Cosmetics queen Estee Lauder dies
Estee Lauder, who started a kitchen business blending face creams and built it into an international cosmetics empire, has died. She was 95.
Lauder died late on Saturday at her home in Manhattan of cardiopulmonary arrest, said Sally Susman, a company spokeswoman.
In 1998, Lauder was the only woman on Time magazineâs listing of the 20 most influential geniuses of business of the century.
Her company was placed 349 in the 2003 ranking in the Fortune 500 list of the US's largest companies, with revenue at $4.744bn dollars (âŹ4.0237bn).
In explaining her success, Lauder once said: âI have never worked a day in my life without selling. If I believe in something, I sell it, and I sell it hard.â
Lauder sold her products primarily through department stores â Saks Fifth Avenue, Bloomingdaleâs, Marshall Field, Neiman-Marcus, Harrods in London, Galeries Lafayette in Paris.
âBeauty is an attitude,â she once said. âThereâs no secret. Why are all brides beautiful? Because on their wedding day they care about how they look. There are no ugly women â only women who donât care or who donât believe theyâre attractive.â
The companyâs product lines have included Estee Lauder, Clinique, Aramis, Prescriptives and Origins.
A favourite selling tool has been offering a gift with a purchase â a giveaway that began out of necessity.
Lauder started off without enough of an advertising budget to attract an agency, so she used the money instead for free samples.
She also courted the rich and famous.
âI donât know her very well, but she keeps sending all these things,â said Princess Grace of Monaco, who became a friend.
Lauder once said: âIf you have a goal, if you want to be successful, if you really want to do it and become another Estee Lauder, youâve got to work hard, youâve got to stick to it and youâve got to believe in what youâre doing.â
She enjoyed entertaining in grand manner, in her Upper East Side townhouse, her oceanfront home in Palm Beach, her London flat, or her villa in the south of France.
But that was not how she grew up.
Born Josephine Esther Mentzer in the working-class Corona section of Queens, she was the daughter of Max and Rose Schotz Mentzer.
Lauder never disclosed her birth date, but biographer Lee Israel reported that it was July 1, 1908.
Lauder said her family always called her Esty. When a public school official spelled it Estee, it stuck.
In 1930 she married a garment centre businessman named Joseph Lauter (later changed to Lauder), and they had their first son, Leonard, three years later.
During the 1930s, she began selling face creams that her uncle John Schotz, a chemist, mixed up in a makeshift laboratory in a stable behind the family house. And she began experimenting with mixes herself.
While in her home kitchen, âduring every possible spare moment, (I) cooked up little pots of cream for faces. I always felt most alive when I was dabbling in the practise cream,â she said.
In 1939 she divorced and moved to Florida. Years later, she explained why: âI was married very young. You think you missed something out of life. But I found out that I had the sweetest husband in the world.â
She and Joseph remarried in 1942, had a second son, Ronald, and went into business together.
Her persistence in selling paid off in 1948, when she persuaded a buyer at Saks to place a sizeable order.
Estee Lauder became a household name in 1953, when the company debuted Youth Dew, a bath oil and perfume.
Over the years she added new lines and new products, fragrances such as White Linen and Cinnabar, the Aramis line of menâs toiletries and the Clinique line of fragrance-free, allergy-tested products.
She duelled with arch rival Charles Revson, who built the Revlon empire.
âShe was the one competitor he set out to beat but couldnât,â wrote Revson biographer Andrew Tobias.
As the privately held company grew, Lauder and her husband involved their sons in the decision making.
Leonard Lauder took over as chief executive officer in 1982, the year before Joseph Lauder died, and nearly quadrupled annual sales by 1995.
Ronald Lauder left the business for several years in the â80s, serving defence and ambassador posts in the Reagan administration and making a failed bid for mayor of New York. He then returned to the company.
Lauderâs assets, including her company stock and much of her real estate, had been put in recent years into a trust administered by her two sons and a longtime lawyer.
Her public life dwindled after she broke her hip in 1994.
After being vague about her background for years, Lauder rushed her autobiography, âEstee: A Success Story,â into print in 1985. Typically, she was out to beat the competition: in this case Israelâs unauthorised biography, âEstee Lauder: Beyond the Magic.â
Lauder and her husband were active in philanthropic work, including contributions to Memorial Sloan-Kettering Hospital in New York and the University of Pennsylvania, the site of the Joseph H Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies.

