Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Original Vintage Christmas Card from the Maybelline Company, signed by my great uncle, Maybelline founder, Tom Lyle Williams





Unk Ile was not only the founder and owner of the Maybelline Company from 1915 to 1968, he was my father's uncle and Godfather, Tom Lyle Williams.
Me with my little sister Donna on Santa's lap in 1949.
Here I am with Donna in front of our Christmas Tree -1952.

Merry Christmas to all my Maybelline Book followers and I look forward to another fun year of Blogging for you in 2013.

My Childhood Home in Culver City CA...Erma Bombeck; There's nothing sadder in this world than to awake Christmas morning and not be a child.

Here are some of my special Christmas memories.

uncle Lyle with my father, Bill Williams, and my little sister my Billee, in the background, Christmas 1959
uncle Lyle, Tom Lyle Williams with googly glasses and cap
My sister Donna, Billee and me in the Surrey.


























My mother, Pauline was pregnant that Christmas and after three girls we were thrilled to have Baby Preston join our family the next Christmas in 1960.

William Preston Williams lll made our family complete and was the best gift of all on Christmas 1960.


Sharrie, Donna, Billee and Baby Preston 



We moved into our home on Lenawee in Culver City in 1956, the year it was built and uncle Lyle spent every Christmas with us here, through 1967, the year he sold the Maybelline Company.


We moved to Newport Beach in 1969 and sold the house on Lenawee in 1971.  Today, 56 years later it's still the cutest house on the block and carries all the special memories of Christmas our childhood and the happiest years of our lives. 


left to right, Sharrie, Bill, Tom Lyle, Billee, Pauline, Donna and Nana, Evelyn Williams and our little poodle, Pepsi. 
Uncle Lyle's last Christmas with us in 1967.  He had just sold the Maybelline Company to Plough Inc. and our lives were about to change forever. 

Merry Christmas everyone and thank you for following the Maybelline Book Blog all year...

Merry Christmas to all and to all a goodnight.





Maybelline's Founder, Tom Lyle Williams - Christmas 1959.

My father Bill Williams with his uncle Tom Lyle Williams Christmas 1959
I remember soaking up the aroma of those red leather upholstered seats, as uncle Lyle stepped out of his brand new white convertible Cadillac that Christmas.
 My dad remarked that the deep red was symbolic of Maybelline's trademark color and called the car triple white, with red interior and extra big whitewall tires.
Uncle Lyle, gathered up the gifts given to him from movie stars, magazine editors, studio executives and advertising tycoons and said he didn't need it all... and would rather see us enjoy the fancy dried fruit from Italy, the Belgium cookies, German chocolates and French pastille candy drops.


 Seeing such delights once a year was a thrill,
 but not nearly as exciting as when he handed us kids
 our Christmas envelopes filled with a crisp $10.00 bill.
  It doesn't seem like much now, but in today's market
 it would be more like $100.00.

 After dinner I sang Bali High from  South Pacific and
 danced the hula...in costume,



while my ten year old sister Donna, waited to
 make her entrance as Marilyn Monroe.
 I'll never forget her wearing
 pink wig, false eyelashes and holding a
 long cigarette holder while dancing to
 Bobby Darin'sMack The Knife.

It was all very entertaining, as you can well imagine,
 but nothing was more memorable than watching uncle
 Lyle's face, as he marveled at my adorable little 4 year
 old sister Billee, dancing to Rudolph the
Red Nosed Reindeer.

I will never forget those wonderful days when
 we were young and Innocent and the wonder of Christmas
 was still so alive in our hearts. 

Stay tuned as I relive Christmas memories. I'd love to
 hear yours and post them on my blog. 

Rare Egyptian 1934 Maybelline ad claims Ancient Proverb is still viable today...or not.

“A woman’s most powerful possession is a man’s imagination.”

A woman can inspire or deplete her man's spirit by the image she projects.   Men are naturally inspired by beauty of any kind... a beautiful car, a beautiful home and a beautiful woman.  Create an image of yourself that empowers yourself as well as your man.


These words of wisdom were passed down to me by my grandmother, Evelyn Williams, but may not work for today's modern woman...Yet, her beauty secrets are as enduring as the ancient Egyptian Pyramids.


