Rose O'Neill was born in Wilkes-Barre,
Pennsylvania on June 25, 1874. The second of seven children,
she was encouraged to pursue the arts by her parents, William
Patrick and Alice Asenath "Meemie" Smith O'Neill. Rose loved
to draw and her Papa would leave specially sharpened pencils and
blank paper around the house for her. When Rose was 14 years
old, she entered a children's drawing contest sponsored by the Omaha
World Herald and won first prize. A few years later, Rose went
to New York City on her own and stayed with the Sisters of St.
Regis. She brought a portfolio of 60 drawings with her
and sold all of them within three months! While still a
teenager, Rose O'Neill became the highest paid female illustrator in
the United States.
While Rose went to New York,
her father homesteaded a small tract of land in the Ozarks
wilderness and relocated his family. The homestead had a
'dog-trot' cabin--two log cabins with a sort of breezeway
in-between. One cabin was used for eating and living, the
other for sleeping. The O'Neills tried their hand at
farming. It was a year before Rose saw the beautiful place
that was to become her beloved Bonniebrook. While in Omaha,
Rose met a handsome young Virginian named Gray
Latham. He visited Rose (under the watchful eyes of the nuns)
and continued writing Rose when she went to Missouri to see her
family. Gray went to Mexico to make films for his
father's invention, a moving picture machine, all the while worrying
about Rose being in the middle of nowhere. He finally came to
Bonniebrook and took Rose back to New York, where they were
married, in 1896.
Rose was very concerned
with the welfare of her family. The money that Rose made while
on staff at Puck magazine was always sent home to her parents.
With it, her dad, brothers and neighborhood craftsmen built a
14-room mansion in the middle of nowhere.
Rose became very unhappy with
Gray. He was a man that liked 'living large'. He
gambled, was known as a playboy, and had very expensive
tastes. On several occasions, Rose would find that Gray
had taken her paychecks and spent them on himself. She left
him once and then returned after his promise to leave her paychecks
for her family. After a few months of being blissfully happy
again, she went to collect her wages, only to find that Gray had
been to the paymaster earlier and hadn't left her enough money for
cab fare! She took the train from New York to Springfield,
Missouri, where her dad met her at the station. They went to
the Taney County courthouse, where Rose filed for divorce in 1901
and decided to stay on at Bonniebrook.
A few months later, Rose began
receiving anonymous letters and gifts in the mail. It
turned out that the wonderful letters were coming from a man that
was an assistant editor at Puck magazine. Rose and Harry
Leon Wilson had never been formally introduced, but they had seen
each other. Rose remembered Harry as a 'surly man', but was so
taken with his heartfelt letters that she married him in 1902.
After a honeymoon in Colorado (where Harry would go for days without
speaking to Rose) they moved to Bonniebrook where they lived for the
next several winters. While they were together Harry wrote a
novel for the first three years they were married and Rose drew
the illustrations. One of Harry's later novels became a great
success, RUGGLES OF RED GAP, being made into several motion
pictures: a silent movie; a 'talkie' with Charles Laughton, and then
a remake--"Fancy Pants" with Lucille Ball and Bob Hope. With
Harry's sullen moods and Rose's bubbly personality, they eventually
divorced in 1907, but stayed friends until Harry's death.
Rose came home to Bonniebrook,
once again to heal her heart. She decided that marriage did
not agree with her and concentrated on her artwork. She
was in high demand in a field dominated by men. In 1909,
in her 'treetop studio' Rose took an afternoon nap. While
sleeping, she dreamt that little cupids were bouncing on her
coverlet, one even sitting on her hand. When she awoke,
she went immediately to her drawing board—and Kewpie characters were
born!
Kewpie characters were
loved the world over! Magazines with Kewpie
character stories were sold out as soon as they hit the
stands. In 1912, children from all over the world asked for a
Kewpie character they could hold in their hands, so Rose found
a German porcelain manufacturer that would make Kewpie dolls.
She was very particular about the Kewpie characters—she wanted the
tiniest doll the poor children would get to be just as
beautiful as the larger Kewpie doll the rich children
would receive. Rose and her sister, Callista, went to Germany
to show the porcelain artists how to make the dolls the way she
wanted them.
Rose became a legend.
Known as the "Queen of Bohemian Society", she also became active in
the cause for women's rights. By now, she owned Bonniebrook in
the Ozarks; in Greenwich Village, New York, she had an apartment in
Washington Square (the song "Rose of Washington Square" was written
about her); Castle Carabas in Connecticut; and Villa Narcissus on
the Isle of Capri, Italy. She was welcomed into the homes of royalty
all over the world and was considered one of the world's five most
beautiful women. She had self-made a fortune of 1.4 million
dollars (approximately 15 million dollars in today's market).
Her homes were furnished with beautiful antiques and splendid
artwork: she denied herself, her family and her friends,
nothing.
Rose continued working, even at
her wealthiest. Perhaps driven by the unfortunate
circumstances in her life to express herself, along with the needs
of her family, she delved into different types of art. She
learned sculpture at the hand of Rodin (The Thinker), and had
several exhibitions of her "Sweet Monsters" in Paris and the United
States. She held open salons in her Washington Square
apartment where poets, actors, dancers and the 'great thinkers' of
her day would gather. After her friends would leave, Rose
would take out her drawing board, working until early the next
morning.
In 1937, Rose came home to
Bonniebrook to stay. Her beloved mother, Meemie, had died and
Rose made Bonniebrook her sole residence.
By the 1940's, Rose had lost
most of her money and her beautiful homes, much of it due to her
extravagant nature. She had totally supported her family, as
well as an entourage of 'artistic' hangers-on and her first
husband. The Depression hurt Rose's fortune, as did World War
I, when shiploads of Kewpie dolls coming from Germany were sank
by the British. No longer was Rose the 'queen' of
society. When she lost her fortune, most of her 'friends'
disappeared as well.
Rose was dismayed to find that
her work was no longer in demand. The Kewpie character
phenomena, after 30 years of popularity was starting to fade.
Photography, with the invention of the camera, was replacing
illustrating as a commercial vehicle. Rose decided to make
another doll. . . she needed a laugh. . . and created little Ho Ho,
a laughing, baby Buddha. Before plans could be finalized for
production of the new little figure, the factory burnt to the
ground.
Despite her reversal of
fortune, Rose became a prominent personality in the Branson
area. She donated her time and pieces of artwork to the
School of the Ozarks at Point Lookout, Missouri. She lectured
at artist's workshops and continued to address women's
groups.
In April of 1944, Rose O'Neill
died at the home of her nephew in Springfield, Missouri. She
is interred in the family cemetery at Bonniebrook, her beloved
Ozarks home, next to her mother and several family
members.