Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Showing posts with label .Maybelline beauties. Show all posts
Showing posts with label .Maybelline beauties. Show all posts

1971, Maybelline Great Lash was born.





A cosmetic gateway drug for many who grew up in the '80s and '90s, Maybelline Great Lash Mascara is perhaps one of the most easily-recognizable beauty products in history. Its now-iconic neon color scheme was no doubt partly what got it noticed when it debuted, but it was what's inside the tube that proved to be a real game-changer in the marketplace in the early 1970s. 


"The formula is water-based, which was groundbreaking and revolutionary when the product launched," says Amy Whang, Maybelline's senior vice president of marketing. "At the time, most mascaras were solvent-based and tended to repel water, making it difficult to remove without an oil-based remover." 


While the tube and first-of-its-kind formula were flashy, the product's name was intentionally less so. In part, that owes to the fact that the clever copywriting we're accustomed to today was simply not a priority in the 1970s. After all, there were not only far fewer brands in the beauty market, but there were also far fewer product options available to consumers. For Maybelline, this straightforwardness reigned supreme. "The name was meant to be simple," says Whang. "A great formula, an easy application and a natural lash look — Great Lash was born."


The mascara's easily-identifiable packaging (just try to lose it in the cavern of your makeup bag) was inspired by then up-and-coming designer Lilly Pulitzer. "At the time, makeup trends were all about color," says Whang. "[The color scheme was] in line with that and the dΓ©cor and fashion themes of the time. It is so recognizable, and of course remains to this day."

But the enduring popularity of Maybelline Great Lash is that consumers do, indeed, find the formula itself to be, well, great. "It's truly an American icon and that's why it remains Maybelline's number-one mascara year after year. The Great Lash formula has not changed since the original blend. It's one of the most closely guarded formulas in makeup," says Whang.


It's been posited recently that mascara is losing its ground and waning in importance to beauty companies, but in fact it seems that the opposite may be true: Many brands are doubling down and working with their respective R&D departments to perfect their formulas, bring new technology to the space and generate the kind of excitement for mascara consumers showed for Great Lash's first 1971 drop.

Glossier, for instance, released its first mascara in May of 2018, more than three years deep into its successful tenure in the marketplace. It took a reported 248 tries to get it just right. Then there's Chanel's new Le Volume Revolution, the first mascara to bring 3D printing technology to lashes with its carefully crafted brush. In fact, of any color cosmetics category, mascara is perhaps the one that offers the most opportunity for continued ingenuity and advancement. And for Maybelline, it absolutely remains a key focus. "Mascara is definitely the core of Maybelline New York and a big priority for our internal labs," says Whang. "The goal is to innovate and break through; we're the leader on mascara, so the teams work on new formulas and brushes as a priority." 

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 AMBER KATZ
Fashionista



Great Granddaughters of Maybelline's first African American Model, Je'Taun M. Taylor, review The Maybelline Story


Je'Taun M. Taylor, Maybelline's first African American model, 1959, read more about this amazing woman, click link.
http://www.maybellinebook.com/2016/02/jetuan-m-taylor-maybellnes-first.html





Review by Chane' Haynes,
Je'Taun M. Taylor's Great Granddaughter

Hi Sharrie☺️ how are you? Prayerfully better than ever! I have just closed your beautifully written book on its last chapter....and might I say that is one hell of a story!!!!!!! I loved and enjoyed every minute of it....up until that last part....with Nana....I can't stop crying.....who would be that sick and heartlessπŸ˜•πŸ˜­πŸ˜’....I despise Danie....my heart aches and goes out to you and your family....on the contrary this story inspired me....you and I have dealt with tremendously the same pain it's crazy....the weight thing I'm still trying to conquer, kudos to you😘😘😘....and my grandmother Cherie was just like your Nana....personality wise always seemingly judgmental yet only wanting the best for us......your story ignited a fire in me that I thought died long ago....it inspires me to to go full head on unapologetically with my dreams and to keep fighting the good fight no matter what life throws at me....your whole family were fighters not only verbally but physically and emotionally....it made me feel as though I was reading about my family without the money lol....I felt indulged in the story as if it were happening in front of my eyes....this book definitely deserves airtime for a movie and 5 amazing stars....I'm not saying that just to be saying that, you definitely can change the route in someone's life just by inspiration and this book was just that! It gave me life, hope, and sadness took me through so many emotions but I loved every bit of it....I would love to write a book just don't know where to start....you know your blessed if you can inspire and change someone through text who has never met you, and that you are! Thank you for this special gift....it will remain with me forever and all the lessons it has taught me.....I will continue to read this book lol I could never get tired of it. Thank you for your story.




