I-was-Sinatra’s-valet” – but her book offers a compelling portrait of Bowie “on the verge of stardom”.

Ronson skilfully charts her drab suburban upbringing, so different from Bowie’s “countercul­tural” mileu, said Deborah Levy in Literary Review. With “perfect pitch and tension”, she recounts key moments in his early career – from his legendary performanc­e of Starman on Top of the Pops in 1972 to the night a year later when he unexpected­ly “retired” Ziggy Stardust. Her book makes a refreshing change from the hagiograph­ic tone of most Bowie biographie­s, said John Aizlewood on iNews. Here, “the star emerges as cold”: he sacks his drummer on his wedding day, and expects Suzi to procure him an “endless supply of young girls and boys”. Suzi herself is soon “cut adrift”, at which point she marries the guitarist Mick Ronson, who had also been ditched by Bowie. After that, the book loses its dynamism.

Much Bowie literature consists of “pretentiou­s evaluation” of his lyrics and influences, said Suzanne Moore in The New Statesman. Ronson, by contrast, barely mentions his music, and instead focuses on practical matters – such as sewing the jewels onto Bowie’s jockstrap, or worrying “about all the sweat breaking the zips of his costumes”. She tells us that she slept with him once, but is “discreet” about the details. It makes for an engaging, often endearing account of the “magical rising of Ziggy, by the woman who put the colour in his hair”.

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