HELENA RUBINSTEIN
G'day folks,
I bet you have heard of this woman. Helena Rubinstein was a Polish American business magnate. A
cosmetics entrepreneur, she was the founder and eponym of Helena
Rubinstein Incorporated cosmetics company, which made her one of the
world's richest women.
Synopsis
Helena
Rubinstein was an entrepreneur and philanthropist born on December 25, 1872, in
Krakow, Poland. In 1902, she started her business career in Australia
distributing a beauty cream that her mother had used. She soon founded a beauty
salon and manufactured cosmetics, working hard to expand her business at every
turn. Rubinstein opened salons in London and Paris, and when World War I began
she moved to America. Her beauty business grew into a worldwide cosmetics empire,
and she eventually created the Helena Rubinstein Foundation in 1953 to fund
organizations for children's health. She died on April 1, 1965, in New York
City.
Early Years
Helena
Rubinstein was born in Krakow, Poland, on December 25, 1870. While her father
was strict, her mother took a unique approach with raising her eight daughters:
She told them they would wield influence in the world through the powers of
beauty and love. To this end, her mother even made her own beauty creams.
As the
oldest child, Helena helped her father with bookkeeping, and her intelligence
led him to insist she study the medical sciences. She liked the lab work but
was averse to being in a hospital, and she was allowed to end her studies as
long as she agreed to marry. Her choice, however, was not the 35-year-old
widower her father picked out but a fellow student from the University of
Krakow.
Business Begins in Australia
Rubinstein’s
father disapproved of her choice in a husband, so she packed up and moved from
her native Poland to live with her uncle in Australia. She brought along a
dozen bottles of her mother’s beauty cream, made from combinations of herbs,
almonds and Carpathian fir tree extract. The creams were a hit with regional
women and Rubinstein gave the products away until her mother had to send more.
While
working odd jobs, and with financial support of a woman whose skin had seen the
benefits of the cream, Rubinstein soon began selling her products. Before long
she had her own shop in Melbourne. There she met Polish-American journalist
Edward William Titus, and the pair married in July 1908 in London. Working
18-hour days, Rubinstein turned a profit in her beauty business, and in 1905
she headed to Europe to study advances in skin treatments. When she returned,
she started bringing over her sisters to help with the business and also
brought to Australia Dr. Jacob Lykusky, the man who gave Rubinstein’s mother
her cream formulas, to help create more beauty products.
Building the Empire
In 1908,
Rubinstein headed to London with £100,000 to invest in her business, and in
less than a year she had opened Helena Rubinstein's Salon de Beauté Valaze. She
soon bought a Paris salon and installed her sister Pauline to run it. The only
thing that slowed Rubinstein down was when she was pregnant and gave birth to
two sons in 1909 and 1912. Rubinstein then opened a New York salon in 1916.
Salons in San Francisco, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago and Toronto followed, as
did sales of her products in department stores.
The 1920s
found Rubinstein in Hollywood, teaching starlets how to properly apply makeup.
Back in New York, she had a heated rivalry with both Elizabeth Arden
and Charles Revson, founder of Revlon, and in 1928 Rubinstein sold her American
business to Lehman Brothers. (She re-bought it cheaply soon after however, as
the subsequent stock market crash made the business available at a huge
discount.)
Rubinstein
and Titus divorced in 1937, and the following summer she married Russian prince
Artchil Gourielli-Tchkonia, who was 20 years younger. A lifelong advocate for
healthy living and self-care, Rubinstein died in New York City on April 1,
1965, at age 94. A year later, her autobiography, My Life for Beauty,
was published.
Clancy's comment: Always impressed by women who were ahead of their time.
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