Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Showing posts with label Sharrie Williams author of the Maybelline Story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sharrie Williams author of the Maybelline Story. Show all posts

Short history of Maybelline Founder Tom Lyle Williams and the Maybelline Company



The Maybelline Story" written by Sharrie Williams is a historical narrative of Maybelline, one of the most iconic beauty brands in the world. The book explores the brand's humble beginnings and its rise to become one of the most well-known and successful makeup companies in the world.

The book covers the life of the founder, Tom Lyle Williams, and his journey to creating Maybelline, as well as the innovations, challenges, and triumphs the brand went through. Additionally, the book tells the story of how Maybelline became a trailblazer for the beauty industry and its impact on the society and culture.

In the 1920s, the cosmetic industry experienced significant growth as women's fashion and social norms were changing. The 1920s were known as the "Roaring Twenties" and were a time of great social and cultural change, particularly for women. During this decade, women began to wear shorter skirts, bob their hair, and apply makeup to their faces as a way of expressing their newfound freedom and individuality.

Maybelline was founded by my great uncle, Tom Lyle Williams in 1915. The brand originally sold a mascara product called "Maybelline Cake Mascara," which was a combination of petroleum jelly and coal dust. The mascara was applied with a brush, and Tom Lyle, named the product after his sister Mabel. Maybelline was one of the first companies to market makeup specifically to women, and it advertised its products as a way for women to enhance their natural beauty. 

In the 1930s, Tom Lyle continued to expand the company's product line and increase its visibility. He added new items  and advertised heavily in magazines. The company continued to be one of the first companies that marketed makeup specifically to women.

Maybelline was a successful brand in the 1930s, thanks to its innovative marketing techniques, and the continued popularity of its mascaras and other makeup products.

In the 1940s, Maybelline continued to grow in popularity as a makeup brand, thanks in part to its innovative marketing strategies. Tom Lyle continued to advertise heavily in magazines, and also expanded the company's product line.

During World War II, many consumer goods were hard to come by, and this affected Maybelline as well. Tom Lyle had to get creative with his supply chain and he did so by rationing and repackaging the available products.

During this time the company was also affected by the war effort, some of their staff went to fight in the war, this affected the productivity and the ability to advertise and market the products as heavily as before. Despite these difficulties, Maybelline managed to maintain its position as a popular makeup brand.

After the war, with the economy recovering and a return to normalcy, Maybelline resumed its growth and by the end of the 1940s, it was one of the leading makeup brands in the United States.

In the 1950s, Maybelline continued to be a popular and successful makeup brand as Tom Lyle, continued to expand its product offerings and improve its advertising and marketing strategies. The company added more shades and options to the existing products and by the late 50s he began to target specific audiences like African American customers.

Maybelline also began to invest more in television advertising, as the medium gained popularity in the 1950s. The company sponsored TV shows and created commercials that featured models and actresses wearing Maybelline products. This helped to increase the brand's visibility and reach a wider audience.

Overall, the 1950s were a period of continued growth and success for Maybelline, thanks to its effective advertising and marketing strategies, and its expanding product line.

In 1968, Tom Lyle, sold  Maybelline to Plough Inc. and was no longer actively involved in its operations.

Plough Inc. continued to advertise heavily on television and invest in new product developments. The company came out with new mascara, eyeliner, and lipsticks, as well as new shades of eyeshadows and other items, in order to keep up with changing fashion and beauty trends.

The company also continued to expand internationally in the 1970s. Maybelline products were exported to even more countries, which helped to increase the brand's visibility and reach a wider audience.

Maybelline had also grown into a big corporation by then and was purchased by a large pharmaceutical company called Schering-Plough. This gave the company a deeper financial pockets and resources to invest in further growth and expansion.

Overall, the 1970s were a period of continued growth and success for Maybelline, as the brand continued to be one of the most popular and well-known makeup brands in the world, despite the founder, Tom Lyle Williams stepping down and no longer being involved in the company 

1980s, Tom Lyle Williams, the founder of Maybelline, had passed away and was no longer involved with the company. By that time Maybelline had been a publicly traded company and was owned by different corporation and was operated by a new management team.

Throughout the decade, Maybelline continued to be a popular and successful brand. The company continued to advertise heavily on television and invested in new product developments. The company came out with new mascaras, eyeliners, lipsticks, as well as new shades of eye shadows and other items, in order to keep up with changing fashion and beauty trends.

In the 1980s, Maybelline also expanded its product line to include a wider range of makeup products, including foundation, concealer, and powder, which helped the company appeal to an even wider range of customers.

The Maybelline Story expands on the personal stories of the people behind the Maybelline Brand. It reads like a Novel, but, alas is an exciting true Story.










Sharrie Williams, Original Maybelline Family Descendant, wanted to be a Maybelline Model, but, ended up writing her family's history in her book, The Maybelline Story

 



looking 35 at 18 didn't get me a Maybelline model contract. But the Maybelline Story was born.





Nana, my dad Bill, me with dyed black hair and my dad's uncle, Tom Lyle Williams, founder of the Maybelline Company.

I hoped to be a Maybelline model after I graduated high school. My grandmother convinced me to dress up for Christmas in a black cocktail dress, heals and of course my Chicken of the Sea hair-do to impress Unk Ile.  He took one look at me he said, "My god, Sharrie, you look like a 35 year old woman, not a teenage girl.

Was that a good or bad thing?  I wasn't sure, but it wasn't what he was looking for in a Maybelline model. He was targeting the teenage market in 1966.  In fact, Unk Ile, wanted just the opposite of my exotic look. Maybelline was going for a softer, more natural look.  So my hopes of becoming the next teen Maybelline model were smashed. 

