\u201cSomewhere in the world there\u2019s a Tupperware Party starting every 10 seconds.\u201d And we\u2019re going to one with The Kitchen Sisters.
\n\nParties. Rallies. Sales sessions. More than a way of storing leftovers in covered plastic bowls, for many it\u2019s a way of life. Earl Tupper took the plastics he developed for WWII into post-war American kitchens. The Tupperware Party is one of the ways women have come\xa0together to swap recipes and kitchen wisdom, get out of the house and support each other\u2019s entrepreneurial efforts.
\n\nThis story, which is used\xa0by instructors\xa0teaching\xa0audio\xa0classes around the\xa0country, was produced\xa0by The Kitchen Sisters in 1980, one of\xa0the first stories they created together. In this podcast the Sisters deconstruct the making of the\xa0piece\xa0and\xa0talk about the experiments and accidents \xa0that led to the development of their production style.
\n\nWe also hear from Tupperware historian Dr. Allison Clarke, Professor of Design Theory &\xa0History, University of Applied Arts, Vienna, and Tupperware consultant Lynn Burkhardt, and we hear\xa0vintage Tupperware ads from the Prelinger Archive\u2014in a piece produced by Brandi Howell.