Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Celebrating Maybelline's 102 Birthday with an excerpt from The Maybelline Story

Tom Lyle Williams, was spending $200,000 a year in advertising, with Maybelline ads appearing in forty popular magazines as well as Sunday newspaper supplements and specialized journals such as Theater and Photoplay. Between 1915 and 1929, he’d spent over a million dollars to advertise Maybelline. His little eye beautifier now had wide distribution in the United States and Canada.  Everywhere you went, close-up photos of eyes darkened with Maybelline projected a provocative--but no longer sinful--eroticism.


Tom Lyle Williams in 1929, from an article in a trade magazine.
In fact Tom Lyle had just launched his 1929 “Springtime is Maybelline Time!” campaign, featuring an idealized lovely young miss looking up adoringly at her man through starry eyes. The offers to vendors pitched display cartons, each holding a half-dozen eye makeup containers, and urged druggists to try product placement by the soda fountain, “forcing extra sales.” Tom Lyle felt that the ad would assure continued prosperity for the company, meaning he could afford to leave Maybelline in the hands of his brother Noel while he and Emery headed out to California for a few days.

On October 29, 1929, a news flash announced that the Dow industrial average had fallen almost twenty-three percent, and the stock market had lost a total of sixteen billion dollars in value in a month. Sixteen billion dollars.

Tom Lyle knew the stock market crash would be devastating for the country in general, and would certainly ruin many companies. Although Maybelline, as a family-owned business, was not directly affected by the Wall Street disaster, there was no question that the aftermath would be devastating. Who would choose to buy eye cosmetics over food for the family?


The prosperity and opulence of the Roaring Twenties were gone, disappearing along with the vamps who had loaded up with Maybelline’s seventy-five-cent product. In order to keep his company alive in the years to come, Tom Lyle knew he would have to find ways to keep his product in the public eye, yet at a price women could afford. The flashy, flapper look was quickly devolving to a more demure look fit for austere times.


Despite the national situation, he felt good about the future. In fact, when Noel showed him a story in The Wall Street Journal about a brand-new skyscraper being constructed over the old Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York--the Empire State Building, the tallest structure in the world--Tom Lyle took it as a sign that the bad economy would be only a temporary dip in the road.


He was rarely so wrong. When Emery suggested an ad tie-in to the Empire State Building--Things Are Looking Up, featuring young women with gorgeous eyes gazing up at a new skyscraper--Tom Lyle backed it enthusiastically...until it became clear that for most of the country, things were looking very much down. They abandoned the new ad campaign as the market continued to decline, wages plummeted, and credit dried up. When industrial production also collapsed, many businesses went with it.


But not Maybelline. Although innovative and widespread advertising was responsible for a lot of the company's success over the years, it was not the whole story. So was constant innovation in the lab, and that spring, thanks to the introduction of an improved waterproof eye makeup, total sales rose to $750,000--at a time when most businesses were struggling simply to keep their wallowing businesses afloat.

Read more about Maybelline's success during the worst economic downturn in American history and it's secret to becoming the most successful cosmetic company in the world in

The Maybelline Story and the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It.


 Celebrating Maybelline Mascara 102 Anniversary and "National Lashes Day." Here is a short excerpt from The Maybelline Story. Maybelline New York, your history from "Ashes to Lashes" is one of the most spectacular rags to riches stories ever told. 

Maybelline cousin, Brian Dietzen Talks About That Gibbs Hug On NCIS Plus, what does Palmer's newfound doc status mean for the future?







Palmer reaches all-new heights—literally!
During a hit-and-run investigation, Palmer joins a stranger (Spencer Treat Clark) on the outside ledge of a building in an attempt to save his life on the NCIS episode "Keep Going."

Watch NCIS on Tuesdays at 8/7c on CBS and CBS All Access.
Brian Dietzen, is Maybelline's namesake, Mabel Williams Hewes, great grandson. I've done several posts about him on the Maybelline Story Blog. His family is very proud of his accomplishments and wishes him further success on NCIS and beyond. We look forward to seeing him play a bigger part on NCIS, after viewing the last episode, where he was featured in a staring role. Take a look at the videos and click on the link to read the full article and be sure to tune into CBS and and record the new season.  Congratulations Brian!!!
Feb 5, 2012 ... Brian Dietzen, David McCallum, Pauley Perrette, Mark Harmon, Sean Murray, Cote de Pablo, and Michael Weatherly attend CBS' "NCIS" ...

Sep 14, 2015 ... There is Buzz going around about The Maybelline Story being filmed as a Miniseries. I'd love to see my cousin, Brian Dietzen, play the part ...

May 4, 2015 ... NCIS' Season 12 Cast: Brian Dietzen Talks To Real Medical ... Mabel Williams, great grandson, Brian Dietzen, plays Jimmy Palmer on NCIS.

Sep 1, 2014 ... Trudy leaves behind her loving husband Keith, sons Aaron and Brian Dietzen; grandchildren Ella, Maxwel, Gracelyn, Clover, and Satchel; sisters Suzie ...

Maybelline Brand-merchandising in the 1930's, is common place today.


Maybelline products mounted on a card and placed on display racks for easy accessibility, was the brain child of Maybelline's marketing man, Rags Ragland, in 1935.





 What we consider common merchandising today actually began at the Maybelline Company as a way to display their products in an organized fashion in drugstores like JJ Newberry and Company.




 Maybelline eye-shadow on a card in 1935.




Today all Brands are carded but 80 years ago


products were haphazardly thrown on a table, causing, great frustration, for the consumer. 




Carded merchandise extended the promotional impact of Maybelline.  Cards increased impulse buying, attracted customer's attention, organized products, enhanced shopability and increased the bottom line. 




