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Max Factor Sr.

Max Factor Sr. (September 15, 1877 – August 30, 1938),[2][3] born Maksymilian Faktorowicz, was a Polish-American[1] businessman, beautician, entrepreneur and inventor. As a founder of the cosmetics giant Max Factor & Company, he largely developed the modern cosmetics industry in the United States and popularized the term "make-up" in noun form based on the verb.

Max Factor Sr.
Max Factor Sr. in 1935, demonstrating his beauty micrometer device
Born
Maksymilian Faktorowicz

(1877-09-15)September 15, 1877
DiedAugust 30, 1938(1938-08-30) (aged 60)
Resting placeHillside Memorial Park Cemetery, Culver City, California, U.S.
MonumentsHollywood Walk of Fame
NationalityPolish[1]
CitizenshipAmerican (naturalized)
Occupation(s)Entrepreneur; wig and cosmetics technician; inventor
Years active1887–1938
Known forMax Factor Cosmetics
Spouses
  • Esther Rosa "Lizzie" Faktorowicz
    (m. 1896; died 1906)
  • Huma "Helen" Sradkowska
    (m. 1906; div. 1908)
  • Jennie Cook
    (m. 1908)
Children5, including Francis "Frank" Factor (Max Factor Jr.)
Relatives
AwardsHonorary Academy Award (1929)

He is also known for doing makeovers for starlets and giving them their signature looks; his most iconic works include Jean Harlow's platinum hair, Clara Bow's bob, Lucille Ball's false lashes and red curls, and Joan Crawford's "Hunter's Bow", or overdrawn lips.[4]

Early life edit

Factor, of Polish-Jewish descent, was born in Zduńska Wola[a] to Abraham Faktorowicz (1850/52 – before 1938) and Cecylia Wrocławska.[5] His father, a hard-working grocer, rabbi, or textile mill worker (depending upon the source), could not afford a formal education for his four children.

By the age of eight years, Factor was working as an assistant to a dentist and pharmacist.[6] At the age of nine, he was apprenticed to a wig maker and cosmetician in Łódź, in central Poland. That experience enabled him to gain a position at Anton's of Berlin, a leading hairstylist and cosmetics creator. By the age of fourteen, he was working at Korpo, a Moscow wig maker and cosmetician to the Imperial Russian Grand Opera. He spent the years from age eighteen to twenty-two undertaking his compulsory military service in the Imperial Russian Army, where he served in the Hospital Corps.

Upon his discharge, he opened his own shop in the town of Ryazan, selling hand-made rouges, creams, fragrances, and wigs. He became well known when a traveling theatrical troupe wore Factor's cosmetics to perform for Russian nobility. The Russian nobility appointed Factor the official cosmetics expert for the royal family and the Imperial Russian Grand Opera, an honor which led to him being closely monitored. He married Esther Rosa (whom he called Lizzie) and by early 1904 they had produced three children, Freda, Cecilia and Davis.[7] By 1904, concerned about the increasing anti-Jewish persecution developing in the Russian Empire, he and his wife decided to follow his brother Nathan and uncle Fischel to America. Worried that he would not be released from his royal service, he arranged with the assistance of a friend to take a rest cure at Karlovy Vary. According to another version he escaped with his family through the frosty woods straight into the harbor with a waiting ship.[8] After meeting up with his family they traveled in the steerage class on board the S.S. Moltke III and were processed at Ellis Island on February 25, 1904; he had US$400 in his possession.[9] They settled in St. Louis, Missouri.

Life in the United States edit

He sold his rouges and creams at the 1904 World's Fair, operating under the newly re-spelled name Max Factor. His partner in the venture stole all of his stock and the profits. With assistance from his brother and uncle, Factor recovered and opened a barber's shop. In August 1904, Max and his wife had their fourth child, Francis "Frank" Factor. However, on March 17, 1906, his wife collapsed and died from a brain hemorrhage. Anxious to provide a mother for his four children, he married Huma "Helen" Sradkowska on 15 August 1906.[10] Despite the birth of Louis on August 29, 1907, the marriage was short-lived and ended in a prolonged court battle, as result of which Factor obtained custody of all of his children.

Creation of an empire edit

On January 21, 1908, Factor married Jennie Cook (March 1, 1886 – December 3, 1949), a neighbor.

