Leonard Lauder, Former Estée Lauder CEO, Dies at 92: ‘True Visionary, Fearless Leader'
Leonard Lauder died on June 14, 2025; he was 92
The former Estée Lauder CEO was Estée's eldest son
"Mr. Lauder was a true visionary, fearless leader, and cherished friend to so many," read a statement from the companyLeonard Lauder, the former Estée Lauder CEO, has died. He was 92.
Leonard, who was also famed art collector and philanthropist, died 'surrounded by family' on Saturday, June 14, the Estée Lauder Companies Inc. announced in a statement on Sunday, June 15.
"Mr. Lauder was a true visionary, fearless leader, and cherished friend to so many," the statement read. "He was the beacon of our company and the north star of an entire industry. The world is a better place because Leonard Lauder was in it."
Leonard was the eldest son of Estée and Joseph Lauder, who together formally started the Estée Lauder business in 1946. Leonard joined the business in 1958 and served for years as CEO. His first wife, the late Evelyn Lauder, co-created the pink breast cancer ribbon.
He was born in New York City in 1933. His mother was born Josephine Esther Mentzer, and his father was born Joseph Lauter. Estée got into the makeup business thanks to her uncle, who sold beauty products. Estée and Joseph changed their names to enhance the mythology of the Estée Lauder brand.
'My mother wasn't like other mothers,' Leonard wrote in his 2020 memoir The Company I Keep: My Life in Beauty, which was excerpted by CBS. 'When I was growing up in the 1930s, I remember sitting in the kitchen, watching my mother cook up facial creams on the stove.'
As he and his younger brother Ronald ate lunch and did their homework, women would come to the apartment to receive facials and buy products.
Leonard graduated from Bronx Science High School and then completed undergraduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. He then served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy beginning in 1956.
After he was discharged, he joined Estée Lauder. According to the company's website, Leonard wasn't sure he wanted to join the company and considered re-enlisting in the Navy for a full-time career. But he ultimately made the jump, and from 1972 to 1995 he served as president. In 1982, he became CEO, a role he served in until 1999. In 1995, he became Chairman, and in 2009 he transitioned into Chairman Emeritus. Leonard was also called the company's Chief Teaching Officer.
Under Leonard's leadership, Estée Lauder transformed into the global company it is today. He created its first research and development lab, and beginning in the '90s, they started to acquire other companies, including MAC, Bobbi Brown and Aveda.
According to Forbes, in December 2024, Leonard was worth $10.8 billion, making him the 234th richest person in the world.
Leonard married Evelyn Hausner in 1959, and they had two sons, William and Gary Lauder. Evelyn was a teacher when she and Leonard wed, but became a Senior Corporate Vice President at Estée Lauder and founded the Clinique line. She also helmed the company's largest social issue — breast cancer awareness — helping to create the now-ubiquitous pink ribbon. Leonard and Evelyn together worked with New York's Memorial Sloan-Kettering Hospital and helped launched the hospital's Evelyn H Lauder Breast Center.
Leonard and his brother Ronald co-founded the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation in 1998, which has awarded over $209 million to fund trials in 19 countries, according to Forbes.
Leonard was also passionate about visual art and was a major collector. He wrote in his memoir, excerpted in ArtNews, that his love of collecting began with postcards, and he ultimately amassed a vintage postcard collection of more than 125,000 items. Then he began collecting posters before jumping to fine art.
He wrote, 'I had become interested in modern art back when I was in elementary school. I was crazy about films and two or three times a week, I'd take the subway by myself — kids had an extraordinary amount of freedom in those days — to watch classic movies at the Museum of Modern Art. If I arrived early or had time after the film ended, I would wander through the galleries. I didn't discover Cubism then, but I experienced the great satisfaction of savoring a picture again and again and making it 'mine.' '
He donated some of his collection to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and the Newberry Library, and has served as both president and chairman at the Whitney Museum of American Art. In April 2013, he promised his collection of 81 pieces of Cubist art to New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. The New York Times called it 'a sterling act of philanthropy.'
Evelyn died in 2011. Leonard married Judy Ellis Glickman in 2015. Like Leonard, Glickman had also lost a spouse after more than 50 years of marriage. Leonard told The New York Times in 2015, 'We were lucky in that our next chapters' endings and beginnings coincided.'
Reflecting on his life and whether he had any regrets, he told Brunswick Group in 2020, 'I can't think of anything that I really regret. Now, could I have done a few things a little bit better? Of course. You can always keep trying to do better. But do I regret anything? Not a bit. Onward!'
Leonard is survived by his brother, wife and sons William and Gary, who both celebrated his legacy with statements of their own following his death.
"He was the most charitable man I have ever known, believing that art and education belonged to everyone, and championing the fight against diseases such as Alzheimer's and breast cancer," William wrote in part. "Above all, my father was a man who practiced kindness with everyone he met. His impact was enormous."
"He was not only well-respected and admired, but he was also adored by his employees and colleagues. This affection stands out for me," wrote Gary, in part. "While we mourn his passing, we also celebrate his extraordinary life, his lasting contributions, and the values he instilled in all of us: integrity, curiosity, and the importance of giving back. He will be missed more than words can express."
