In late 1951, inventor Earl Tupper bought a thousand acres of cow pasture and swamp in Kissimmee, just outside the quiet farm town of Orlando, Florida. There, he and his new vice president and general ...
The home was built for a movie star who never moved in. It had white columns and terrazzo floors and a huge curved fireplace in the living room. A swimming pool shimmered just off the dining room. And ...
Five years ago, Monica Luke quit her civil service job at U.S. Northern Command to sell Tupperware. “It’s my full-time job,” the Colorado Springs woman says — a job that lets her be her own boss, set ...
Tupperware's durable containers, as well as its lively home parties, have been passed down through generations, becoming a part of family traditions and valuable memories. While it might be the ...
Earl S. Tupper molded plastics into parties and a pop-culture phenomenon. Now the lid has been sealed on an era in American consumer culture. Months after Tupperware Brands Corp. shuttered its last ...
For decades Tupperware parties were a regular fixture in the social calendars of housewives across Britain and the US - until the company saw a huge decline in interest in the 21st century. The US ...
This is not your grandma’s Tupperware. The iconic storage containers sold at home parties with friends gathered in the living room or kitchen can now be purchased at Target. Miguel Fernandez, CEO of ...
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