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Breck Girls Collection

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Creator
Williams, Ralph William
Breck Company.
Dial Corporation.
American Cyanamid Company
Sheldon, Charles
Names
Basinger, Kim
Gray, Erin
Hamill, Joan
Shields, Brooke
Tiegs, Cheryl
Topic
Shampoos -- advertising
Hair -- Shampooing
advertising -- 20th century
Feminine beauty (Aesthetics)
Beauty contestants
Beauty culture
Provenance
The Dial Corporation through Jane Owens, Senior Vice President, Gift, June 1998.
Creator
Williams, Ralph William
Breck Company.
Dial Corporation.
American Cyanamid Company
Sheldon, Charles
See more items in
Breck Girls Collection
Summary
The collection documents the development and evolution of the Breck Girl, a highly successful and long-lived advertising campaign whose hallmark was its vision of idealized American womanhood through correspondence, photographs, paintings, and print advertisements.
Biographical / Historical
Dr. John Breck is credited with developing one of the first liquid shampoos in the United States, in Springfield Massachusetts in 1908; Breck is also credited with introducing the first ph-balanced shampoo, in 1930. During the early years of the business, distribution remained localized in New England, and the product was sold exclusively to beauty salons until 1946. Advertising for the brand began in 1932, but appeared only in trade publications, such as Modern Beauty Shop. Edward Breck, son of the founder, assumed management of the company in 1936. Breck became acquainted with Charles Sheldon, an illustrator and portrait painter who is believed to have studied in Paris under Alphonse Mucha, an artist noted for his contributions to Art Nouveau style. Sheldon had achieved some measure of fame for his paintings of movie stars for the cover of Photoplay magazine in the 1920s, and had also done idealized pastel portraits for the cover of Parents magazine. He created his first pastel portraits for Breck in 1936, launching what would become one of America's longest running ad campaigns. When the company began national advertising (and mass distribution) in 1946, the campaign featured Sheldon's 1937 painting of seventeen-year old Roma Whitney, a spirited blonde. Ms. Whitney's profile was registered as Breck's trademark in 1951. When he retired in 1957, Sheldon had created 107 oil paintings and pastels for the company. Sheldon was known to favor ordinary women over professional models, and in the early years of the campaign, the Breck Girls were Breck family members, neighbors or residents of the community in which he worked; company lore holds that nineteen Breck Girls were employees of the advertising agency he founded in 1940. A Breck advertising manager later described Sheldon's illustrations as, "illusions, depicting the quality and beauty of true womanhood using real women as models." The paintings and pastels form a coherent, if derivative, body of work which celebrates an idealized vision of American girlhood and womanhood, an ideal in which fair skin, beauty and purity are co-equal. Ralph William Williams was hired to continue the Breck Girls campaign after Sheldon's retirement. Between 1957 and his death in 1976, Williams modified the Breck Girl look somewhat through the use of brighter colors and a somewhat heightened sense of movement and individuality. The advertising manager during his tenure recalled that at first Williams continued in Sheldon' manner, but in later years, as women became more independent, he would take care to integrate each girl' particular personality; he studied each girl and learned her special qualities. During these years, Breck Girls were identified through the company's sponsorship of America's Junior Miss contests. Williams work includes pastels of celebrities Cybil Shepard (1968 Junior Miss from Tennessee), Cheryl Tiegs (1968), Jaclyn Smith (1971, 1973), Kim Basinger (1972, 1974) and Brooke Shields (1974) very early in their careers. By the 1960s, at the height of its success, Breck held about a twenty percent share of the shampoo market and enjoyed a reputation for quality and elegance. Ownership of the company changed several times (American Cyanamid in 1963; Dial Corporation in 1990). The corresponding fluctuations in management of the company and in advertising expenditures tended to undermine the coherence of the national advertising campaign. In addition, despite William's modifications, the image had become dated. Attempts