Rita Hayworth
During World War ll, Maybelline's market share skyrocketed, because so many women worked in air craft plants and refused to cut back on their cosmetics. When the war ended Tom Lyle's thirty-year-old invention benefited mightily from the Postwar Boom when mascara and eye-shadow came out in matching colors - with new hues added every Spring and Fall - imitating the practice of fashion designers. The increase in sales were dramatic and though in 1940 only one in four American women wore eye make-up, by 1949 this figure increased to three out of four, with Maybelline accounting for 45,000 units out of 51,000 eye products sold that year.
Merle Oberon |
Rita Hayworth, Merle Oberon, Betty Grable, Joan Crawford and Hedy Lamarr (click to see) were some of the GI's favorite pin-up girls. They were top box office queens during the war years and their image represented money in the bank for Maybelline.
Betty Grable |
Tom Lyle contracted Betty Grable for her sex appeal, moxy and girl next door image.She appealed to young want-a-bee’s who saved their grocery money to buy hope in a little red box. Maybelline turned simple shop girl's into sex symbols - inspiring soldier boys to get back home. In fact a G.I.'s morale was often dependent on pictures of their girls with "Those Maybelline Eyes."
Tom Lyle spent more on his beautiful movie stars as cover-girls then any other cosmetic company in history and it paid off in the 1940's beyond his wildest dreams.
Joan Crawford |
Hedy Lamarr |
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