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Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project

American History Museum

Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project
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Finding aid
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Object Details

Summary

The Cover Girl Make-Up Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project, 1923-1991, is the result of a year-long study in 1990, which examined the advertising created for Noxell Corporation's Cover Girl make-up products from 1959 to 1990. The objective of the project was to document, in print and electronic media, the history of Cover Girl make-up advertising since its inception in 1959.

Scope and Contents

Twenty-two oral history interviews (conducted by Dr. Scott Ellsworth for the Archives Center) and a variety of print and television advertisements, photographs, scrapbooks, personal papers, business records and related materials were gathered by the Center for Advertising History staff. The objective was to create a collection that provides documentation, in print and electronic media, of the history and development of advertising for Cover Girl make-up since its inception in 1959. Collection also includes earlier material related to other Noxell products, including Noxzema, with no direct connection to the Cover Girl campaign.
sova.nmah.ac.0374

GUID

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep89b09e4c7-64e7-4074-b65e-0d097966d1e3

Creator

Bunting, George L., Jr.
Brinkley, Christie
Ellsworth, Scott, Dr.
Colonel, Sheri
Giordano, Lynn
Ford, Eileen
Hall, L. C. "Bates"
Grathwohl, Geraldine
Huebner, Dick
Harrison, Fran
Lindsay, Robert
Hunt, William D.
McIver, Karen
MacDougall, Malcolm
Noble, Stan
Nash, Helen
Noxell Corporation.
Bergin, John
O'Neill, Jennifer
Oelbaum, Carol
Pelligrino, Nick
Poris, George
Roberts, F. Stone
Tiegs, Cheryl
Troup, Peter
Weithas, Art
Witt, Norbert

Names

Noxzema Chemical Company

Place

Hunt Valley (Maryland)
Baltimore (Md.)
Maryland

Topic

Women in advertising
advertising -- 1930-1940 -- California
Cosmetics -- advertising
Endorsements in advertising
Beauty culture
advertising -- 1950-2000
African American women -- Beauty culture
Modelling -- 1950-1990
Sex role in advertising
Radio advertising
Television advertising

Provenance

Most of the materials in the collection were donated to the Center for Advertising History by the Noxell Corporation, 1990. All storyboards and videoscripts, and a large collection of business records and proofsheets were donated by George Poris in June 1990. All mechanicals were donated by Art Weithas in June 1990. (These contributions are noted in the finding aid).

Creator

Bunting, George L., Jr.
Brinkley, Christie
Ellsworth, Scott, Dr.
Colonel, Sheri
Giordano, Lynn
Ford, Eileen
Hall, L. C. "Bates"
Grathwohl, Geraldine
Huebner, Dick
Harrison, Fran
Lindsay, Robert
Hunt, William D.
McIver, Karen
MacDougall, Malcolm
Noble, Stan
Nash, Helen
Noxell Corporation.
Bergin, John
O'Neill, Jennifer
Oelbaum, Carol
Pelligrino, Nick
Poris, George
Roberts, F. Stone
Tiegs, Cheryl
Troup, Peter
Weithas, Art
Witt, Norbert

See more items in

Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project

Sponsor

The project was supported in part by a gift from the Noxell Corporation.

