Helena Rubinstein (born Chaya Rubinstein,
December 25, 1870 – April 1, 1965), a Polish-born American business magnate. A
cosmetics entrepreneur she was the founder and eponym of company Helena
Rubinstein, Incorporated, which made her one of the world's richest women.
Rubinstein was the eldest of eight
daughters born to a Jewish couple, Augusta - Gitte (Gitel) Shaindel Rubinstein
née Silberfeld and Horace - Naftoli Hertz Rubinstein; who was a shopkeeper in
Kraków.
Rubinstein immigrated from Poland and arrived in Australia in 1902, with no money
and little English. Her stylish clothes and milky complexion did not pass
unnoticed among the town's ladies, however, and she soon found enthusiastic
buyers for the jars of beauty cream in her luggage. Spotting a market, she
began to make her own. Fortunately, a key ingredient was readily at hand.
Coleraine, in Western
Victoria , where her uncle was a shopkeeper, might have been an
"awful place" but it did not lack of that ingredient. Sheep, some 75
million of them, were the wealth of the nation and the Western District's vast
mobs of merinos produced the finest wool in the land, secreting abundant
quantities of a grease, chemically known as lanolin, in the process. To
disguise this essential component of her product's pungent odour, Rubinstein
experimented with lavender, pine bark and water lilies.
She also managed to fall out with her
uncle. After a stint as a bush governess, she got a job as a waitress at the
Winter Garden tearooms in Melbourne .
There, she found an admirer willing to stump up the funds to launch her Crème
Valaze, supposedly including herbs imported "from the Carpathian
Mountains ". Costing ten pence and selling for six shillings,
it walked off the shelves as fast as she could pack it in pots. Now calling
herself Helena, Rubinstein could soon afford to open a salon in fashionable Collins Street ,
selling glamour as a science to clients whose skin was "diagnosed"
and a suitable treatment "prescribed".
Diminutive at 4 ft . 10 in . (147 cm ), she rapidly
expanded her operation. In 1908, her sister Ceska assumed the Melbourne
shop's operation, when, with $100,000, Rubinstein moved to London and began what was to become an
international enterprise. (Women at this time could not obtain bank loans, so
the money was her own.)
In 1908, she married the Polish-born
American journalist Edward William Titus in London . They had two sons, Roy Valentine
Titus (London, December 12, 1909–New York, June 18, 1989) and Horace Titus
(London, April 23, 1912–New York, May 18, 1958). They eventually moved to Paris where she opened a
salon in 1912. Her husband helped with writing the publicity and set up a small
publishing house, published Lady Chatterley's Lover and hired Samuel Putnam to
translate famous model Kiki's memoirs.
Rubinstein threw lavish dinner parties and
became known for apocryphal quips, such as when an intoxicated French
ambassador expressed vitriol toward Edith Sitwell and her brother Sacheverell:
"Vos ancêtres ont brûlé Jeanne d'Arc!" Rubinstein, who knew little
French, asked a guest what the ambassador had said. "He said, 'Your
ancestors burned Joan of Arc.'" Rubinstein replied, "Well, someone
had to do it."
At another fête, Marcel Proust asked her
what makeup a duchess might wear. She summarily dismissed him because "he
smelt of mothballs." Rubinstein recollected later, "How was I to know
he was going to be famous?"
At the outbreak of World War I, she and
Titus moved to New York City ,
where she opened a cosmetics salon in 1915, the forerunner of a chain
throughout the country. This was the beginning of her vicious rivalry with the
other great lady of the cosmetics industry, Elizabeth Arden. Both Rubinstein
and Arden, who died within 18 months of each other, were social climbers. And
they were both keenly aware of effective marketing and luxurious packaging, the
attraction of beauticians in neat uniforms, the value of celebrity
endorsements, the perceived value of overpricing and the promotion of the
pseudoscience of skincare.
From 1917, Rubinstein took on the
manufacturing and wholesale distribution of her products. The "Day of
Beauty" in the various salons became a great success. The purported
portrait of Rubinstein in her advertising was of a middle-age mannequin with a
Gentile appearance.
In 1928, she sold the American business to
Lehman Brothers for $7.3 million, ($88 million in 2007). After the arrival of
the Great Depression, she bought back the nearly worthless stock for less than
$1 million and eventually turned the shares into values of multimillion
dollars, establishing salons and outlets in almost a dozen U.S. cities.
Her subsequent spa at 715 Fifth
Avenue included a restaurant, a gymnasium and rugs
by painter Joan Miró. She commissioned artist Salvador Dalí to design a powder
compact as well a portrait of herself.