Read more about Nana's Beauty Secrets at http://www.maybellinebook.com/p/beauty-secrets.html 

Listen to my interview on Lette's Chat, where I delve further into Nana's unusual vintage beauty rituals.                                                                                  

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/letteschat/2012/12/13/maybelline-queensharrie-williamsreturns-with-holiday-ideas.


Maybelline ad promotes 1934 film, Cleopatra.

Cleopatra in 1934 directed by Cecil b. Demille and distributed by Paramount pictures. Legendary for its costumes and specially its set depicting Cleopatra (Claudette Colbert) seducing Mark Antony. The film won Academy awards for best Cinematography and was nominated for best Picture, Best Asst. Director among many others.







MAYBELLINE SHAPED THE GLOBAL CULTURE OVER THE LAST 98 YEARS



Maybelline has left a lasting impression upon America, yet not many people realize just how vital a role the cosmetic brand has played in shaping the global culture.

The obsession with perfection started with Hollywood Stars nearly 100 years ago.  However, that obsession did not reach the average woman until Tom Lyle Williams introduced Maybelline in 1915.




It was Tom Lyle's advertising genius that sparked the idea: "Every woman has the potential to obtain glamour with the simple swish of a mascara brush."



Maybelline New York (formally Maybelline,) is owned by L'Oreal of Paris and is still the number 1 cosmetic brand of all time. 




Maybe She's Born with it, Maybe it's Maybelline

Be sure to LIKE me on my Facebook page and on Twitter on the right side of this page to enter to win a signed copy of The Maybelline Story.

I'm giving away a copy of my book, The Maybelline Story on Facebook again and speaking on Lettes Chat December 12.

Enter to win a copy of The Maybelline Story book (by Sharrie Williams) here on Facebook! Just 'like' this post and leave a comment about why you want to win! One winner will be randomly selected. (ends 11/21/2012) *make sure to check back on the 21st to see who wins

Enter to win here.


October winner Shelley Ollivier wrote....Omg! I am so excited! I cannot believe I have won a copy of your book, The Maybelline Story. I cannot wait to get my hands on it and read such a behind-the-scenes story of the Maybelline Dynasty.  Thank you!!!  I am certainly going to tell everyone on FB and Twitter that I have won!!!!

Maybelline Queen, Sharrie Williams, returns with holiday ideas

on LettesChat  Wed, December 12, 2012 

Excuse me, but how could I have had the nerve to seriously wear a gold plastic crown in Jr High?  Well ever since I found out The Maybelline family had Royal blood, I figured the need to be Maybelline Queen was in my DNA.  Be sure to call in on Wednesday, December 12th to speak with the host at  (347) 215-7302 and  lets chat about it!!!  

No one was more generous than Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams.



My father, ten year old Bill Williams was selling magazine subscriptions hoping to win a a new Schwinn two wheeler, but he was having trouble competing with the other boys at school... until he made his rounds at the Maybelline Company.  There he found a pot of gold, when uncle Noel, uncle Chet, uncle Ches, Rags Ragland and all the rest of the Maybelline employees bought up half his orders.  Bill had one more call to make and was excited as he patiently waited in his uncle Tom Lyles office hoping to sell a few more subscriptions before heading home.  An hour went by and he almost fell asleep on the leather sofa when the door finally swung open and there stood the majestic figure of  uncle Lyle, or Unk Ile as he liked to called him. 

Tom Lyle sat down at his over sized carved walnut desk and listened to the little speech Bill had prepared.  He thought for a minute than proceeded to give him a lecture about safety and riding a bike on the streets of Chicago.  Bill promised that if he won the bike he would always look both ways before crossing the street and would never pull out into traffic.  Once Tom Lyle was satisfied his nephew understood the dangers of owning a two wheeler, he took out his check book and wrote a check for the entire amount... Bill won the contest hands down and never forgot what his Unk Ile had done for him.


This is just a small example of the kind of man Tom Lyle was.  He always went beyond the call of duty for his family and everyone he knew for that matter and today though he is just a memory he will live in our hearts forever as a loving, generous angel.