to update the image misfired, further limiting the brand's coherence and effectiveness. Finally, increased competition and an absence of brand loyalty among consumers through the 1970s and 1980s helped push Breck from its number one position into the bargain bin. The Breck Girl campaign was discontinued around 1978, although there have been at least two minor revivals, first in 1992 with the Breck Girls Hall of Fame, and again in 1995 when a search was begun to identify three new Breck Women. Scope and Content: The 188 pieces of original advertising art (62 oil paintings on board, 2 pencil sketches on paper, and 124 pastels on paper) and related photographs, correspondence and business files in this collection document the development and evolution of the Breck Girl, a highly successful and long-lived advertising campaign whose hallmark was its vision of idealized American womanhood. The collection is a perfect fit with other 20th century Archives Center collections documenting the efforts of American business to reach the female consumer market. The Estelle Ellis Collection (advertising and promotions for Seventeen, Charm, Glamour and House & Garden and many other clients) the Cover Girl Collection (make-up), the Maidenform Collection (brassieres), and the Tupperware Collections offer a prodigious body of evidence for understanding the role women were expected to play as consumers in the 20th century. These advertising images also offer fertile ground for research into the evolution of popular images of American girlhood and womanhood. The research uses of the collection derive primarily from its value as an extensive visual catalog of the ideal types of American women and girls, arising and coalescing during a period in which 19th century ideals of womanhood were being revisited (the depression, the war years, the immediate post-war period) and continuing, with slight modifications and revisions, through several decades during which those historical ideals were being challenged and revised.
Extent
6.5 Cubic feet (16 boxes, 188 pieces of original artwork)
Date
circa 1936-1995
Custodial History
Donated by the Dial Corporation, which purchased the Breck brand from American Cyanamid in 1990. The collection was donated to the Archives Center of the National Museum of American History by the Dial Corporation in June 1998. The 2006 addendum was donated by Cynthia Brown in 2006.
Archival Repository
Archives Center, National Museum of American History
Identifier
NMAH.AC.0651
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Black-and-white photographic prints
Pastels (visual works)
Advertisements
Business records
Citation
Breck Girls Collection, circa 1936-1995, Archives Center, National Museum of American History.
Arrangement
Collection divided into four series. Series 1: Company history, 1946-1990 Series 2: Photographs, 1960-1995 Series 3: Print ads, 1946-1980 Series 4: Original artwork, 1936-1994
Processing Information
Processed by Mimi Minnick, archivist, July 1998; revised Erin Molloy, volunteer and Alison Oswald, archivist, 2012.
Rights
Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual property rights may apply. Archives Center cost-recovery and use fees may apply when requesting reproductions.
Genre/Form
Black-and-white photographic prints -- Silver gelatin -- 1950-2000
Pastels (visual works)
Advertisements -- 20th century
Business records -- 20th century
Scope and Contents
188 pieces of original advertising art (mostly pastel drawings), and photographs, correspondence, and business records, documenting the development and evolution of the Breck Girls advertising campaign. Original advertising art includes portraits of famous models, such as Cheryl Tiegs, Brooke Shields, Kim Basinger, and Erin Gray. Artists represented include Charles Sheldon and Ralph William Williams. The 2006 addendum consists of approximately one sixth of one cubic foot of papers relating to Cynthia Brown's selection as a Breck Girl, 1988 and her induction into the Breck Hall of Fame.
Restrictions
Collection is open for research but 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
Several items of packaging, 1930s-1980s are held in the former Division of Home and Community Life (now Division of Cultural and Community Life); an 18k gold Breck insignia pin is in the former.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1562731478542-1562731478566-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep8391c0d4c-0f44-4123-acb3-bd54f8a86aa3

