Businesswoman Estée Lauder

Estée Lauder (/ˈɛsteɪ ˈlɔːdər/ EST-ay LAW-dər; née Josephine Esther Mentzer; July 1, 1908 – April 24, 2004) was an American businesswoman.

She co-founded her eponymous cosmetics company with her husband, Joseph Lauter (later Lauder). Lauder was the only woman on Time magazine's 1998 list of the 20 most influential business geniuses of the 20th century.

Estée Lauder
Businesswoman Estée Lauder
Lauder (left) with a customer in 1966
Born
Josephine Esther Mentzer

(1908-07-01)July 1, 1908
New York City, U.S.
DiedApril 24, 2004(2004-04-24) (aged 95)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationBusinesswoman
Known forCo-founder of The Estée Lauder Companies
Spouses
Joseph Lauder
(m. 1930; div. 1939)
(m. 1942; died 1983)
Children
Relatives

Early life and education

Lauder was born Josephine Esther Mentzer in Corona, Queens, New York City, the second child born to Rose Schotz and Max Mentzer. Her parents were Hungarian Jewish immigrants. Her mother's mother was from Sátoraljaújhely and her mother's father was from Gelle (now Holice, Slovakia), while her father had Czech-Jewish ancestry. Lauder's claims of descent from European aristocracy were discredited in a biography, Estée Lauder: Beyond the Magic (1985) by Lee Israel. Her New York Times obituary observed "she was a New Yorker and not an aristocrat at all", notwithstanding "the mythmaking that is so much of the magic of the beauty industry". Her "favourite story was that she had been brought up by her Viennese mother in fashionable Flushing, Long Island, in a sumptuous home with stables, a chauffeured car and an Italian nurse."

In actuality, her mother Rose emigrated from Hungary to the United States in 1898 with her five children at the time to join her first husband, Abraham Rosenthal. In 1905, Rose married Max Mentzer, a shopkeeper who had also immigrated to the United States in the 1890s. When their daughter was born, they wanted to name her Eszti, the diminutive form of the Hungarian first name Eszter, after her mother's favorite Hungarian aunt, but decided at the last minute to keep the name "Josephine", which they had agreed upon. However, the baby's nickname became "Estee", the name she would grow up using and responding to. Eventually, when she launched her perfume empire with her husband, she added an accent mark to make her name look French and began pronouncing it the way her father had in his Hungarian accent.

Lauder spent much of her childhood trying to make ends meet. Like most of her eight siblings, she worked at the family's hardware store, where she got her first taste of business, entrepreneurship, and what it takes to be a successful retailer. Her childhood dream was to become an actress with her "name in lights, flowers and handsome men".

Businesswoman Estée Lauder 
Estée and Joseph Lauder in 1971
Businesswoman Estée Lauder 
Lauder (left) with Ivana Trump in 1986

When Lauder grew older, she agreed to help her uncle, Dr. John Schotz, with his business. Schotz was a chemist, and his company, New Way Laboratories, sold beauty products such as creams, lotions, rouge, and fragrances. She became more interested in his business than her father's. She was fascinated watching her uncle create his products. He also taught her how to wash her face and do facial massages. After graduating from Newtown High School in Elmhurst, Queens, New York, she focused on her uncle's business.[citation needed]

Career

Lauder named one of her uncle's blends Super Rich All-Purpose Cream, and began selling the preparation to her friends.: 115  She sold creams like Six-In-One cold cream and Dr. Schotz's Viennese Cream to beauty shops, beach clubs and resorts. One day, as she was getting her hair done at the House of Ash Blondes, the salon's owner Florence Morris asked Lauder about her perfect skin. Soon, Estée returned to the beauty parlor to hand out four of her uncle's creams and demonstrate their use. Morris was so impressed that she asked Lauder to sell her products at Morris's new salon.: 116 

In 1953, Lauder introduced her first fragrance, Youth-Dew, a bath oil that doubled as a perfume. Instead of using French perfumes by the drop behind each ear, women began using Youth-Dew by the bottle in their bath water. In the first year, it sold 50,000 bottles; by 1984, the figure had risen to 150 million.

Lauder was the subject of a 1985 TV documentary, Estée Lauder: The Sweet Smell of Success. Explaining her success, she said, "I have never worked a day in my life without selling. If I believe in something, I sell it, and I sell it hard."

Awards and honors

Lauder received the Chevalier (Knight) class of the Legion of Honour from the Consul General of France, Gerard Causer, on January 16, 1978. She was the first woman to receive this honor.

She was inducted to the Junior Achievement U.S. Business Hall of Fame in 1988. She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2004.

Personal life

Estée met Joseph Lauter when she was in her early twenties. On January 15, 1930, they married. Their surname was later changed from Lauter to Lauder. Their first child, Leonard, was born March 19, 1933.: 115  The couple separated then divorced in 1939 and she moved to Florida, but they remarried in 1942. Their second son, Ronald, was born in 1944. Estée and Joseph Lauder remained married until his death in 1983, and she later regretted her divorce, saying that she married young and assumed that she had missed out on life but soon found out that she had the "sweetest husband in the world".

Leonard became the chief executive of Estée Lauder and then chairman of the board. Ronald was a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense in the Reagan administration and was U.S. Ambassador to Austria in 1986–87. As of 2021, he is the president of the World Jewish Congress.

Death

Lauder died of cardiopulmonary arrest on April 24, 2004, aged 95, at her home in Manhattan.

See also

References

Further reading

Tags:

Businesswoman Estée Lauder Early life and educationBusinesswoman Estée Lauder CareerBusinesswoman Estée Lauder Awards and honorsBusinesswoman Estée Lauder Personal lifeBusinesswoman Estée Lauder DeathBusinesswoman Estée Lauder Further readingBusinesswoman Estée Lauder

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

RihannaWikiTottenham Hotspur F.C.Margot RobbieLionel MessiJonathan Majors2023SwitzerlandVietnamMichael LandonGigi HadidJane FondaYouTube MusicJustin BieberMateo ReteguiRuud van NistelrooyHimeji CastleJennifer LawrenceCovenant School shootingBabylon (2022 film)NullAsh ReganPriscilla PresleyAlexandra DaddarioChinaD. B. WoodsideKari Matchett2023 Miami Open – Women's singlesBumpy JohnsonWorld War IISam BurnsMinecraftEasterXNXXChris RockSaddam HusseinBlackpinkCatRonald ReaganUEFA Euro 2024 qualifyingFlorida Atlantic UniversityThe Banshees of InisherinMichael CaineLuther (TV series)Queen VictoriaGottfrid SvartholmLorem ipsumThe Continental (miniseries)Ben StillerMartin Luther King Jr.List of South Park episodesLiv TylerTaiwanJustine BatemanCherThomas Tuchel2023 New South Wales state election2023 IBA Women's World Boxing ChampionshipsSue BirdAnsel AdamsRakesh RoshanErling HaalandRashmika MandannaScotlandNathan LaneGeorge VIJapanP versus NP problem2020 United States presidential electionJava (programming language)Austin ButlerBrie LarsonShamier AndersonAmritpal Singh (activist)Rahul GandhiAndrew Tate🡆 More