
Amul Butter Girl
Edited from an article by Mini Varma published in The Asian
Age on March 3, 1996
The moppet who put Amul on India's breakfast table
50 years after it was first launched, Amul's sale figures
have jumped from 1000 tones a year in 1966 to over 25,000 tones a
year in 1997. No other brand comes even close to it. All because a
thumb-sized girl climbed on to the hoardings and put a spell on the
masses.
Bombay: Summer of 1967. A Charni Road
flat. Mrs. Sheela Mane, a 28-year-old housewife is out in the balcony
drying clothes. From her second floor flat she can see her neighbours
on the road. There are other people too. The crowd seems to be growing
larger by the minute. Unable to curb her curiosity Sheela Mane hurries
down to see what all the commotion is about. She expects the worst
but can see no signs of an accident. It is her four-year-old who draws
her attention to the hoarding that has come up overnight. "It
was the first Amul hoarding that was put up in Mumbai," recalls
Sheela Mane. " People loved it. I remember it was our favourite
topic of discussion for the next one week! Everywhere we went somehow
or the other the campaign always seemed to crop up in our conversation."
Call her the Friday to Friday star. Round eyed, chubby cheeked, winking
at you, from strategically placed hoardings at many traffic lights.
She is the Amul moppet everyone loves to love (including prickly votaries
of the Shiv Sena and BJP). How often have we stopped, looked, chuckled
at the Amul hoarding that casts her sometime as the coy, shy Madhuri,
a bold sensuous Urmila or simply as herself, dressed in her little
polka dotted dress and a red and white bow, holding out her favourite
packet of butter.
For 30 odd years the Utterly Butterly girl has managed to keep her
fan following intact. So much so that the ads are now ready to enter
the Guinness Book of World Records for being the longest running
campaign ever. The ultimate compliment to the butter came when a British
company launched a butter and called it Utterly Butterly, last year.
It all began in 1966 when Sylvester daCunha, then the managing director
of the advertising agency, ASP, clinched the account for Amul butter.
The butter, which had been launched in 1945, had a staid, boring image,
primarily because the earlier advertising agency which was in charge
of the account preferred to stick to routine, corporate ads.