Later that year, Factor moved his family to Los Angeles, California, when he saw an opportunity to provide made-to-order wigs and theatrical make-up to the growing film industry. Initially, he established a shop on South Central Avenue, and advertised the business as "Max Factor's Antiseptic Hair Store." After the foundation of "Max Factor & Company" in 1909, he soon became the West Coast distributor of Leichner and Minor, two leading theatrical make-up manufacturers. Greasepaint in stick form—although the accepted make-up for use on the stage—could not be applied thinly enough, nor were the colors appropriate, to work satisfactorily on the screen during the early years of movie-making.

Factor began experimenting with various compounds in an effort to develop a suitable make-up for the new film medium. By 1914, he had perfected the first cosmetic specifically created for motion picture use—a thinner greasepaint in cream form, packaged in a jar, and created in 12 precisely-graduated shades. Unlike theatrical cosmetics, it would not crack or cake.

With this major achievement to his credit, Max Factor became the authority on cosmetics for film making. Soon, movie stars were eager to sample the "flexible greasepaint," while movie producers sought Factor's human hair wigs. He allowed the wigs to be rented to the producers of old Westerns, on the condition that his sons were given parts. The boys would watch the expensive wigs.

Factor marketed a range of cosmetics to the public during the 1920s, and insisted that every girl could look like a movie star by using Max Factor cosmetics.

In the early years of the business, Factor personally applied his products to actors and actresses. He developed a reputation for being able to customize makeup to present actors and actresses in the best possible light on screen. Among his most notable clients were: Ben Turpin, Gloria Swanson, Mary Pickford, Pola Negri, Jean Harlow, Claudette Colbert, Bette Davis, Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, Lucille Ball, and Judy Garland. As a result, virtually all of the major movie actresses were regular customers of the Max Factor beauty salon, located near Hollywood Boulevard. Max Factor's name appeared on many movie credits, and Factor appeared in some cameos.

Factor became a United States citizen in 1912.[11]

In 1920, Max Factor gave in to Frank Factor's suggestion, and officially began referring to his products as "make-up." Until then, the term "cosmetics" had been used, because "make-up" was considered to be used only by people in the theatre or of dubious reputation—not something to be used in polite society.

Death edit

In 1938, Factor was traveling in Europe on business with his son, Davis, when during a stopover in Paris, he received a note demanding money in exchange for his life. An attempt was made by the police using a decoy to capture the extortionist, but no one turned up at the agreed drop-off point to collect the money. Factor was so shaken by the threat that he returned to the US at the behest of a local doctor, where upon arrival, he took to his bed. Factor died on August 30, 1938, at the age of 60, in Beverly Hills, California.[2] He was originally interred in the Beth Olam mausoleum at the Hollywood Cemetery in Los Angeles. His remains were moved many years later to Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California.[12]

Honors and tributes edit

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented Max Factor with an honorary Academy Award in 1929 for his contributions to the film industry. Additionally, Max Factor is honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (at 6922 Hollywood Boulevard). Max Factor is mentioned in the classic song, "Hooray For Hollywood." In a reference to his creation of Clara Bow's heart-shaped lips, the song states, "To be an actor / See Mr. Factor / He'll make your pucker look good!"

Family edit

 
Daughter of Max Factor in the Netherlands (1963)

Max Factor had six children:

  • Freda Shore (January 22, 1898 – June 18, 1988)[13]
  • Cecilia Firestein (October 17, 1899 – May 28, 1984)
  • Davis Factor (February 2, 1902 – August 31, 1991)
  • Francis "Frank" Factor (later known as Max Factor Jr.; August 18, 1904 – June 7, 1996)
  • Louis Factor (August 29, 1907 – December 1975)
  • Sidney B. Factor (February 14, 1916 – December 15, 2005)[14]

In 2003 Andrew Luster (born December 15, 1963), one adopted great-grandson, was convicted of multiple sexual assaults involving the use of GHB to render his victims unconscious.[15]

Max Factor's half-brother John (October 8, 1892 – January 22, 1984) was a Prohibition-era gangster and con-artist affiliated with the Chicago Outfit.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The town was then situated in Congress Poland, subjugated by the Russian Empire

