Memories of the earliest Tupperware parties, from one who was there
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[September 19, 2024]
By ANN T. ANTHONY
ALLISON PARK, Pa. (AP) — Sometimes something takes your thinking back to
an isolated memory of decades ago. And without your bidding, other
memories — memories of that era of your life — come flooding in.
When asked what I remember about Tupperware parties, I pulled out some
of my pieces of Tupperware from long ago. Along with finding the “Bacon
Keeper” that I have used for perhaps 35 years to refrigerate deli
sandwich makings. I located an entire part of my life.
We didn’t have a dishwasher back then — what struggling young family
did? When my two daughters were old enough. we made a deal. I would
prepare the dinner. They would do the dishwashing and I’d be free.
What made me remember that? The Tupperware pieces I was looking at were
of the pre-dishwasher type plastic that has not survived the heat very
well in the many years since dishwashers have been taken for granted. My
later pieces have withstood the dishwasher onslaught. They still look
new.
In those days, we thought very little about most women’s designated
roles in suburban society. Your husband went to work; you were home when
the children arrived after school. Once in a while in the evening, you
left the young ones in the care of their dad and went to a friend’s home
for a Tupperware party.
It was fun. You saw 10, maybe 20 friends and acquaintances who had also
escaped for an evening. It never occurred to any of us that no men were
there. We played little games and took home small Tupperware pieces as
prizes.
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Ann T. Anthony poses for a photo on Dec, 26, 1998 in front of her
home in Allison Park, Pa. (AP Photo/Ted Anthony, File)
A representative demonstrated the “Tupperware seal”: how to make the
containers airtight so we could serve the contents fresh and with pride.
We shared coffee and cake provided by our hostess. Then we went home
with renewed ability to face the next day and its chores.
Is it still the same today? Now that so many women have taken their
place next to men in the working world, do Tupperware parties still
exist? Do they fill the same needs? Do men also attend? Are some of the
newer items designed to solve gentlemen’s storage problems?
Do we have Tupperware party equality at long last?
___
Ann T. Anthony (1924-2018), wrote this story for The Associated Press in
1996. when she was 71. She was married in 1946 — the year Tupperware was
introduced — and attended Tupperware parties for years. She remembers
the parties as events where friends could get together and buy from
someone they trusted.
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