Brownie Wise was the single mum who pioneered the art of selling small, plastic food containers at parties in 1950s' America. The so-called Tupperware parties she made popular were the forerunner ...
The firm's 'Tupperware parties' made it an icon during the 1950s and 1960s consumer revolution, and its air-tight and water-tight containers took the market by storm. But its core business model ...
Brightly coloured plastic food storage containers made by the U-S company Tupperware used to be in high demand. Tupperware marketed its products at people looking for high-end kitchen storage ...
American group Tupperware is to cut nearly 1,700 jobs as it closes its UK party sales business. The Orlando-based business is to concentrate on selling directly to shops or through alliance ...
The firm became well-known in the 1950s and 1960s when people held "Tupperware parties" in their homes to sell plastic containers for food storage. Tupperware still employs a direct sales force ...
Shares in Tupperware have fallen by more 50% after the food storage brand filed for bankruptcy last week. The brand's very name "conjures images of plastic food boxes" and buying parties in ...
Perhaps in your personal life, through your mother, a family member, or a close friend, you participated in the bygone era of Avon, Mary Kay, kitchenware (think pots, pans, or utensils), or herbal ...