In the Collection

Pages

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  • Breck Girl. Print advertising, women's publications.

  • Your hair has a complexion just like your face. Print advertising. Women's publications

  • Appraisal of Artwork

  • Breck Shampoo brings out the shine in your hair. Print advertising.

  • Breck Girl. Print advertising, women's publications

  • Breck Girl. Print advertising. McCall's

  • Breck Girl. Print advertising. Women's publications.

  • Save 10 cents on Gold Formula Breck--the only leading shampoo that isn't mostly detergent. Print advertising.

  • Breck Shampoo brings out the shine in your hair. Print advertising.

  • Breck's Law. Print advertising.

  • Beautiful Hair: Breck. Print advertising.

  • Beautiful Hair: Breck. Print advertising. This Week

  • What do you want with detergent hair when you can have beautiful hair by Breck? Print advertising.

  • Beautiful Hair / Breck advertisement. Reproduction of a pastel drawing.

  • Most instant shampoos are easy to spray on. Breck Fresh Hair is easier to brush off. Print advertising.

  • Breck Girls. Print advertising.

  • Oil-free Breck Clean Rinse. The difference is very clear. Print advertising.

  • Beautiful Hair: Breck. Print advertising. Ladies Home Journal

  • Beautiful Hair: Breck. Print advertising. McCall's

  • Breck Girl. Print advertising. Women's publications.

  • Will he find kissable skin underneath those pretty bangs? Print advertising. Teen Magazine

  • If she let go of her comb, it might float down through her hair by itself Print advertising.

  • Business Records

  • Print Ads

  • Breck Girl. Print advertising. Women's publications.

  • Original Artwork

  • Tahitian and Breck girls share the secret of beautiful hair. Print advertising.

  • Photographs

  • Breck Shampoo brings out the shine in your hair. Print advertising.

  • Breck Girl. Print advertising.

  • Breck Girl. Kim Basinger as a bride. Print advertising tear sheet.

  • I just tried Breck again. And wow! Print advertising. Magazine.

  • Breck Shampoo brings out the shine in your hair. Print advertising.

  • There's only one leading shampoo that isn't mostly detergent: Gold Formula Breck. Print advertising, Women's publications.

  • Breck Shampoo brings out the shine in your hair. Print advertising. Women's publications.

  • TWA Hostess Judy Newmann was voted "The girl in the air with the most beautiful hair." Print advertising.

  • Get your hair in great condition, too! Print advertising. Women's publications.

  • How to find out if your baby's shampoo is a baby's shampoo. Print advertising.

  • Little girl, possibily Eileen McKenna, getting hair washed : black and white photoprint

  • Breck Girl. Print advertising. Publ. in various women's publications.

  • Reproduction of pastel drawing of a blonde : Print advertising.

  • Breck Girls

  • Television stills

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Janet Collier

  • Pam Woodworth

  • Print ads (product only)

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Breck Girls

  • Print ads (product only)

  • Breck Girls

  • Appraisal of the Breck Girl Collection for the Dial Corporation (photographs)

  • Breck Girls

  • Print ads (product only)

  • John Breck, Jr.

  • Ads

  • Cindy Harrell

  • List of Former Breck Girls

  • Linda Ann Lawrence

  • Unidentified painting

  • Judy Breck with her mother Gertrude Breck

  • Negatives: Proofs of Breck Girl Hall of Fame

  • Adrienne Tillotson

  • Mary Lou Emmons Mehrtens, 1950

  • Unidentified painting

  • Slides: Dial Corporation Executives

  • Ann Rutenber

  • Elaine Bordwa Hartman

  • Jacqueline Lancioux

  • Articles and clippings

  • Anne Magennis

  • Breck Girls: six finalists

  • Gay Dixon Witten

  • Mary Lou Emmons

  • Press clippings re purchase

  • Breck Girls

  • Correspondence: Tiffanie Palmer

  • Sandra Dahlgren

  • Print ads (product only)

  • Cheryl Tiegs misidentified?

  • Karen Morris

  • Telescripts

  • Breck Girl Negatives

  • Nancy Breck O'Connor

  • Company history (secondary sources)

  • Correspondence

  • Correspondence with Betty Ford

  • Barbarann Buckley

  • Elizabeth Hathaway Husson

  • Patricia Kelley

  • Nina Plumb Twining

Pages

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Appraisal of the Breck Girl Collection for the Dial Corporation (photographs)
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