Review by Mami-Melay Tati Taylor
Je'Taun M. Taylor's Great Granddaughter


One of the ‪#‎Best‬ books I've read in my 23 years of living hands down!! ‪#‎TheMaybellineStory‬ by Sharrie Williams ....a memorabilia that seeps drama, laughter, pain, pleasure, wealth, wisdom, inspiration and hope all in one....also gives very knowledgeable tactics on advertising, marketing and entrepreneurship for the business mind as well as inquires inside scoop on how the beauty industry operates....Definitely is going to make a great movie and I can't wait to watch! 5⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ A ‪#‎MustRead‬ go get your copy!! click the ‪#‎link‬ to show this amazing story support...and if not this show will still move forward. Y'all be blessed✌🏽️πŸ‘ŒπŸ½

Loretta Young, Maybelline's Hollywood Madonna, a symbol of beauty, serenity, and grace. But behind the glamour and stardom was a woman of substance.


Nobody loves old Hollywood movies and Movie Stars more than I do.  Not just because so many of them endorsed Maybelline ad's between 1915-1967, but because my mother's father Andrew Mac Donald was a Motion Picture Pioneer in Hollywood from 1915 to 1967.  I grew up surrounded by Maybelline history from my great uncle Tom Lyle Williams, founder of the Maybelline Company and stories from my grandfather Andy who worked at MGM and knew most every Star at the studio.


 My grandfather's story is lightly glazed over in my book, The Maybelline Story, because it's so extensive it needs to be a book itself, but you do get a brief picture of what his life was like during the Golden Age of MGM.  That being said, you can understand why I was so fixated on wanting to be a Star myself, or at least a Maybelline Model.


I asked my grandfather about Clark Gable, who I adored as Rhett Butler in Gone with the Wind.  I was shocked when he said  "Gable was a very bad man," but wouldn't elaborate on the subject.  I never knew what he meant until this book about Loretta Young, came.  My grandfather disapproved of  Gable for abandoning Loretta Young when she was pregnant with their child, during the making of Call of the Wild in 1935.  He rejected their daughter all his life.


This story is clearly spelled out in Loretta Young's book, Hollywood Madonna, and though it makes me sad, I also realize how the Hollywood Star System worked at MGM and how any scandal could destroy a Stars career.  Gable and Young put their careers over their daughter and ruined her childhood.




Loretta Young's Daughter talks about her mother and father during the making of Call of the Wild.





Maybelline and Loretta Young represent classic beauty in the 1950s. 




Maybelline as well represented fashion and glamour with serenity and grace, always ahead of it's time.



Click below to view Lorretta Young as televisions best dressed most elegant woman in the industry. 






Like Loretta Young, Tom Lyle Williams was blessed with classic features and demended perfection in himself and his Maybelline Company.



  Want to meet Tom Lyle Williams and the Williams Family, be sure to purchase The Maybelline Story and brace yourself for quite a ride. 



THE LORETTA YOUNG SHOW TRANSFORMED WOMEN'S ROLES.



Loretta Young hosted and starred in the well-received half hour anthology series The Loretta Young Show. It ran from 1953 to 1961. Her trademark was to appear dramatically at the beginning in various high fashion evening gowns. Her program ran in prime time on NBC for eight years, the longest-running prime-time network program hosted by a woman up to that time
The Loretta Young Show, put women front stage and center, and created a vehicle for Maybelline to reach a larger target market in the 1950's.


The Loretta Young Show ran from 1953 to 1961. Her trademark was to come through a door dramatically at the beginning in various high fashion evening gowns.


The Lorette Young, TV series, worked through the image of the glamorous Hollywood star, and would forever remain a phenomenon of 1950s television, the period in which the Hollywood studio system that had created larger-than-life stars came to a close.


Her program ran in prime time on NBC for eight years, the longest-running prime-time network program hosted by a woman up to that time.


In 1988, she was awarded the Women in Film Crystal Award. for outstanding women who, through their endurance and the excellence of their work, have helped to expand the role of women within the
entertainment industry.






Maybelline capitalized on Loretta Young's fashionable image. with a series of ads that illustrated her persona.. and affirmed postwar ideas, that true happiness, was possible, within the domestic/heterosexual sphere of the middle-class home.

Hollywood's biggest Stars represented Maybelline during it's Golden Age


Old Hollywood means, The Maybelline Story.

              
California


Whitley Heights

Gorgeous men

Glamour

                                                            Beauty


Packard, Convertibles

Valentino

Fashion

                                           Tom Lyle Williams


                                              and Maybelline.


If you love old Hollywood, with it's style, glamour and Panache, you have to get a signed copy of The Maybelline Story  order today on Amazon

Beautiful Silent Film Stars endorse Maybelline and promote the Women's Movement

                                        
                                           Mary Eaton


                                     
                                         Mae Murrey


       Ethel Clayton.



