Victoria's Secret was founded by Roy Raymond, and his wife Gaye, in San Francisco, California on June 12, 1977.
No, Victor Gay is not the founder of Victoria's Secret. Victoria's Secret was founded by Roy Raymond in 1977.
The secret is that a MAN owns it and his name was Victor so they made it into Victoria. Then they put Victoria's secret because it is a secret!
YES
A man named victor was gay,and he never told anybody.So he named it"Victoria's Secert".
Victoria's Secret was originally founded by Roy Raymond in 1977. He started the company in San Francisco, California as a way to create a lingerie store where men could comfortably shop for gifts for women.
The duration of Victor Victoria is 2.2 hours.
Victor Victoria was created on 1982-03-16.
Metta Victoria Fuller Victor was born in 1831.
Metta Victoria Fuller Victor died in 1885.
Victoria means 'victor' or 'victory'.
Victor Victoria - 1995 TV is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
Columbia - founded in 1888; Victor (became RCA/Victor) - founded in 1901; Decca - founded in 1934; Capitol - founded in 1942. There were other majors: Mercury and MGM - founded in the 1940s.
The origin of a company name is often a mystery. What we discovered, is that there is no one "secret." The Victoria of Victoria's Secret likely refers to the British queen. Ipso facto, one can conclude the aforementioned "secret" is merely part of a clever branding strategy, alluding to the titillating possibility that the prudish monarch (who at one point during her reign went into seclusion for 25 years) liked to wear sexy lingerie like the stretch lace Miracle Bra. Lucky Prince Albert. But despite what some would say was a cultivated aura of Anglicism, Victoria's Secret started in the early 70s as a small lingerie shop in San Francisco. The store was decorated, according to Les Wexner, CEO of Victoria's parent company, like a Victorian brothel, complete with red leather sofas. Not so secret, perhaps, is that over the years, the company has been the subject of various protests and accusations. Some claim it promotes hyper-sexualized images of women. And in 2003, the Supreme Court ruled that a small Kentucky sex shop called "Victor's Little Secret" did not infringe on the company's trademark. Details aside, the background story is that the company was started by a man who was trying to buy lingerie for his wife. It was difficult for men to simply walk into lingerie stores and buy lingerie for their wives. In any case, that man's name was Victor. Victor dressed as a women to enter the store and disguised himself as Victoria. Hence, Victoria's Secret. Victoria is Victor, who is man, trying to buy lingerie for his wife.