By the 1950's and 60's, all beauty products were carded




 and displayed on free-standing, 




 or on twirling racks, another idea of Rag's Ragland.




By 1964,  ULTRA LASH MASCARA, was  born, taking the place of Maybelline's first wand mascara,  MAGIC MASCARA.  Some of you might remember buying a carded Maybelline ULTRA LASH,  for 69 cents. 





 Before ULTRA LASH,  the little red box with a cake of Maybelline mascara, or Maybelline cream mascara, was the only choice available.



In the 1950's, a ladies make-up bag was filled with Maybelline products. It was the only makeup advertised on television.  No longer a little mail order business, advertised in the classifieds of magazines and news papers.



Maybelline has remained The King, of Advertising for over 100 years.



Thank you for following the Maybelline Blog, tell your friends and be sure to get your copy of The Maybelline Story, you will love it !!!!

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Review: There’s more than meets the eye when it comes to eye makeup.



Take the history of Maybelline. In 2015 the global makeup brand was in the midst of its centennial celebration, complete with multiple star-studded parties But before all the blushes and BB creams, it was about a family company creating cosmetics for the eyes.
Sharrie Williams, an original descendant of the family that started the brand, detailed Maybelline’s rise to popularity and prosperity in her book “The Maybelline Story and the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It."
How well do you know Maybelline? Here are


some fun facts:
■ How it started: In 1915, Mabel Williams burned her eyebrows and lashes. Unsure how long they would take to grow back, she burned a piece of cork, mixed the ashes with petroleum jelly and applied them. The jelly soothed the burn and the ash gave her brows and lashes definition. Her brother, Tom Lyle Williams, noticed how darkening them made her eyes pop, and it gave him an idea for a new kind of makeup.


■ Creating a category: At the turn of the 20th century, eye makeup was mainly worn by silent film stars to highlight their eyes on camera. For most women, options were limited to lipsticks, rouges, creams and powders. With a $500 loan, from his brother Noel J. Williams, Tom Lyle Williams launched a product called Lash-Brow-Ine for “beautifying lashes.” In those early days, it was a cake of black material in a little red box that women applied with a tiny brush. It sold for 25 cents.



■ What’s in a name?: Before Maybelline, there was no name for mascara. The company coined the term in the 1930s as a derivative of the French word mascaro, a product                    used to  darken men’s facial hair.
■ A makeup mainstay is born: In 1971, Maybelline debuted its Great Lash mascara — recognizable for its iconic pink-and-green packaging inspired by fashion designer Lilly Pulitzer’s vibrant hues and prints. It’s been a staple on drugstore shelves and in cosmetics bags ever since. In 2000, a tube was sold every 1.2 seconds, according to brand reports.



■ Advertising king: Quality and affordability aren’t the only reason Maybelline has made its mark. “My great-uncle wanted to be remembered as the king of advertising,” Ms. Williams says.


■ Branching out: By the 1970s, Maybelline was more than just eye makeup. There were lip glosses, blushes and much more. L’Oreal acquired the brand in 1996 and moved it to New York, where it continues to churn out new products and is a regular sponsor at New York Fashion Week.
Sara Bauknecht: sbauknecht@post-gazette.com or on Twitter and Instagram @SaraB_PG.By Sara Bauknecht / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Manny Gutierrez Is the First Man to Star in a Maybelline Campaign, What would founder TL Williams think about it


The first male face to represent Maybelline New York in 102 years. Read the whole article and view the many glamorous sides of "Beauty Boy," Manny Gutierrez, 5:00 shadow and all. Click link. http://www.elle.com/beauty/news/a41853/maybelline-manny-gutierrez-first-male-ambassador/?src=socialflowTW




The makeup artist stars in Maybelline's "That Boss Life" campaign promoting Big Shot Mascara



alongside fellow Insta-famous beauty blogger Shayla Mitchell l (aka @makeupshayla) and sweepstakes winner Jackie Flowers.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/style/manny-gutierrez-is-the-first-man-to-star-in-a-maybelline-campaign-and-it%E2%80%99s-a-huge-deal/ar-BBxWfdE?li=BBnbfcL


 "For this specific campaign, Manny's encouraging everyone, no matter their gender, to "lash like a boss." While the text-speak might come off a little cheese for some, the underlying message isn't lost. Man or woman, makeup is for you."


 19 year old Tom Lyle Williams 

100 years ago wearing Maybelline. He and Maybelline were always way ahead of the curve. I imagine he'd be happy that it's finally acceptable for men as well as women to wear his products.

Maybelline's Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher will be forever in our hearts






Debbie and Carrie buried at Forest Lawn in Hollywood










If you haven't seen "Bright Lights" on HBO, watch it. 




Debbie Reynold's with Maybelline founder, Tom Lyle Williams, (on the right,) Arnold Anderson (on the left,) and Sparky the dog.  Photo taken at TL's home in Bel Air California, 1950.


Married in 1955, Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fisher, known as the perfect couple.  Both equally famous, they were the couple..... to wanna be.






  expecting their first child....This was the stuff fairy tales were made of. 




 A 1956,  Maybelline ad, appeared in movie magazines, the same time Debbie and Eddie were expecting their first child, Carrie Fisher.




Maybelline's advertising strategy featured Romance while focusing on selling War Bonds during WWll




When petroleum was rationed during the War, Maybelline was ordered to stop making their products.  Tom Lyle told the Pentagon, "If women can't get their Maybelline, it will affect the moral of the men overseas."   Petroleum vats remained full and Maybelline's products expanded around the world.










read more about Maybelline's marketing and advertising strategy over the last 100 years in The Maybelline Story and the Spirited Family Behind it.