                                   Ethel Clayton.



Ethel Clayton.


Mildred Davis.


Viola Dana.


Viola Dana.

Viola Dana.




Viola Dana.


                                         Gloria Swanson.



                                             Gloria Swanson.

Maybelline was very influential in the 1920's women's movement, because it allowed women to create their own identities. With endorsements from these major Film Stars, Maybelline began to appear in even the most modest lady's toiletries. Look at these beautiful Actresses and think about the impact they had on your great grandmothers and grandmothers in the 1920's.




If you love Old Hollywood history, pick up a copy of 
The Maybelline Story, as it mirrors everything from the 1920s and beyond.

Check out my Hilarious 1964, High School Blog...Saffrons Rule at saffronsrule.com

Guest Blogger Alicia Dufour says "Check out Sharrie Williams new website at sharriewilliams.com"

In response to the post I wrote on Marjorie Woodworth http://www.maybellinebook.com/2012/08/sexy-glamor-shot-of-maybelline-model.html Alicia Dufour writes about what she has learned from Miss Woodworth's Hollywood career.
I am an actress, model and singer/songwriter. I am also a professional belly dancer and vintage pin up model. I have been performing on stage for over 20 years and recently filmed my second movie. I was honored to bring life to deputy Karen Harper for the Lunatopia/Baylor Film production of Vertical (starring Marshall Bell, Irene Bedard, Elsie Kate Fisher and Wolfgang Bodison, with director Stephen Savage). I am just at the precipice of what I hope to be a long and fulfilling career. I have learned the value of having a great makeup artist, and how important makeup and beauty are in my industry.
I grew up watching my mother wear Maybelline products and always associated Maybelline with what was beautiful and with glamour. And now as an adult, I have a makeup kit worth well over $800 (in addition to my rather large collection of makeup that I use for daily wear) and have used makeup to make me both beautiful and glamorous... as well as frightening. And Maybelline has always been a staple in my house and my career.

The lovely Marjorie Woodworth was both glamorous and at the start of her career when she became a Maybelline model. (wow! wouldn't I love to be featured by Maybelline at this point in my career!!) But for all of her looks and talent, she had a surprisingly short career. She was out shined by other rising talent and her career never took off and she is now remembered in a collection of amazing and beautiful photographs and B movies. She truly was a stunning beauty and it is sad to think what could have become of her talent.
In an industry so driven by looks and beauty, I've already learned that I need to enjoy each moment because I never know how long I will have to enjoy it! For all of the hard work that every actor, musician, producer, director, cinematographer and photographer (atc) does, we need to remember to fully embrace each and every moment we get to do what we love.
I remember a story I heard once about another couple of beauties: Julia Roberts and Dolly Parton.  While filming Steel Magnolias, Julia commented to Dolly regarding how cool she kept in the sweltering heat. Dolly's response was simply that she was doing the one thing she had always wanted to do, so what was there to complain about? I love this. I know the road ahead of me is long. But every 'no' get is one step closer to the next 'yes' and the next opportunity to bring life to some new character. And to me there is nothing more beautiful than that.
Vintage 1950's - 1960's Pin-Up girl Alicia Dufour.


 
                                                     Alicia Dufour.
Photos caption info:
photo by Mikel Healy
photos by Brandy Nichole Photography
Alicia Dufour as Karen Harper - movie still from Vertical by Lunatopia/Baylor Films
Alicia Dufour as Zombie - makeup by Alicia Dufour, Redlands Shakespeare Festival Haunted Grove
Alicia Dufour as Allie Kat, Pin Up Model
photo by Sven Ellirand
actress
www.twitter.com/alicia289
http://www.youtube.com/user/
AliciaDufour
AliciaDufourActress
aliciadufour
Alicia thank you for the great post.  I agree with you about appreciating the the good times when they into your life and not taking them for granted.  Someone once told me that when the Rolls Royce pulls up, get in and enjoy the ride while it lasts and when it's over, get out and be grateful for "the time of your life" you had..... while riding in it. So when we think of Marjorie Woodworth's fairly short career in Hollywood, we should be happy for her, because she did something few people will ever experience in their lifetime and she left us a legacy of beauty, glamour and dreams of a 15 year old girl with beautiful Maybelline eyes!!!!  

I look forward to hearing about your career and when anything exciting comes up please come back and do another great post.


My Sincere Best, Sharrie Williams


The feature film Alicia is working on now is called Vertical by director Stephen Savage premieres in Jan 2013: http://t.co/0eQ4bYIM Vertical will premiere at the Idyllwild Cinema Festival http://t.co/hPY4Ul4Z