You can read more about Tom Lyle, Noel James, Chet Hewes, Ches Haines, Rags Ragland and the Maybelline Company in The Maybelline Story and the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It.  It makes a great Christmas gift and you can order a signed copy directly from me. http://www.maybellinebook.com/p/buy-my-book.html


My Publicist Michael Levine - The Power Behind The Stars - wrote the Foreword for my book, The Maybelline Story.

Michael Levine's Agency, LCO, has represented hundreds and hundreds of very prominent, A-List celebrities, including Michael Jackson, Barbara Streisand, Charlton Heston, Nancy Kerrigan, Demi Moore, Michael Fox, Sandra Bullock, David Bowie, Prince, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Jon Voight, Fleetwood Mac, Cameron Diaz, Bill O'Reilly, Dave Chappelle, John Stewart, Suzanne Somers, George Carlin, Sandra Bernhard, and a whole host of others.

In addition, he has represented 57 Academy Award Winners, including Michael Moore. In addition to that, He's written 19 books, included in that is Guerilla PR, which is the best selling PR book of all time. In addition to that, he's given non paid media counsel to three U.S. Presidents, of both political parties. He's also given counsel to Ronald Reagan, Bush Sr., and Bill Clinton...


Foreword by Michael A. Levine  (Excerpt, Copyright Bettie Youngs Books.

“A woman’s most powerful possession is a man’s imagination.”
Tom Lyle Williams, 1934



I think every girl I ever dated as a teenager had one of those pink and green tubes of Maybelline Great Lash mascara stashed in her purse.  How on earth would I know this?  Because the contents of all those purses regularly spilled out of school lockers, behind bleachers, under the seats of cars….  If they weren’t scrambling to hide their other feminine products, then they were diving for the mascara because THAT was clearly the key to their enchanting doe-eyed beauty. 

As I’ve grown older, gotten married, divorced, and dated all over again, I’ve seen the contents of many beautiful women’s cosmetic bags.  And there has always been a Maybelline product inside.

I recognize things like this because I’m a brand man myself.  At an early age I discovered the power of perception…specifically, the perception of value, which can be even more important than price itself.  For example, the Tiffany brand is indomitable because one need only see the powder-blue box and white satin ribbon to think that whatever is inside is premium simply because it comes from Tiffany.

So I was delighted when I was asked to read The Maybelline Story and learn about the origins and growth of this modest company into the best-known eye beauty brand around the world.  What a story it is!

From humble beginnings in rural Kentucky to gangster-ridden Prohibition Chicago, to Hollywood in the ‘30s and ‘40s, pin-ups, the Pentagon, and eventually, the whole world, this is a classic tale of a makeshift product that developed out of one woman’s innovative need to fix something else, and her brother’s prescient understanding that she was onto something BIG!

In 1915, Mabel Williams singed her eyelashes and brows while cooking.  Horrified that she no longer looked feminine, she concocted a mixture and applied it to her remaining lashes and brows, giving her some added sparkle and sheen.  One of her brothers, Tom Lyle Williams, noticed the successful effect.

But he also noticed something more profound: a woman’s eyes were her calling card.  “Come look at me.”  “Coax me out of my bashfulness.”  “Yes, I’m flirting.”  “I’m interested in you.”  He appreciated beauty in all women, and their beauty spoke to him straight through their eyes.  Tom Lyle wanted to reproduce his sister’s “formula” to see whether regular women would pay a little to “up” the glamour in themselves.

All he needed was $500 and a rudimentary chemistry set to give his idea a real try.  But gathering $500 in 1915 wasn’t easy.  So when his brother Noel offered to loan him the money, he promised to repay him in full.  Little did any of them realize then that Noel would receive a return on his investment similar to the original investors in Microsoft or Apple!

For over a half century, Maybelline operated as a private company owned by the Williams family.  What Tom Lyle, his brother and sister started as a small, mail-order business eventually became an internationally recognized brand purchased 82 years later by French conglomerate L’Oreal for over 700 million.

I can tell you: it’s one thing to recognize a winning product discovered by accident, and quite another to turn it into an empire that, for decades, transcended all competition and remains an icon to this day.

How does one do that?  Precisely by branding.  By taking an exceptional product and equating it with excellence in every way.  By having a constant, relentless drive to promote a desirable image through that product.  By turning that product into the sine qua non of, in this case, eye beauty. 

