

"He showed us how to promote your product, but also have a great time while doing it," said Linda Kramer, a longtime Hawaiian Tropic associate who remained as one of two on the Rice payroll until the end. Rice, struggling with declining health in recent months, died Thursday in that 12,000-square-foot beachfront home. The concoction he settled on, over 50 years ago, would become Hawaiian Tropic suntan lotion and, through Rice’s tireless promotional efforts, eventually made Rice’s Ormond Beach home a party destination for a worldwide Who’s Who of the rich and famous. Ron Rice’s recipe for global notoriety and untold riches began with a $4 garbage can and broken broom handle for stirring when he was a fresh graduate from the University of Tennessee. He had it silver plated.Watch Video: Ron Rice: From UT student to Hawaiian Tropic founder Rice placed in his living room the garbage can in which he had perfected the formula for Hawaiian Tropic. He owned an 80-foot yacht and a Lamborghini that he lent to Burt Reynolds for the film “The Cannonball Run” (1981).Īs a reminder of his roots, and a testament to his success, Mr. Rice’s 12,000-square-foot home in Ormond Beach, just north of Daytona Beach and not far from the lifeguard stand where he once worked, housed a disco and an indoor-outdoor pool. Information on survivors was not immediately available. “It’s fun,” he said of his balmy lifestyle, lubricated with Hawaiian Tropic, “and there’s a lot of extra toys involved, and a lot of fun times, and I drink a little better-quality wine, of course, but I’m still a country boy.” I could go back to that if I had to, but I’m not saying I want to go back.”
HAWAIIAN TROPIC MODELS HELLS KITCHEN TV
Four thousand of that was the teaching part, $300 was the coaching part,” he once told a TV interviewer. “I used to teach school and I used to make $4,300 a year. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, where, according to several accounts, he was studying to explore for oil and uranium, and to be a teacher.

From the time Ron was 5, he would join his siblings at their roadside stand selling apples, cider, honey, grapes and Christmas wreaths to supplement their father’s income as a civil engineer. 1, 1940, in Asheville, N.C., to Clyde and Pauline (Crosby) Rice. Rice sold it to Playtex Products for $83 million. Trump met his second wife, Marla Maples, when she was a Hawaiian Tropic pageant contestant), automobile races (the company name was on a Porsche driven by Paul Newman at Le Mans in 1979), and cunning and not-so-subtle placements in films and on television shows - along with various other stunts - sales of Hawaiian Tropic had topped $110 million, making it the second-largest sun-care product company in the world.Ī year later, Mr. (Coconuts weren’t native to Hawaii and were probably originally cultivated on islands in Southeast Asia, but the name Tropic Tan was already trademarked.)īy 2006, after years of unabashed promotion through beauty pageants judged by celebrities (Donald J. On the side, he blended myriad combinations of coconut oil, exotic fruits, aloe, avocado, kukui, mineral oil and cocoa butter until they combined into a lotion that a few 11-year-olds he enlisted from the neighborhood poured from that foundational garbage can into bottles labeled Hawaiian Tropic and sold for the first time on the beach on July 20, 1969. Years later, after a visit to Hawaii, he was inspired to take on Coppertone, a leading brand of suntan lotion, which promised naturally pale sunbathers like himself that they would tan, not burn, if they slathered themselves with the product’s zinc oxide, alkyl benzoate, isopropyl palmitate and other ingredients.Īfter graduating from college in 1964, he transplanted himself to Florida, taught for eight years (in fleeting positions at seven schools, but long enough to acquire a draft deferment) and worked part time as a football coach and a lifeguard, positions well served by his 6-foot-3 height. Rice became smitten with Florida’s ocean shores while on a family vacation in the 1940s. No cause was specified.Ī dirt-poor boy from North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains, Mr.

His death, in a hospital, was announced by his family on Facebook. Ron Rice, a high school chemistry teacher who had been trained to explore for oil, but who instead made a fortune by concocting coconut-laced suntan lotion in a 20-gallon garbage can in his garage and seductively branding it Hawaiian Tropic, died on May 19 in Daytona Beach, Fla.
