
Dido's "short choppy shag" (''The Times London List'', 7-13 April 2001)
'Dido flip' is a female
hairstyle ''c''2001-2 in imitation of the singer and songwriter
Dido Armstrong (b. 1971).
The style
The term, "Dido flip", was noted by the ''Sunday Times'' in a profile of Dido following her winning two
"BRIT" Awards in 2002: "Having a distinctive chopped hairstyle that has been widely copied as 'the Dido flip' attracts the paparazzi like hungry mosquitoes ..."
[1]. Stylist
Steven Ward, of New York's Garren Salon, described the flip as a "short choppy shag"
[2].
The effect
Dido herself was quoted as saying, with reference to the flip's "
wannabe" effect, that she "love[d] it when you turn up at gigs and the first few rows all have your haircut"
[2]. However, in some ways, this was an unlikely trend because, although she occasionally posed for fashion magazines, Dido did not obviously promote that side of her persona. In 2006 she remarked, of suggestions that she was a "
sex symbol", that "I just make music and don't pay much attention to all that"
[4]. Indeed, Dido had previously appeared to deprecate artists who relied too much on their appearance: "I've always tried to keep people focused on my music, not on me. So I don't parade around with a
bra top and
hot pants"
[5].

Dido, ''All You Want'' (CD single, 2001)
Paradoxically it was perhaps the ease with which "ordinary" young women felt able to identify with Dido that led to the flip's catching on. A journalist who interviewed her shortly before the release of her second album, ''
Life for Rent'' (2003), noted that "for a
platinum-selling star she radiates normality ... She looks like any quietly stylish 31-year-old"
[6]. In similar vein, the ''Observer'' once described Dido's style of dress on stage as ""
[7].
The flip was sported for a time by
Chelsea Clinton, daughter of the former US President
Bill Clinton [2].
CD covers
The flip was not discernible on the cover of Dido's first album, ''
No Angel'' (2001), on which her hair was combed back, and, by the time of ''Life for Rent'', her hair was longer. It could, however, be seen clearly on the cover of the
CD single, ''All You Want'' (2001), and to a lesser extent on that of her almost seminal song, ''
Thank You'' (2001).
Other eponymous styles
Other
eponymous styles of the late 20th and early 21st centuries included the "
Bo Derek" and the
"Rachel" (after
Jennifer Aniston's character in the TV series ''
Friends'').
Notes
1. ''Sunday Times'', 24 February 2002
2. ''Sunday Times magazine'', 2002
3. ''Sunday Times magazine'', 2002
4. ''Metro'', 5 September 2006
5. ''Daily Mail'', 24 June 2005
6. Dorian Lynskey in ''The Big Issue'', 21-27 July 2003
7. ''Observer'', 1 August 2004
8. ''Sunday Times magazine'', 2002
External links
★
Hair secrets of the stars: Dido's look