Tom Lyle Williams packaged and sold artifice – the importance of beautiful eyes.  He made eye beauty the singular defining quality of a beautiful woman, and he branded Maybelline as representative of perfect beauty.  His genius was in convincing millions of women the world over to buy Maybelline with the absolute conviction that using Maybelline eye products would truly make them perfectly beautiful.

Unlike most folks in Hollywood, this unlikeliest of legends kept a low personal profile and let his creativity speak through his work.  In my opinion, Tom Lyle Williams can teach us more about branding than Colonel Sanders, Calvin Klein, and Coco Chanel combined.  He was first to enlist movie stars to promote his products.  One of the first companies to promote corporate social responsibility by supporting war bonds.  First to take advantage of advertising on broadcast television.  First to employ market research.  And first to truly understand the buying power of women.

Surely such a creative man must have had a muse…perhaps some woman he thought the ideal version of his own vision of beauty?  Indeed!  While he named the company for his sister, his muse was actually his sister-in-law, Evelyn.  She was gorgeous, smart, and often too smart for her own good.

The drama of this family-business-story, as with many such sagas, lies in deciphering where the family and the business intersected, frequently came to loggerheads, and sometimes went to court.  Secrets existed, lies were told, and facades masqueraded as truth – often to protect the family from itself, and always to protect Maybelline above all else. 

Edison made light bulbs.  Ford manufactured cars.  Here’s another great American rags-to-riches story.  This time the name is Williams.  The cash cow wore mascara and Maybelline.

“My publisher Bettie Youngs Books confirms that we now hold 3 Foreign Rights translations: Spain/Spanish –Chinese and Estonia.


With 105 Countries following The Maybelline Book Blog and Foreign Rights sold to Spain, China and Estonia, my Publisher, Bettie Youngs plans to have The Maybelline Story translated into every language around the world.  

Here are the top 11 countries following my Blog.

United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, France, Ukraine, China, Australia, Russia, Sweden, Poland.

Step into my world and cruise with me.
The Maybelline Story epitomizes the Entrepreneurial Spirit, woven into the fabric of the 20th Century through one little company that became a Global Phenomenon... 

Priceless Maybelline Family History became a Memoir after meeting my Publisher Bettie Youngs.

I've had a passion for my family history ever since I was in Jr. High School, when my Nana told me about the birth of the Maybelline company.  She demonstrated how my great auntie Mabel mixed  ashes from a burnt cork with Vaseline, dabbed it on her brows and lashes to darken them and hoped the concoction would make them grow.  Nana's love for Maybelline's history ignited a fire in my belly as she painted colorful pictures with her words.  She explained how my great uncle Tom Lyle Williams, a 19 year old entrepreneur with a small mail-order business in 1915, realized the value of his sister Mabel's idea and decided to market it as mascara and name it Maybelline in her honor.
My grandfather Preston with his
little sister Eve Williams, 1908
Nana was so proud of Maybelline's great success in the cosmetic field that she suggested I give a speech at school.....I did and I got an A+.  From that minute on, I was obsessed uncovering the lost story about the people who shaped the Maybelline Company and my life.   After spending precious time with my parents, grandparents, great aunts and uncles gathering memories, collecting photographs and vintage Maybelline ads, I was determined to write my book.  Then, in 1978, My dear Nana died mysteriously in an arson related fire and I vowed not to let her memory die.  So for the next 20 years I studied being an intensive journal keeper, using the Ira Progoff system, until eventually I found my writer's voice.
My father - great uncle Tom Lyle - Nana 1967.
When a fire burned down my home in 1993 and all my treasures were lost, I turned to my father, Bill Williams, to help me reconstruct a 963 page manuscript.
 

I believe I was divinely inspired  to leave a legacy before a piece priceless piece of American history was lost forever.  I hope other people will be inspired to research their roots, capture their family's story and preserve it for their children, grandchildren and beyond.  

History is the greatest gift one can pass on and connecting with your ancestors is priceless.  My Nana's words still ring in my ears today, "Sharrie Darling" she'd say, "you can lose everything, but nobody can ever take your background away." 
Check out ancestry.com today and see who's in your family tree.