Biographical / Historical

George Avery Bunting founded the Noxzema Chemical Company in Baltimore, Maryland in 1917. In the 1890s, he left behind a teaching job on Maryland's Eastern shore to move to Baltimore, where he hoped to pursue a career as a pharmacist. He landed a job as errand boy and soda jerk at a local drugstore, where he worked while attending classes at the University Of Maryland College of Pharmacy. Valedictorian of the Class of 1899, Bunting was promoted to manager of the drugstore, which he purchased. Bunting began to experiment with the formulation of medicated pastes and compounds, which he marketed to his customers. In 1909, he began refining a medicated vanishing cream, which he introduced in 1914. "Dr. Bunting's Sunburn Remedy," an aromatic skin cream containing clove oil, eucalyptus oil, lime water, menthol and camphor, was mixed by hand at his pharmacy. Marketed locally as a greaseless, medicated cream for the treatment of a variety of skin conditions, including sunburn, eczema, and acne, the product was renamed "Noxzema" for its reputed ability to "knock eczema." By 1917, the Noxzema Chemical Company was formed. During the 1920s, distribution of the product was expanded to include New York, Chicago, and the Midwest and, by 1926, the first Noxzema manufactory was built in northwest Baltimore to accommodate the demand for nearly a million jars a year. Having achieved a national market by 1938, Noxzema Chemical Company executives pursued product diversification as a means to maintain the corporate growth of the early years. In the 1930s and 1940s, line extensions included shaving cream, suntan lotion and cold cream, all with the distinctive "medicated" Noxzema aroma. In the late 1950s, Bill Hunt, director of product development at Noxzema, suggested a line extension into medicated make-up. Creatives at Sullivan, Stauffer, Colwell & Bayles, Incorporated (SSC&B), Noxzema's advertising agency since 1946, suggested that the advertising for the new product focus on beauty and glamour with some reference to the medicated claims made for other Noxzema products. In contrast to other cosmetics, which were sold at specialized department store counters, Noxzema's medicated make-up would be marketed alongside other Noxzema products in grocery stores and other mass distribution outlets. After experimenting with names that suggested both glamour and the medicated claims (including Thera-Blem and Blema-Glow), Bill Grathwohl, Noxell's advertising director, selected Carolyn Oelbaum's "Cover Girl," which conveyed the product's usefulness as a blemish cover-up, while invoking the glamorous image of fashion models. These three elements of the advertising, wholesome glamour, mass marketing, and medicated make-up, remain central to Cover Girl advertising nearly a half-century later. Beginning with the national launch in 1961, American and international fashion models were featured in the ads. The target audience was identified as women between eighteen and fifty-four and, initially, the "glamour" ads were targeted at women's magazines, while the "medicated" claims were reserved for teen magazines. Television ads featured both elements. Cover Girl advertising always featured beautiful women -- especially Caucasian women, but the Cover Girl image has evolved over time to conform to changing notions of beauty. In the late 1950s and 1960s, the Cover Girl was refined and aloof, a fashion conscious sophisticate. By the 1970s, a new social emphasis on looking and dressing "naturally" and the introduction of the "Clean Make-up" campaign created a new advertising focus on the wholesome glamour of the "girl next door," a blue-eyed, blonde all-American image. In the 1980s, the Cover Girl look was updated to include African-American, Hispanic and working women. In January 1970, SSC&B bought 49% of the Lintas Worldwide advertising network. After SSC&B was acquired by the Interpublic Group of Companies in 1979, the entire Lintas operation was consolidated under the name SSC&B/Lintas in 1981. With the Procter & Gamble buy-out of the Noxell Corporation in September 1989, the cosmetics account was moved to long-time P&G agency Grey Advertising, in order to circumvent a possible conflict of interest between P&G competitor Unilever, another Lintas account. In 1989 SSC&B/Lintas, Cover Girl's agency since its launch in 1961, lost the account it helped to create and define, but the brand continues to dominate mass-marketed cosmetics. This project is the result of a year-long study of advertising created for the Noxell Corporation's Cover Girl make-up products, 1959-1990. The effort was supported in part by a grant from the Noxell Corporation. The target audience was identified as women 18-54, and initially, the "glamour" ads were targeted at women's magazines, while the "medicated" claims were reserved for teen magazines. Television ads featured both elements. Cover Girl advertising has always featured beautiful women (especially Caucasian women), but the Cover Girl image evolved over time to conform with changing notions of beauty. In the late 1950s-1960s, the Cover Girl was refined and aloof, a fashion conscious sophisticate. By the 1970s, a new social emphasis on looking and dressing "naturally" and the introduction of the "Clean Make-up" campaign created a new advertising focus on the wholesome glamour of the "girl next door," a blue-eyed, blonde all-American image. Through the 1980s, the Cover Girl look was updated to include African-American and Hispanic models and images of women at work.

Extent

15.5 Cubic feet (30 boxes)

Date

1959-1990

Custodial History

As part of a continuing program to document and study modern advertising, the Center for Advertising History selected Cover Girl advertising as the sixth in a series of case studies of significant American advertising campaigns. This decision was based on the Noxell Corporation's role in developing mass-produced and mass-marketed cosmetic products. One aim of the project was to document the decision-making process involved in the creation of a successful campaign. Topics addressed include the applications of focus groups and market research as the industry struggled to adapt to changing roles and expectations for women between 1959 and 1990; the relations of the advertising to overall marketing strategy; and the nature of the creative process in producing effective advertising images. Twenty-two oral history interviews were conducted in 1990-1991by the Center's chief historian, Dr. Scott Ellsworth. In addition to the oral history interviews, a variety of print and television advertisements, story boards and television scripts, photographs, scrapbooks, personal papers, business records and other documentary materials were gathered by the Center for Advertising History staff. The majority of the materials found in the collection were donated to the Center for Advertising History by the Noxell Corporation during 1990. All storyboards and television scripts, and a large collection of business records and proofsheets, were donated by George Poris in June 1990. All mechanicals were donated by Art Weithas in June 1990.

Archival Repository

Archives Center, National Museum of American History

Identifier

NMAH.AC.0374

Type

Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Interviews
Business records
Audiotapes
Bumper stickers
Annual reports
Oral history
Black-and-white photographic prints
Press releases
Scrapbooks
Television scripts
Videotapes
Tear sheets

Citation

Cover Girl Advertising Oral History & Documentation Project, 1959-1990, Archives Center, National Museum of American History.