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In 2013, he pledged the most significant gift in the history of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a trove of nearly 80 cubist paintings, drawings, and sculptures by Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Fernand Léger, and Juan Gris. Scholars put the value of the gift at $1 billion and said its quality rivaled or surpassed that of the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia, and the Pompidou Center in Paris. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up After the gift was announced, he added another dozen major cubist works, The New York Times reported in a profile of Mr. Lauder last year. Advertisement Estée Lauder founded the company that bears her name in 1946 and would become the flamboyant public face of her empire, pitching its lipsticks, bath oils, face powders, and antiwrinkle creams with almost messianic zeal. 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'My dream,' he wrote in his memoir, 'The Company I Keep: My Life in Beauty,' published in 2020, 'was to make Estée Lauder the General Motors of the beauty business, with multiple brands, multiple product lines and multinational distribution.' Estée Lauder's sales, which hovered around $800,000 a year when Mr. Lauder joined the company, soared to more than $16 billion for fiscal 2021, despite the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, as he continued as senior member of the board. The company markets products under some 30 brand names in 150 countries around the world. Shares were publicly sold starting in 1995, but by January 2025 about 85 percent of the voting stock was still owned by members of the Lauder family, along with about 38 percent of the total common stock. Mr. Lauder became the company's president in 1972, was CEO from 1982 to 1999, and was named chair in 1995 and chair emeritus in 2009, when he retired. Along the way, he launched brands including Clinique, Aramis, Lab Series, and Origins. He also amassed a personal fortune of about $10.1 billion, according to Forbes, making him one of the 100 richest Americans. Advertisement He began a lifelong pursuit of art at the age of 6, when he spent his nickel allowance on a postcard of the Empire State Building. 'I can see that postcard today,' he told The New Yorker in 2012, adding that it turned him into a collector for life. He eventually acquired 125,000 postcards -- not the kind tourists buy, but artistic cards with lithographs and vintage photos depicting celebrities from the worlds of sports and fashion as well as images of war and historical events. 'I'm interested in popular culture and that's where postcards come in,' he told the Times in the 2024 profile. 'I love that they're the predecessor for so many things: email, Instagram, social media.' In 2002, Mr. Lauder gave the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston a collection of some 20,000 Japanese postcards to complement the museum's collection of Japanese woodblock prints, considered the most important outside of Japan. Eight years later, Mr. Lauder gave the MFA more than 100,000 postcards from the 1870s through just after World War II. When considering whether to bid on a work of art, he told the Times last year, he heard his mother's voice saying, 'You only regret what you do not buy.' Mr. Lauder for years quietly assembled a world-class collection with a focus on cubism, the movement that revolutionized modern art early in the 20th century. He bought many pieces from the collections of writer Gertrude Stein, Swiss banker Raoul La Roche, and British art historian Douglas Cooper. His collection, given without restrictions, filled an artistic gap for the Met and placed Mr. Lauder in a class with cornerstone contributors such as the Rockefellers and Annenbergs. Advertisement A trustee and later president and chair of the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, he gave millions in money and art to the museum, including nearly 50 works by Jasper Johns. In 2008 he gave $131 million, the largest gift in the Whitney's history. That gift transformed the Whitney 'from a provincial New York institution to a world-class museum known for its extraordinary holdings of American art,' Carol Vogel wrote in the recent Times profile of Mr. Lauder. When the Whitney moved from its Madison Avenue location to its current home in the meatpacking district, it named its new building after him. Mr. Lauder, in New York in 1996. He would say of his relationship with his mother: 'It was so love-hate. I was her competitor, her senior partner, her manager." CHESTER HIGGINS JR./NYT Leonard Alan Lauter was born March 19, 1933, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, the older of two sons of Joseph and Josephine Esther (Mentzer) Lauter. (The family name was changed not long after his birth.) His younger brother, Ronald, would serve as ambassador to Austria and run unsuccessfully for mayor of New York. In the Depression years, his father owned a small chain of luncheonettes and a silk business. During World War II, he and a partner sold military-style post-exchange supplies. His mother also worked, helping to sell an uncle's homemade face creams and fragrances in the 1930s. His parents, who were divorced in 1939 but remarried in 1942, founded their company after the war and for years struggled to make it profitable. After graduating from the Bronx High School of Science in 1950, Leonard Lauder attended the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and received a bachelor's degree in 1954. He joined the Navy, served on two warships and became a lieutenant junior grade. Advertisement After his discharge, he joined his mother's company. Although publicly deferential to her, he shared decision-making with her. She retired in 1995 and died in 2004 at 97. 'It was so love-hate,' he said of their relationship. 'I was her competitor, her senior partner, her manager. . . . I was able to identify what she did that was really good and build on her early success.' Mr. Lauder married Evelyn Hausner in 1959, and they had two children: William, who is chair of the board of Estée Lauder Cos., and Gary, managing director of Lauder Partners, a Silicon Valley venture capital firm. Mr. Lauder, in 2024. JINGYU LIN/NYT Mr. Lauder's first wife died in 2011. In 2015, he married photographer Judith Glickman. She survives him, as do his sons, his brother, five grandchildren, two great-grandsons, and many stepchildren and stepgrandchildren. In addition to his home in New York, he had homes in Palm Beach, Fla., and Portland, Maine. He was a co-founder and chair of the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation and, with his first wife, a founder of the Evelyn H. Lauder Breast Center at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. For all his contributions to various causes, Mr. Lauder regarded himself as a frugal man with an eye on the bottom line. 'I use slivers of soap, I reuse paper clips, I use the backside of memos,' he told the Times in 2004. 'You can take the child out of the Depression, but you can't take the Depression out of the child.' Advertisement This article originally appeared in