Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Showing posts with label silent film actress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label silent film actress. Show all posts

“Once you become a star, you are always a star!” Maybelline Girl, Mae Murray, rose to fame during the silent film era and was known as "The Girl with the Bee-Stung Lips" and "The Gardenia of the Screen"





"One of the many Beautiful Stage and Screen Stars who wear and highly recommend Maybelline Beauty Aids''.



May Murray appeared in this Maybelline ad while starring with Rudolph Valentino in The Delicious Little Devil in 1919. 



Purchase this Comedy/The Delicious Little Devil (1919) DVD



The Delicious Little Devil is a silent film drama/comedy produced by Universal Film Manufacturing Company in 1919 stars Mae Murray and features a "pre-star" Rudolph ValentinoPurchase the card at Silent Cinema Inc. lobby card


Mae Murray: The Girl with the Bee-Stung Lips (Screen Classics) (Hardcover) The real-life silent screen queen of the 20s was defined, not only by her screen allure, but also by her fabrications, her fictions, her pretenses, her litigiousness and her decidedly odd behavior.



she was once "The Merry Widow," or a hardworking professional silent screen actress who got lost in her own publicity.


Mae Murray could not let go of the fantasy that Hollywood had and it destroyed any hope of her leading a normal life out of the spotlight.



 Murray's life could be the model for Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard.  She was a Ziegfeld Girl, a successful dancer and a successful Silent Film movie queen. 



Click on the video and enjoy Maybelline's beautiful

Movie Legend, Mae Murray.


Why is it that so many of these Silent Film Stars lives in so tragically? Mae Murray's sad ending.

When the Talkies took over many turned to Alcohol and died young like Mary Eaton.



Thank you for following the Maybelline Book Blog.

Maybelline's Silent Film Models, Colleen Moore and Louise Brooks, both Beautiful and Brilliant in their own way


Because she was a respected actress before she was known as a flapper, she made the flapper respectable. By removing the fear many held towards this new movement, she made it possible for a new generation of independent young woman to appear on the screen and to explore new degrees of independence in the real world.https://sites.google.com/site/colleenmooresite/





Colleen the sweet girl next door Flapper





Louise Brooks  represented the sexy American Flapper.

Louise Brooks was one of the most fascinating personalities of Hollywood, always being compared with her most important characterization as protagonist: Lulu in Georg Wilhelm Pabst's Pandora's Box (1929). Along with her beauty and talent she had an independent streak and refused to accept the restrictive role that women had in American society, and pretty much went her own way, which caused quite a bit of controversy. Not everyone found her rebellious nature off-putting,

Colleen Moore has a permanent dollhouse exhibition in Chicago . After leaving film she came back to Chicago. She was brilliant and became a partner at Merrill Lynch. The name her book is Cast of Killers. She was a multifaceted person... a movie producer as well. She and King Vidor were going  to collaborate on a movie about the murder of a director named Taylor.  It seems Louise Brooks was more successful Than Colleen Moore. 


Comment by Linda Hughes, Maybelline's namesake, Mabel Williams granddaughter.


Thank you Linda for the idea for this post. After watching both video's my take is, because of the 1920's, the audience was more attracted to a wild, rebellious sex siren, than a sweet talented actress. Sex appeal always wins. Maybelline ads were based on it, in the most modest way. 













Tribute to Irene Rich, 1927 Maybelline Model - Silent Film and Radio Star

Irene Rich was a glamorous actress who played Will Rogers' nagging wife in 1930s films and read radio's World War II-era "Dear John" letters.
She was a San Francisco real estate agent before she got her first movie job as an extra in Mary Pickford's "Stella Maris" in 1918.
Soon, she had graduated to starring roles in silent melodramas, usually portraying mature women of the world, and in short films with Rogers.


By the late 1920s and early 1930s, she was playing Will Rogers' wife in talkies, including "They Had to See Paris," "So This is London" and "Down to Earth."
From 1933 to 1945, she was a popular radio star, reading "Dear John" letters to introduce and close Sunday-night episodes on the Welch's Grape Juice program.

The term "Dear John" became soldiers' slang for mail from a lover breaking off a romance.
Later, Rich appeared in 21 Warner Bros. movies—including "Lady Windermere's Fan" in 1925, "Craig's Wife" in 1928 and "The Champ" in 1931. She also performed in several Broadway shows.


Actress
Born Irene Luther on Oct. 13, 1891 in Buffalo, N.Y.
Died April 22, 1988 in Santa Barbara, CA

She retired from show business after her fourth marriage, to George H. Clifford, in 1950.

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

“Once you become a star, you are always a star!” Maybelline Girl, Mae Murray, rose to fame during the silent film era and was known as "The Girl with the Bee-Stung Lips" and "The Gardenia of the Screen"




"One of the many Beautiful Stage and Screen Stars who wear and highly recommend Maybelline Beauty Aids''.



May Murray appeared in this Maybelline ad while starring with Rudolph Valentino in The Delicious Little Devil in 1919. 



Purchase this Comedy/The Delicious Little Devil (1919) DVD



The Delicious Little Devil is a silent film drama/comedy produced by Universal Film Manufacturing Company in 1919 stars Mae Murray and features a "pre-star" Rudolph ValentinoPurchase the card at Silent Cinema Inc. lobby card


Mae Murray: The Girl with the Bee-Stung Lips (Screen Classics) (Hardcover) The real-life silent screen queen of the 20s was defined, not only by her screen allure, but also by her fabrications, her fictions, her pretenses, her litigiousness and her decidedly odd behavior.



she was once "The Merry Widow," or a hardworking professional silent screen actress who got lost in her own publicity.


Mae Murray could not let go of the fantasy that Hollywood had and it destroyed any hope of her leading a normal life out of the spotlight.



 Murray's life could be the model for Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard.  She was a Ziegfeld Girl, a successful dancer and a successful Silent Film movie queen. 



Click on the video and enjoy Maybelline's beautiful

Movie Legend, Mae Murray.


Why is it that so many of these Silent Film Stars lives in so tragically? Mae Murray's sad ending.

When the Talkies took over many turned to Alcohol and died young like Mary Eaton.



Thank you for following the Maybelline Book Blog.

Maybelline "It-Girl" Clara Bow passed away 47 years ago on September 27th 1965

 She was only 60 years old and was best remembered as the roaring twenties leading sex symbol.
In honor of her I have taken this Maybelline Clara Bow illustration from the 1920's and placed it on this adorable vintage mini-make-up bag - now available on my blog at http://www.maybellinebook.com/p/make-up-bags.html

At the time Clara Bow was staring in Silent Films, Maybelline's little red box looked like this,

and came in liquid form as well.

Here is what the original Maybelline box looks like on my mini-make-up bag.
These little bags are great organizers for quickly locating many lost items in your purse.
And this is the sexy "It-Girl" illustration, featured in a Maybelline advertisement in the 1920's.
Before Maybelline... the eyes were the one feature on the
 face completely and positively overlooked.  Image that!!!


Part one of Clara Bow Documentary.


And as always I'd love your comments and please be a guest blogger on my Maybelline Book Blog. Contact me at maybellinebook@gmail.com.


Maybelline-It-Girl, Clara Bow unleashes the Excitement of the Roaring 20's.

http://www.maybellinebook.com/2011/04/maybellines-it-girl-clara-bow-unleashes.html