The Real (& Really Weird)
Story Behind The Cult-Fave Egyptian Magic Cream
What with the pyramids, the ankhs, and heavy-handed
use of words like "mystic," "miraculous," and, most
notably, "magic," one unscrews a jar of Egyptian Magic half-expecting
a genie to fly out. But what you'll find instead is a simple, scent-free,
six-ingredient blend of olive oil, beeswax, honey, bee pollen, royal jelly, and
bee propolis — finished off with the formula's signature component of divine
love.
Since first appearing on the market in 1991, the
all-purpose skin cream has amassed a cult following mostly through
word-of-mouth. It is made by hand in its own facilities in Texas and sold
mainly online, on the brand's bare-bones website, and at health-food stores and
homeopathic pharmacies. It is beloved by actresses, models, and celebrity
makeup artists alike: Kate Hudson is one of its biggest celebrity fans, calling
it her "all-around go-to"; Lauren Conrad swears it's a "serious
miracle worker"; Behati Prinsloo loves it for keeping her legs smooth;
Dree Hemingway says she can't live without it; and Ozzy Salvatierra used it to
give Rihanna her glossy lids and dewy cheekbones in the video for "Bitch
Better Have MyIndeed, its myriad uses call to mind the supposed versatility of
Windex in My Big Fat Greek Wedding. Free of additives, preservatives,
fragrances, chemicals, and parabens, you can put Egyptian Magic on your face,
your body, your lips, your hands, your stovetop-mishap burns, bug bites, and
surface wounds, your kids, your hair, your scalp, your acne, your eczema, your
scars, and, if an anecdote on the website is to be believed, your horses
post-surgery. (The company is a PETA partner and has never tested on animals.)
But what gives this unassuming salve its magnetic pull? Is it magic — or just
the finest of what nature has to offer?
LordPharaoh ImHotepAmonRa, the CEO and founder of
Egyptian Magic, is a man of mystery, and not quite a real pharaoh. But he is
real — well, sort of. A 2007 profile in the New York Times revealed that Mr.
ImHotepAmonRa, now 72, was sitting in a Chicago diner in 1986 when he was
approached by an elderly man. "He said, ‘Brother, the spirit has moved me
to reveal something to you,'" explained Mr. ImHotepAmonRa, then a
water-filter salesman known by his real name, Westley Howard. "It didn’t
seem too weird to me. I’m a spiritual person, so these things happen to me all
the time."
And so the story goes that, over the next couple of
years, that stranger, who called himself Dr. Imas (he never shared his first
name... or what kind of doctor he was), paid regular visits to Howard at his
home in Washington, where he showed him how to make a special skin cream from
olive oil, beeswax, bee pollen, royal jelly, and bee propolis — the very same
ingredients used to create Egyptian Magic today. Dr. Imas claimed it was an
exact replica of a salve found in ancient Egyptian tombs; Mr. ImHotepAmonRa
told the Times of the origins of Dr. Imas's recipe, "He said it was
revealed to him the way he was revealing it to me." Money."
The air of secrecy, the idea that you're using some
kind of enigmatic formula channeled from one seer to another, is naturally part
of what gives Egyptian Magic its celebrity cache, regardless of the legitimacy
of a mysterious ancient recipe passed down from the pharaohs. But there's also
at least some truth to that lore — in fact, Bernie Hephrun, a Reading,
England-based researcher of Egyptian cosmetics, thinks the product is quite
impressive. Beeswax, Hephrun told the Times, was a popular ingredient in
cosmetics at the time, along with olive oil, which has been used as a cleanser,
moisturizer, and antibacterial agent for centuries.
And, for what it's worth, Hephrun also said that while
the Ancient Egyptians did not have the wherewithal to separate out pollen,
jelly, and propolis from bee product, it has long been believed that Alexander
the Great was preserved with honey when he died in Babylon in 323 BC. In 2015,
archaeologists excavating ancient tombs in Egypt discovered pots of honey
dating back approximately 3,000 years — and still perfectly edible. Researchers
at the University of Bristol also found evidence that humans have been using
bee products, including honey and wax, for almost 9,000 years.
Mystic or madman, Mr. ImHotepAmonRa — under the
guidance of the late visionary Dr. Imas — has created a skin-care success
story, a multitasking workhorse in nondescript, even shady-looking packaging
that continues to persevere in an age where we want all the answers, and do not
consider "a miraculous skin cream secretly used by the great sages,
mystics, magicians, and healers" a sufficient explanation of how something
works. The popularity of and tale behind the cure-all balm is enough to make
one want to believe in its magic or, at the very least, put it on your acne
scars and heed the advice given on the back of the jar: "Life takes from the
taker & gives to the giver. Above all, let your word be your bond."
Sometimes, pharaoh knows best.
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