Freed of her former marriage vows, in 1938
Helena readily married Prince Artchil Gourielli-Tchkonia (1895–1955), whose
somewhat clouded materlineal claim to Georgian nobility, as that of Prince
Artchil Gourielli-Tchkonia (sometimes spelled Courielli-Tchkonia; born in
Georgia, February 18, 1895, died in New York City November 21, 1955), stemmed
from his having been born a member of the untitled noble Tchkonia family of
Guria, enticing the ambitious young man to appropriate the genuine title of his
grandmother, born Princess Gourielli.
Self-styled Prince Artchil
Gourielli-Tchkonia, was 23 years younger than Rubinstein. Eager for a regal
title to call her own, Rubinstein pursued the handsome youth avidly; coming to
name a male cosmetics line after her youthful prized catch. Some have claimed
that the marriage was a marketing ploy, including Rubinstein's being able to
pass herself off as Helena Princess Gourielli.
A multimillionaire of contrasts, Rubinstein
took a bag lunch to work and was very frugal in many matters, but bought
top-fashion clothing and valuable fine art and furniture. Concerning art, she
founded the respectable Helena Rubinstein Pavilion of Contemporary Art in Tel
Aviv and in 1957 she established the Helena Rubinstein travelling art
scholarship in Australia .
In
1953, she established the philanthropic Helena Rubinstein Foundation to provide
funds to organizations specializing in health, medical research and
rehabilitation as well as to the America Israel Cultural Foundation and
scholarships to Israelis.
In 1959, Rubinstein represented the U.S. cosmetics industry at the American National
Exhibition in Moscow .
A £300 annual Rubinstein Prize was awarded
for portraits by Australian artists from 1958. Prizewinners included Frank
Hodgkinson 1958; Charles Blackman 1960; William Boissevain 1961; Margaret Olley
1962; Vladas Meskenas 1963; Judy Cassab 1964, 1965; Jack Carington Smith 1966.
Called "Madame" by her employees,
she eschewed idle chatter, continued to be active in the corporation throughout
her life, even from her sick bed, and staffed the company with her relatives.
Mme. Rubinstein died April 1, 1965, and was
buried in Mount Olivet
Cemetery in Queens .
Some of her estate, including African and fine art, Lucite furniture, and
overwrought Victorian furniture upholstered in purple, was auctioned in 1966 at
the Park-Bernet Galleries in New York.
One of Rubinstein's numerous mantras was:
"There are no ugly women, only lazy ones."
A scholarly study of her exclusive beauty
salons and how they blurred and influenced the conceptual boundaries at the
time among fashion, art galleries, the domestic interior and versions of
modernism is explored by Marie J. Clifford (Winterthur Portfolio, vol. 38). A
feature-length documentary film, The Powder and the Glory (2009) by Ann Carol
Grossman and Arnie Reisman, details the rivalry between Rubinstein and
Elizabeth Arden.
Her methodology has been described thus:
She was "the first self-made female
millionaire, an accomplishment she owed primarily to publicity savvy. She knew
how to advertise—using 'fear copy with a bit of blah-blah'—and introduced the
concept of 'problem' skin types. She also pioneered the use of pseudoscience in
marketing, donning a lab coat in many advertisements, despite the fact that her
only training had been a two-month tour of European skin-care facilities. She
knew how to manipulate consumers' status anxiety, as well: If a product
faltered initially, she would hike the price to raise the perceived
value."
In 1973, the company Helena Rubinstein,
Inc. was sold to Colgate Palmolive, and is now owned by L'Oréal.
'Helena
Rubinstein: The Woman Who Invented Beauty', by Michèle Fitoussi - review
BOOKS 0
Comments Nicky Haslam 13 April 2013 / http://www.spectator.co.uk/books/8883751/park-avenue-princess/
Helena
Rubinstein: The Woman Who Invented Beauty Michèle Fitoussi
Gallic
Books, pp.497, £8.99, ISBN: 9780730496502
In
My unique
encounter with the woman Cocteau called — not, given her machinations, without
a touch of irony — the ‘Byzantine Empress of Beauty’, encapsulated her
self-made aura: her battle against blemishes, her extravagant style, canny
acumen and her famously brusque manner.
The friend
I’d been meeting was a tall, elegant and extremely witty Irishman named Patrick
O’Higgins. To say he ‘worked’ for this monstre maquillée is not the half of it.
He walked her, arranged her contracts, travelled the world with her, was the
shoulder she cried on, made amends for her manners, held the heavily jewelled
hand when husbands and sons died. And he wrote an amusing, touching, critical
but finally sympathetic book, simply titled Madame, about his many years with
Helena Rubinstein.
Michèle
Fitoussi’s biography of the same subject puts much factual flesh on Madame’s
funny-bones. It is credibly researched, fairly accurate, without too many
invented conversations and written in powder-pink, though somewhat
cliché-ridden, prose. Exclamation marks dot paragraphs like beauty-spots, and
there are more ‘such as’s followed by lists of long-forgotten rivals than you
can shake a lipstick at.
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