New York Times
As Ethnic Pride Rises, Rhinoplasty Takes
a Nose Dive
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As Ethnic Pride Rises, Rhinoplasty Takes a Nose
Dive
But the crowd is thinning.
In the midst of an explosion in cosmetic surgery,
the number of nose jobs has dropped significantly.
While the total number of cosmetic procedures increased
76 percent, to 697,000 from 395,000, between 1992
and 1996, the numbers of rhinoplasties, as they
are known, fell 8 percent, to 46,000 from 50,000.
And the decline was probably steeper between the
1990s and the 1970s, experts say, although no statistics
are available before this decade.
The reasons are partly cultural and partly economic,
according to plastic surgeons who have watched the
evolution of a procedure that was once a benchmark
in a young girl's life, especially among Jewish
teen-agers. "It was the thing to do," said Dr. H.
George Brenna, who practices in Southern California.
"You had your bat mitzvah and you got your nose
done."
They heyday for nosejobs, experts agree, was in
the 60s and early 70s, when the post-war baby boomers
were teen-agers. Parents of Jewish ancestry who
knew first-hand of the Nazi atrocities were ever
on the alert for stirrings of anti-semitism.
They wanted their own children spared discrimination.
And to them, that meant fitting inconspicuously
into the Protestant mainstream. "Jewish parents
at that time didn't want their children to look
Jewish," said Dr. James L. Baker Jr., who practices
outside Orlando, Fla. "They feared a stigma left
from the war."
The physical characteristic that most set Jews
apart was their noses, and so legions of teen-agers,
usually girls, had them fixed. The technology was
primitive compared to today's and so the results,
through the 1970s, had a cookie-cutter similarity
little ski-jump noses with the bony bridge
scooped away.
But that was O.K. with the patients. "Everybody
wanted to look like a shiksa," said Dr. Thomas D.
Rees, a retired plastic surgeon who trained many
of the high-priced doctors at work today along Park
Ave.
The leading practitioner back then was Dr. Howard
Diamond of Manhattan, renowned for standardizing
what had been a hit-or-miss operation. "Every girl
on Long Island had a Diamond nose," said Dr. George
J. Beraka, who said he can still pick them out on
women now deep into middle age.
But fashion was changing. Ethnic looks were coming
into style. In the mid-70s, black models appeared
for the first time on the covers of Glamour
and Vogue. Blondes were not the only ones
having fun. Lana Turner and Betty Grable were replaced
by Barbra Streisand (who was afraid to have a nose
job for fear it would change her voice) and Cher
(who eventually had her nose fixed, along with many
other body parts).
Now, doctors say, their patients want to maintain
their ethnic individuality, perhaps with slight
refinement. Where once the button nose was the rage,
women these days beg for a "natural" look. "They're
not trying to erase their ethnic background anymore,"
said Dr. Darrick E. Antell, a Park Avenue
surgeon.
Dr. Christopher Nanni of Brooklyn agreed: "There's
a much broader definition of beauty. Not everyone
needs to look like Barbie." Dr. Nanni noted that
the preoccupation has shifted to flat stomachs and
wrinkle-free faces. "It's youth they're looking
for, not certain facial features."
Another factor in the decline of nose jobs, doctors
say, is the new health care economics. In the old
days, insurance
plans covered the procedure if a patient complained
of breathing difficulties. Now, insurers do not
docilely accept that a cosmetic operation costing
between $3,000 and $8,000 is necessary for a deviated
septum. "They fight and fight," Dr. Pittman said,
and many middle-class families are "reluctant to
spend the college money."
The statistics available on rhinoplasty do not
distinguish between primary and secondary surgeries,
the return trips to the operating room to fix what
was done before. Dr. Antell said he sees
older women who have tired of their cute little
ski-slope noses and "want to turn the clock back"
and look like real people. He complies, transplanting
cartilage from the septum to give them back the
bump they once hated.
Plastic
surgery article by Jane Gross