References edit

  1. ^ a b Szlęzak, Karolina (July 17, 2016). "Two Great Polish enterpreneures - Max Factor & Helena Rubenstein". Your Roots in Poland. Archived from the original on 2021-06-06. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  2. ^ a b "Max Factor Collection". oac.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2018-11-19. 1877-1938
  3. ^ "Max Factor House | Los Angeles Conservancy". www.laconservancy.org. Retrieved 2018-11-19. Factor, born to a Jewish family in Poland in 1877...
  4. ^ Connell, Alle (2017-02-23). "This Is The Exact Moment Overdrawn Lips Became A Thing". Revelist.com. Archived from the original on 2021-06-06. Retrieved 2021-06-06.
  5. ^ Leszczyńska Joanna, Max Factor. Czarodziej gwiazd, [w:] "Nasza Historia" [wyd. łódzkie], styczeń 2014, s. 8–11.
  6. ^ Basten, page 1.
  7. ^ Basten, page 6.
  8. ^ Kuźma, Darek (March 2021). "KOSMETOLOG Z WYBORU" [COSMETOLOGIST BY CHOICE] (PDF). Magazyn Filmowy [Film Magazine] (in Polish). No. 115 #3. pl:Stowarzyszenie Filmowców Polskich. pp. 58–59. (PDF) from the original on 2021-05-11.
  9. ^ Basten, page 10.
  10. ^ Basten, page 18
  11. ^ Basten, page 31.
  12. ^ Basten, page 122
  13. ^ "Notes for Freda Factor De Vault Shore Friedman". www.myfamilybusiness.org. from the original on 2021-05-22. Retrieved 2021-06-06.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.
  15. ^ Weiner, Tim (19 June 2003). "Fugitive and Heir to Cosmetics Fortune Is Captured in Mexico". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2015-05-27. Retrieved 2017-02-19.

Further reading edit

  • Basten, Fred E (2008). Max Factor - The Man who Changed the Faces of the World. New York: Arcade Publishing. pp. 172 pages. ISBN 978-1-55970-875-3.
  • Kent, Jacqueline C. (2003). Business Builders in Cosmetics. Minneapolis: Oliver Press. pp. 160 pages. ISBN 1-881508-82-X.
  • Updike, John: "Makeup and Make-Believe". The New Yorker, Sept 1 2008, Pages 124 to 128.
  • Kuźma, Darek: "Kosmetolog z wyboru", Magazyn Filmowy-Pismo Stowarzyszenia Filmowców Polskich, Nr 3 (115), March 2021, Pages 58 to 59.

