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Samantha Ellis

How Victoria Beckham’s flowing locks inspired a Jewish play

February 11, 2010 17:37
Victoria Beckham wearing extensions made from the hair of worshippers at a Hindu temple in India

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

3 min read

One of the bigger Jewish stories to be given lots of coverage in the wider media in recent times concerned the curious case of sheitels, Victoria Beckham and Russian prisoners. Oh, and Hindu temples.

Samantha Ellis was working in Joseph’s Bookstore in the north-west London, Jewish heartland suburb of Temple Fortune at the time. She was in the process of making the leap from journalism — and working part time in a bookshop — to becoming a full-time playwright.

“In quite a lovely way, you know everything about what is happening in the Jewish community if you work in Temple Fortune,” says Ellis.

It was 2004, and a media story had revealed that much of the world’s supply of hair for extensions came from the heads of shorn Russian prisoners. Then, during an interview, Victoria Beckham, who was known among those who keep close tabs on all things follically extended, was asked if her extensions came from Russian convicts. In an answer that managed to conflate Ulster’s penal system with Russia’s, the former Spice Girl joked that she had “half of Russian Cell-Block H” on her head.