Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Showing posts with label Bette Davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bette Davis. Show all posts

False Eye Lashes were patented in 1911, three years before Maybelline was born in 1915

Three years before Tom Lyle Williams walked into his sister Mabel's room and witnessed her applying ash and Vaseline to her brows, a lady Anna Taylor got her U.S. patent for false eyelashes in 1911, it's doubtful she could see far enough into the future to know that trying to make lashes look longer and fuller would turn into a multimillion-dollar industry.

Bette Davis eyes
In the early 20th century, film director D.W. Griffith and Hollywood makeup artist Max Factor brought false lashes to the big screen. Movie stars, such as Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Lauren Bacall and Carol Channing were regular lash wearers.
A 2007 Los Angeles Times obituary for Hollywood makeup artist Monty Westmore, who worked with the legendary Crawford, noted that she did her own face. But it was his job "to lay out her makeup supplies and curl six pairs of her false eyelashes each morning before filming began."
Maybelline false lashes in the 1960's.
In the '60s, model Twiggy made false lashes so popular as many as 20 million pairs were sold a year, according to Racked.
Maybelline false eye lashes 1976


"They were mystifying!" says Jenny Bailly, the executive beauty director for Allure magazine. Even though false lashes were the standard for movie stars, showgirls and models, for the laywoman they could be a bit of work.
"There was the glue, the strips — how do you get these things on and then how do you get them off," Bailly says.

Unyi Agba, a senior manager of marketing at Maybelline, says there's a growing demand for mascara that gives the false lash look.

"It's always about trying to find that mascara that's going to really transform them," she says. "So there's going to be an increased appetite for that. Consumers are going to want mascaras that can really deliver a false lash look. So even more lengthening, even more volume, and even more depth to the lashes — expect to see some of that."

Bette Davis and Leslie Ann Down with Hollywood Borderline Producer, David Van Houten



We ran across this photo in the Borderline Hollywood archive from September 1978 of David Van Houten meeting Bette Davis. 

The great Bette Davis stopped by the 29th floor Publicity Office of Paramount Pictures in New York City with a bottle of Scotch, to just thank us for helping her promote Death on the Nile, which was released theatrically September 29, 1978. What an amazing and thoughtful person she was.

Van Houten's mother, who's name was also Bette, happened to be in New York that day and ran over from her hotel, The Essex House, to meet her as well.



Scene from Death on the Nile
 with Bette Davis and Maggie Smith






Bette Davis interview on the Dick Cavett Show, November 18, 1971 




Dr. David Van Houten with actress Leslie Anne Down.

 He remembers her as Georgina, in the English television series from 1975, UP STAIRS, DOWN STAIRS...."Such an amazing television series from that period"  he said, "and she was amazing in it.   She's still an iconic beauty today."


The changing styles of young women was captured accurately in the brilliant 1970′s TV period drama – Upstairs Downstairs, where the young Georgina, wonderfully portrayed by Lesley-Anne Down, evolved from war nurse to frivolous flapper. 



Read more  about The Flapper on Glamour Daze.

Upstairs Downstairs, Series 3, Episode 9.


Sharrie and David, 1993.
Dr. David Van Houten, Owner of Borderline Hollywood Productions, is a long time friend of author, Sharrie Williams... Please click on these links to learn more about him.

http://www.maybellinebook.com/2013/07/id-like-to-introduce-my-dear-friend.html



http://www.maybellinebook.com/2013/06/hollywoods-mermaid-ester-williams-my.html


http://www.maybellinebook.com/2011/08/eyes-on-stars-as-tom-lyle-slowly-slips.html


Borderline Hollywood specializes in Behind the Scenes, Documentaries and EPK production. Our focus is primarily in the Film and Television industry, but we also have provided for Live Music and Comedy for either Broadcast or DVD.



Call: 310.570.6290


Whitley Heights, Paradise during Hollywood's silent film era.


  Off of Camrose south of the Hollywood Bowl.



Before there was Beverly Hills, during the silent film days, Whitley Heights was where the famous stars of Hollywood lived. Francis X. Bushman had a large, opulent house, with the first swimming pool built in the  

area and Rudolph Valentino lived off Wedgwood Place.   
 

Villa Valentino, 6776 Wedgewood Place, Whitley Heights, built in 1922, this was the site of the home Valentino shared with Natacha Rambova in upscale Whitley Heights just north of Hollywood. In 1951 the state of California paid Tom Lyle Williams, $90,000, intending to demolish it to make way for the Hollywood Freeway. The foundation of the home survives and can still be seen from the freeway.The foundation to the home is still visible from the freeway.



 During the Jazz Age, life was a party, and Whitley Heights was Party Central for the Hollywood set.


By: DH
Traveling along Franklin Avenue, the east/west thoroughfare north of Hollywood Blvd., you might not notice the most historic enclave of 1920s residences from the Golden Era of silent films and speakeasies, aka The Roaring Twenties, rising above Franklin Avenue. And roar they did in those days of high living, laughter and a new industry that seemed to have no bounds. Ethel Barrymore, Charlie Chaplin, Marion Davies, W.C. Fields, Harold Lloyd, Carole Lombard, Rudolph Valentino and many others lived and held legendary parties that marked an era and the early Hollywood film industry.



Today the Hollywood Freeway runs through what was once the toast of the Hollywood, in it's Heyday. 


 Before the Hollywood Freeway took Whitley Heights, it was an oasis,of gorgeous landscaping and Italian architecture.

 The arrow points to Tom Lyle Williams, Villa Valentino, in 1935.


 Tom Lyle remodeled the Villa Valentino in 1937.

Tom Lyle Williams on the left, followed by his sister Mabel, her husband Chet Hewes, and his sister Eva and her husband Ches Haines.  Notice the statue, Aspiration in the background.

Read more about Tom Lyle Williams and his love affair with the Villa Valentino, in The Maybelline Story, buy a signed copy today at www.maybelliestory.com




Maybelline Supports the Troops during World War ll.

This ad was published in cooperation with the Drug, Cosmetic and Allied Industries
in Modern Screen's 15TH Anniversary Edition, 1945

Maybelline - Worlds favorite eye make-up
Check out the list of Warner Brothers stars.

Stay tuned for more gorgeous, sexy Super Stars who filled the pages of movie magazines like this, with Maybelline Ads during World War ll. 

 Read All About It in The Maybelline Story. 

You won't be able to put it down!!