Character Study: Mr. Clean

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Character Study: Mr. Clean

  
  
  
describe the imageAround the world, he’s known as Don Limpio, Monsieur Net and Mister Proper but, here in America, he’s just Mr. Clean—and his famous bald face has been popping up in messy kitchens since 1957.

Dreamed up by Harry Barnhart and Ernie Allen of the Chicago ad firm Tatham-Laird & Kudner, Mr. Clean was given a tough, muscular appearance that was reportedly modeled after a Navy sailor.

The melody and lyrics of his trademark jingle (“Mr. Clean, Mr. Clean…”)—which will now be stuck in your head, by the way—were penned by legendary ad man Thomas Scott Cadden, who went on to write, produce and direct Mr. Clean commercials until the 1970s. Don Cherry and Betty Bryan provided the original vocals for the jingle, which is now the longest-running in advertising history.

Over the years, Mr. Clean has been illustrated, animated and even portrayed by live actors but, surprisingly, this enduring symbol of spotlessness never did any actual cleaning of his own until 2008, when a new series of ads depicted him scrubbing kitchen appliances with the Mr. Clean Magic Eraser.

 

Character Study is an ongoing series featuring background trivia on the classic advertising characters from the private collection of MLT Creative.

Chase Mitchell, B2B marketing copywriter

 

Chase Mitchell is a copywriter at MLT Creative, an Atlanta-based advertising agency specializing in business-to-business marketing.


Comments

Great post and clever observation that Don Limpio never did any cleaning himself until recently. I never noticed before. He's always been an admirable character that truly anthropomorphized the brand perfectly.
Posted @ Tuesday, September 07, 2010 12:43 PM by Craig Brimm
Great post Chase. Recently, I read an article where the Mr. Clean brand is looking to capitalize on its recognition with services. There are Mr. Clean car washes popping up all over the country. Will be interesting to see if the public transfers this iconic cleaning products brand to a cleaning service brand.  
 
Wonder what's next? Mr. Clean house cleaning service? I might buy that one if the maids look like him. :-)
Posted @ Tuesday, September 07, 2010 2:34 PM by Martine Hunter
Craig -- Thanks! I actually hadn't noticed it myself until I began researching this post. To think, all those years, he was just lurking in the background while everyone else did all the work. But yes, he is certainly one of the all-time greats among ad mascots (adscots?). 
 
Martine -- I hadn't heard about the car washes. That's an interesting idea. He's such an icon of all-around cleanliness, I don't think it'll be hard for customers to make the connection. I guess we'll see where it goes.
Posted @ Thursday, September 09, 2010 1:01 PM by Chase Mitchell
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