Arrangement

The collection is arranged into eight series. Series 1: Research Files, 1925-1991; undated Subseries 1.1: Center for Advertising History Reference and Clipping Files, 1925-1991; undated Subseries 1.2: George Poris Files, 1958-1968, 1971-1980; undated Series 2: Interviewee Files, 1990-1991 Series 3: Oral Histories, 1990-1991 Subseries 3.1: Original Master Audiocassettes, 1990-1991 Subseries 3.2: Researcher Copies of Audiocassettes, 1990-1991 Subseries 3.3: Preservation Master Copies, 1990-1991 Series 4: Television Commercials, 1950-1990; undated Subseries 4.1: Master Copies, 1960-1990; undated Subseries 4.2: Researcher Copies, 1960-1990 Subseries 4.3: Storyboards and Television Scripts, 1950-1981; undated Series 5: Print Advertisements, 1923-1989; undated Subseries 5.1: Ledger, 1923-1926 Subseries 5.2: Printed Advertisements and Proof sheets, 1950-1989; undated Subseries 5.3: Layouts of Printed Advertisements, 1960s Series 6: Company Publications and Promotional Literature, 1926-1988 Series 7: Photographs, 1925-1948, 1960s; undated Series 8: Scrapbooks, 1937-1941; 1949

Processing Information

Processed by Mimi Minnick, archivist, 1990; revised by Vanessa Broussard Simmons, archivist, 2007.

Rights

Copyright and trademark restrictions.

Genre/Form

Interviews -- 1950-2000
Business records -- 20th century
Audiotapes
Bumper stickers
Annual reports
Oral history -- 1990-2000
Black-and-white photographic prints -- Silver gelatin -- 1950-2000
Press releases
Scrapbooks -- 20th century
Television scripts
Videotapes
Tear sheets

Restrictions

Collection is open for research but a portion of the collection is stored off-site and special arrangements must be made to work with it. Contact the Archives Center for information at archivescenter@si.edu or 202-633-3270.

Related Materials

Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution Warshaw Collection of Business Americana, Subject: Cosmetics, NMAH.AC.0060.S01.01.Cosmetics NW Ayer Advertising Agency Records, NMAH.AC.0059 African American Cosmetic and Food Label Collection, NMAH.AC.0480 Carolyn Jones Papers, NMAH.AC.0552 Sandra and Gary Baden Collection of Celebrity Endorsements in Advertising, NMAH.AC.0611 Nathaniel Mathis Collection of Barbering and Beauty Culture, NMAH.AC0641 Revlon, Incorporated, NMAH.AC.0939

Separated Materials

"The Division of Home and Community Life, Costume Collection (now Division of Cultural and Community Life) holds eighty-six cosmetic items and one computer that were also donated by the Noxell Corporation in 1990 in conjunction with the oral history project. These artifacts include lipstick, manicure sets, brushes, make-up, eye shadow, blush, powder puffs, eyelash curler, nail polish, and mascara. See accession number 1990.0193. "
NMAH.AC.0374
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep89b09e4c7-64e7-4074-b65e-0d097966d1e3
NMAH.AC.0374
ACAH

Record ID

ebl-1562709012351-1562709012385-0

Showing 573 result(s)

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  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project 573 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 4: Television Commercials / 4.2: Researcher Copies 189 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 4: Television Commercials / 4.3: Storyboards and Television Scripts 86 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 5: Print Advertisements / 5.2: Printed Advertisements and Proof sheets 67 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 1: Research Files / 1.2: George Poris Files 56 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 2: Interviewee Files 26 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 3: Oral Histories / 3.1: Original Master Audiocassettes 25 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 3: Oral Histories / 3.2: Researcher Copies of Audiocassettes 25 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 3: Oral Histories / 3.3: Preservation Master Copies 25 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 1: Research Files / 1.1: Center for Advertising History Reference and Clipping Files 16 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 4: Television Commercials / 4.1: Master Copies 9 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 7: Photographs 9 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 6: Company Publications and Promotional Materials 8 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 5: Print Advertisements / 5.3: Layouts of Printed Advertisements 4 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 3: Oral Histories 3 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 4: Television Commercials 3 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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  • Cover Girl Advertising Oral History and Documentation Project / Series 8: Scrapbooks 2 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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  • Office equipment and supplies 1 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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  • CC0 573 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • No 416 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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  • ead_component 573 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus

Noxzema Skin Cream, 1966

Noxzema Shaving Lather, 1962

1975

Noxzema Cold Cream, 1967

1968

1974

Cover Girl Make-Up, 1976

Cover Girl Make-Up, 1966

Cover Girl Plus 3, 1966

Noxzema Skin Cream, 1962

1968

Noxzema Skin Cream, 1963

Photographs

1964

1976

1950

George Avery Bunting Sr.

Cover Girl Lip Softeners

undated

1985

Command Dry and Natural Hair Control,1972

Cover Girl Lipstick, 1965

1960s

Research Files


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