
Mantrap Legacy
In 1981, Olivett Robinson and Charlie Vo, two Black and Vietnamese women, opened the first nails-only salon in the hood—South Central LA to be exact. With Black women establishing nail art as an everyday luxury via these new salons, Mantrap was the roadmap for legions of Vietnamese entering the business and spreading affordable nail salon service across the country.
Known as the Vietnamese boat people (Thuyền nhân Việt Nam,) more than two million Vietnamese refugees fled Vietnam between 1975-1995. Link to the NSXR Hub
Five of the "First 20" Vietnamese manicurists, in conversation with Tippi Hedren recount their harrowing escapes from Vietnam, as the US military chaotically pulled out of a devastating 15 year war. The women who birthed the Vietnamese nail industry were the "lucky" ones, escaping on US military planes and ships, mostly due to their husbands' rank in the South Vietnamese military, collaborating with United States Armed Forces. Click to watch video
Facing death from pirates, over-crowded boats, starvation and ocean storms, it’s estimated that between 200,000 and 400,000 refugees died at sea trying to reach foreign soil. View photo gallery of the Fall of Saigon from Manhhai.

Between 200,000 and 400,000 Vietnamese boat people died at sea trying to reach foreign soil. Those who survived struggled to find work in the US.

Most Vietnamese were admitted as refugees, and later through family reunification. Nail salons played a pivotal role in sponsoring Vietnamese relatives to western countries—through today.