factor, this, article, about, polish, american, emigre, born, 1877, other, uses, factor, disambiguation, september, 1877, august, 1938, born, maksymilian, faktorowicz, polish, american, businessman, beautician, entrepreneur, inventor, founder, cosmetics, giant. This article is about the Polish American emigre born 1877 For other uses see Max Factor disambiguation Max Factor Sr September 15 1877 August 30 1938 2 3 born Maksymilian Faktorowicz was a Polish American 1 businessman beautician entrepreneur and inventor As a founder of the cosmetics giant Max Factor amp Company he largely developed the modern cosmetics industry in the United States and popularized the term make up in noun form based on the verb Max Factor Sr Max Factor Sr in 1935 demonstrating his beauty micrometer deviceBornMaksymilian Faktorowicz 1877 09 15 September 15 1877Zdunska Wola Congress Poland Russian EmpireDiedAugust 30 1938 1938 08 30 aged 60 Beverly Hills California U S Resting placeHillside Memorial Park Cemetery Culver City California U S MonumentsHollywood Walk of FameNationalityPolish 1 CitizenshipAmerican naturalized Occupation s Entrepreneur wig and cosmetics technician inventorYears active1887 1938Known forMax Factor CosmeticsSpousesEsther Rosa Lizzie Faktorowicz m 1896 died 1906 wbr Huma Helen Sradkowska m 1906 div 1908 wbr Jennie Cook m 1908 wbr Children5 including Francis Frank Factor Max Factor Jr RelativesJohn Factor half brother Andrew Luster great grandson AwardsHonorary Academy Award 1929 He is also known for doing makeovers for starlets and giving them their signature looks his most iconic works include Jean Harlow s platinum hair Clara Bow s bob Lucille Ball s false lashes and red curls and Joan Crawford s Hunter s Bow or overdrawn lips 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Life in the United States 3 Creation of an empire 4 Death 5 Honors and tributes 6 Family 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingEarly life editFactor of Polish Jewish descent was born in Zdunska Wola a to Abraham Faktorowicz 1850 52 before 1938 and Cecylia Wroclawska 5 His father a hard working grocer rabbi or textile mill worker depending upon the source could not afford a formal education for his four children By the age of eight years Factor was working as an assistant to a dentist and pharmacist 6 At the age of nine he was apprenticed to a wig maker and cosmetician in Lodz in central Poland That experience enabled him to gain a position at Anton s of Berlin a leading hairstylist and cosmetics creator By the age of fourteen he was working at Korpo a Moscow wig maker and cosmetician to the Imperial Russian Grand Opera He spent the years from age eighteen to twenty two undertaking his compulsory military service in the Imperial Russian Army where he served in the Hospital Corps Upon his discharge he opened his own shop in the town of Ryazan selling hand made rouges creams fragrances and wigs He became well known when a traveling theatrical troupe wore Factor s cosmetics to perform for Russian nobility The Russian nobility appointed Factor the official cosmetics expert for the royal family and the Imperial Russian Grand Opera an honor which led to him being closely monitored He married Esther Rosa whom he called Lizzie and by early 1904 they had produced three children Freda Cecilia and Davis 7 By 1904 concerned about the increasing anti Jewish persecution developing in the Russian Empire he and his wife decided to follow his brother Nathan and uncle Fischel to America Worried that he would not be released from his royal service he arranged with the assistance of a friend to take a rest cure at Karlovy Vary According to another version he escaped with his family through the frosty woods straight into the harbor with a waiting ship 8 After meeting up with his family they traveled in the steerage class on board the S S Moltke III and were processed at Ellis Island on February 25 1904 he had US 400 in his possession 9 They settled in St Louis Missouri Life in the United States editHe sold his rouges and creams at the 1904 World s Fair operating under the newly re spelled name Max Factor His partner in the venture stole all of his stock and the profits With assistance from his brother and uncle Factor recovered and opened a barber s shop In August 1904 Max and his wife had their fourth child Francis Frank Factor However on March 17 1906 his wife collapsed and died from a brain hemorrhage Anxious to provide a mother for his four children he married Huma Helen Sradkowska on 15 August 1906 10 Despite the birth of Louis on August 29 1907 the marriage was short lived and ended in a prolonged court battle as result of which Factor obtained custody of all of his children Creation of an empire editOn January 21 1908 Factor married Jennie Cook March 1 1886 December 3 1949 a neighbor Later that year Factor moved his family to Los Angeles California when he saw an opportunity to provide made to order wigs and theatrical make up to the growing film industry Initially he established a shop on South Central Avenue and advertised the business as Max Factor s Antiseptic Hair Store After the foundation of Max Factor amp Company in 1909 he soon became the West Coast distributor of Leichner and Minor two leading theatrical make up manufacturers Greasepaint in stick form although the accepted make up for use on the stage could not be applied thinly enough nor were the colors appropriate to work satisfactorily on the screen during the early years of movie making Factor began experimenting with various compounds in an effort to develop a suitable make up for the new film medium By 1914 he had perfected the first cosmetic specifically created for motion picture