Nana watched me mope around a while, then said, "Sharrie, Darling, why don't you go back to Chicago next summer and stay with your Great aunts and uncles, meet your cousins and and get to know the Chicago branch of the family.



My spirits lifted and I was on my way.  Here I am, Queen of the super rollers, with my sister, Donna and her pin straight surfer girl hair.  she was happy to see me go for the summer, envisioning driving my 57, blue and white Chevy, to the beach everyday and surf.  I was excited to take my first plane ride back to where the story all began. 
Exotic and over dressed for every occasion in Chicago.

Nana encouraged me to take notes to document my trip in a letter to Unk Ile, when I got back.  I did, and those notes became part of the book I'd  publish 45 years later. 


 When my house burned down in 1993 most of my pictures of my trip to Chicago were lost.  this picture of auntie Eva and uncle Ches at their home on Mercer Lake survived. It was here, as well as with Auntie Mabel and uncle Chet, Aunt Verona and Aunt Bunny, that the Maybelline Story, began to unfold.  They loved showing me pictures, letters, and sharing stories about the early days of Maybelline.  With their help I pieced together a memoir, The Maybelline Story and the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It. 






Memories of Mabel and Chet on their Wedding Day,  Tom Lyle Williams, aka Unk Ile to us,  Maybelline eye shadow in the 1930's and an original Maybelline ad from 1925.

After two wonderful months of getting to know my aunts, uncles and cousins, I returned to California, (as you can see I don't look very happy about it.)  I wanted to stay in Chicago and start college, but my parents insisted I come home.  So here I am at the airport, with my mother, Pauline, My dad, Bill, Nana and little Preston and Billee.

 I did keep a diary of my trip to Chicago and wrote a 25 page letter to Unk Ile.  He was quite impressed with my writing and said, "Sharrie, you certainly have a way with words, I think you'd make a great copy writer. He didn't offer a modeling contract, but he did tell me that if I got a degree in advertising, he'd open every door for me. He also said, I really don't want my story told, but if you do someday write it, I don't want to be remembered as the man who invented mascara, I want to be remembered as the "King of Advertising." 

Read more of my book, The Maybelline Story.  I guarantee you, you won't be able to put it down.

The Maybelline Story - Sharrie Williams (Guest) Bridge City News




Interview with Bridge City News, Canada.  

Maybelline started as a little mail order business in the classified section of Movie magazines. Tom Lyle Williams a 19 year boy with a 10th grade education, was an advertising genius. His great niece, Sharrie Williams tells a bit of his story and the great success he became when his little cosmetic company  took off during the Silent Film Era.  



The Maybelline Story makes a great gift for family and friends

 



 "Spirited" is putting it mildly
Sharrie Williams has written an incredibly entertaining and spirited book about a exciting, complex and spirited family that gives you the roller coaster ride of your life. This book grabs you from the get-go and won't let you go or let you put it down. It has EVERYTHING! And I mean everything you could want in an epic novel. This book should definitely be turned into a mini-series or feature film. I enjoyed every morsel in this delicious and tasty book. Besides all the yuminess you will also come away with valuable life and business lessons. There is alot packed into this one book but Sherrie does it masterfully. And now because Sharrie Williams has now shared this story with the world we will be able to benefit from the insight, inspiration and magic that is THE MAYBELLINE STORY.

Author of The Maybelline Story, hopes to have her second book "Maybelline: Out of the Ashes published this year


“At 5-years-old, my grandmother put complete makeup on my eyes: mascara, eye shadow, eyebrow pencil, lipstick, rouge,” remembers Sharrie Williams. “She paraded me into the living room so that my great uncle could see. He said, ‘There’s nothing more beautiful than Maybelline mascara on virgin eyelashes.’ From that point on, I realized it was pretty important in this family to get attention from being beautiful.”

Her great uncle was Tom Lyle Williams, who created America’s No. 1 cosmetic company, Maybelline, in 1915. In 2010 the Maybelline Story was published. Today Sharrie has written her second book, "Maybelline" Out of the Ashes" that will be published later this year.


Drama and Intrigue within the Family

My grandmother was mysteriously killed in an arson-related fire in 1978, and that really spurred me to make sure her memory wasn’t forgotten,” she explains. “Still, I put it off and put it off until 1993 when my house burnt down in the Laguna Beach [California] fires; and I lost all of my earthly belongings. I realized the only thing you cannot take away from me is my story. With that I started writing this story with my father’s help.”


The book has no shortage of drama and intrigue, including the fact that her great uncle was a homosexual during a time when he largely had to hide the fact. He eventually moved to Hollywood and worked with some of the biggest stars of the period.


The Struggle with “Outer” Beauty


The Maybelline Story” also chronicles Sharrie’s personal struggles. “I realized [at a young age] it was very important in this family to be beautiful and that then starts my issues when I became 13-years-old, with taking diet pills.  Making sure my outsides were more impressive than how I felt inside was expected” she shares.


“My confidence now comes from the inside rather than how I look on the outside,” 


To those interested in writing their own family story, Sharrie offers the following thoughts: “My advice is to just do it, and don’t let anything stand in your way. The emotional satisfaction is better than years in therapy; and the finished product is a family treasure or, if published, a dream come true. If you have a passion for history and a love of ancestry, writing your memoir is a natural calling.” But she also warns, “It won’t happen overnight, and life will step in and try and stop you, but if you are persistent and keep writing, the end result will be a masterpiece that lives on forever.”