Try GOLD - Free
Beyond Skin Deep
Newsweek US
|October 10, 2025
After walking away from her namesake brand, Bobbi Brown is proving reinvention can be as powerful as invention
OWN TERMS - From the brand name to retail strategy, Brown is doing her second act differently.
FOR BOBBI BROWN, PATIENCE ISN'T A VIRTUE; it's an obstacle. The makeup artist and entrepreneur operates on a timeline dictated by instinct, not corporate calendars.
"I have no patience," Brown tells Newsweek in a wide-ranging conversation about her new memoir, Still Bobbi. "Like I go in and I say, 'Oh, I love this new product, when are we getting it? February?' I'm like, 'Hell no, bring it out in November. I don't care it's not in a package."
This drive is the engine behind her entire career. Still Bobbi chronicles the story of a woman who built a billion-dollar beauty empire in her own name, Bobbi Brown Cosmetics, only to walk away from it in order to start over (again), this time on her own terms with a new makeup brand, Jones Road Beauty.
"I do hope and I do think that my story is empowering to people," Brown says. "And they're like, 'Well, look, if she did this and she went through this, then I could do this."
In order to understand Brown's second act, you need to grasp the sheer gutsiness of her beginning.
"My husband and I started Bobbi Brown Cosmetics before it even had a name, out of our home in Montclair, New Jersey, when we were 32 years old," she says. "I made a lipstick and I sold it to people. We were indie beauty people before there was a name saying indie beauty people."
A Revolution of Common Sense
Eventually, Bobbi Brown Cosmetics exploded into department stores, becoming an in-demand commodity before ultimately being purchased by Estée Lauder in 1995 for a reported $74.5 million. Estée Lauder retained Brown as the one in creative control of the brand, effectively making her an employee.
Brown's philosophy toward makeup has remained the same ever since.
This story is from the October 10, 2025 edition of Newsweek US.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Newsweek US
Newsweek US
The Missing Bombers of Trump 2.0
President Donald Trump's second term is easy to read if you focus only on the visible damage: tariffs, agency purges, courtroom fights, public threats.
1 mins
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
'CALIFORNIA IS DESPERATE FOR CHANGE'
Steve Hilton is looking to become the first Republican elected governor in the Golden State since Arnold Schwarzenegger. Can his focus on housing, homelessness and the cost of living guide him to victory in November?
5 mins
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
RICHARD GADD
The actor follows Baby Reindeer with Half Man, an HBO limited series about two repressed “brothers” in Glasgow. “I came up with the two characters, and I couldn't shake them.”
2 mins
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
Q&A STEVE HILTON
It's politics.
2 mins
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
THE MIDDLE EAST THAT BENJAMIN NETANYAHU BUILT
How the vision of Israel's longest-serving premier came to reality—that strength, not agreement, delivers security
10 mins
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
INTO THE LION'S DEN
Charles III's visit to the United States came as the nation is at loggerheads with the U.K. over the war in Iran. Can the king rescue the special relationship?
7 mins
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
CUTTING THROUGH THE CHAOS
It’s business as usual for Mohammad Mehdi as he cuts Ayman Al Zein’s hair on April 18—despite being surrounded by rubble after his barber shop, in Beirut’s Dahiyeh suburb, was damaged in an Israeli strike.
1 min
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
One Personal Download, One Corporate Nightmare
When Vercel-a cloud platform used by businesses worldwide confirmed in April that customer credentials and internal data had been compromised, the attack that caused it required no sophisticated malware, zerodays or insider access.
1 min
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
Live Nation Lost. But Who Won?
At the height of Pearl Jam's success in 1994—and nearly eight months after the rock band filed an antitrust complaint against Ticketmaster—Rolling Stone asked, \"If Pearl Jam couldn't do it, who can?\" Well, 31 years later, it turns out the Swifties can. Kind of.
1 min
May 08-15, 2026
Newsweek US
THE BENEFITS OF A GUIDING HAND
Well-designed Al governance does not suppress innovation—it shapes its direction in socially beneficial ways
4 mins
May 08-15, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