use a thinner greasepaint in cream form packaged in a jar and created in 12 precisely graduated shades Unlike theatrical cosmetics it would not crack or cake With this major achievement to his credit Max Factor became the authority on cosmetics for film making Soon movie stars were eager to sample the flexible greasepaint while movie producers sought Factor s human hair wigs He allowed the wigs to be rented to the producers of old Westerns on the condition that his sons were given parts The boys would watch the expensive wigs Factor marketed a range of cosmetics to the public during the 1920s and insisted that every girl could look like a movie star by using Max Factor cosmetics In the early years of the business Factor personally applied his products to actors and actresses He developed a reputation for being able to customize makeup to present actors and actresses in the best possible light on screen Among his most notable clients were Ben Turpin Gloria Swanson Mary Pickford Pola Negri Jean Harlow Claudette Colbert Bette Davis Norma Shearer Joan Crawford Lucille Ball and Judy Garland As a result virtually all of the major movie actresses were regular customers of the Max Factor beauty salon located near Hollywood Boulevard Max Factor s name appeared on many movie credits and Factor appeared in some cameos Factor became a United States citizen in 1912 11 In 1920 Max Factor gave in to Frank Factor s suggestion and officially began referring to his products as make up Until then the term cosmetics had been used because make up was considered to be used only by people in the theatre or of dubious reputation not something to be used in polite society Death editIn 1938 Factor was traveling in Europe on business with his son Davis when during a stopover in Paris he received a note demanding money in exchange for his life An attempt was made by the police using a decoy to capture the extortionist but no one turned up at the agreed drop off point to collect the money Factor was so shaken by the threat that he returned to the US at the behest of a local doctor where upon arrival he took to his bed Factor died on August 30 1938 at the age of 60 in Beverly Hills California 2 He was originally interred in the Beth Olam mausoleum at the Hollywood Cemetery in Los Angeles His remains were moved many years later to Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City California 12 Honors and tributes editThe Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented Max Factor with an honorary Academy Award in 1929 for his contributions to the film industry Additionally Max Factor is honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6922 Hollywood Boulevard Max Factor is mentioned in the classic song Hooray For Hollywood In a reference to his creation of Clara Bow s heart shaped lips the song states To be an actor See Mr Factor He ll make your pucker look good Family edit nbsp Daughter of Max Factor in the Netherlands 1963 Max Factor had six children Freda Shore January 22 1898 June 18 1988 13 Cecilia Firestein October 17 1899 May 28 1984 Davis Factor February 2 1902 August 31 1991 Francis Frank Factor later known as Max Factor Jr August 18 1904 June 7 1996 Louis Factor August 29 1907 December 1975 Sidney B Factor February 14 1916 December 15 2005 14 In 2003 Andrew Luster born December 15 1963 one adopted great grandson was convicted of multiple sexual assaults involving the use of GHB to render his victims unconscious 15 Max Factor s half brother John October 8 1892 January 22 1984 was a Prohibition era gangster and con artist affiliated with the Chicago Outfit Notes edit The town was then situated in Congress Poland subjugated by the Russian EmpireReferences edit a b Szlezak Karolina July 17 2016 Two Great Polish enterpreneures Max Factor amp Helena Rubenstein Your Roots in Poland Archived from the original on 2021 06 06 Retrieved 2020 05 01 a b Max Factor Collection oac cdlib org Retrieved 2018 11 19 1877 1938 Max Factor House Los Angeles Conservancy www laconservancy org Retrieved 2018 11 19 Factor born to a Jewish family in Poland in 1877 Connell Alle 2017 02 23 This Is The Exact Moment Overdrawn Lips Became A Thing Revelist com Archived from the original on 2021 06 06 Retrieved 2021 06 06 Leszczynska Joanna Max Factor Czarodziej gwiazd w Nasza Historia wyd lodzkie styczen 2014 s 8 11 Basten page 1 Basten page 6 Kuzma Darek March 2021 KOSMETOLOG Z WYBORU COSMETOLOGIST BY CHOICE PDF Magazyn Filmowy Film Magazine in Polish No 115 3 pl Stowarzyszenie Filmowcow Polskich pp 58 59 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 05 11 Basten page 10 Basten page 18 Basten page 31 Basten page 122 Notes for Freda Factor De Vault Shore Friedman www myfamilybusiness org Archived from the original on 2021 05 22 Retrieved 2021 06 06 Descendants of Abraham Factrowitz Factor Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Weiner Tim 19 June 2003 Fugitive and Heir to Cosmetics Fortune Is Captured in Mexico The New York Times Archived from the original on 2015 05 27 Retrieved 2017 02 19 Further reading editBasten Fred E 2008 Max Factor The Man who Changed the Faces of the World New York Arcade Publishing pp 172 pages ISBN 978 1 55970 875 3 Kent Jacqueline C 2003 Business Builders in Cosmetics Minneapolis Oliver Press pp 160 pages ISBN 1 881508 82 X Updike John Makeup and Make Believe The New Yorker Sept 1 2008 Pages 124 to 128 Kuzma Darek Kosmetolog z wyboru Magazyn Filmowy Pismo Stowarzyszenia Filmowcow Polskich Nr 3 115 March 2021 Pages 58 to 59 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Max Factor Sr amp oldid 1200851823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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