
Jaclyn Smith’s most influential career move did not come from staying inside television. It came from stepping into retail at a moment when many entertainers still treated consumer products as side deals, not long-term businesses.
That decision changed the shape of celebrity branding. Long before social media turned famous names into full-scale business platforms, Smith built a label designed to last, and in doing so created a model that many later stars would follow.

1. She chose mass retail when that path still carried stigma
After Charlie’s Angels ended, Smith faced a choice familiar to many stars: protect a polished Hollywood image or test a new lane. She chose the second route. Kmart approached her in the mid-1980s, and she initially hesitated, later explaining that many people advised against it. That hesitation mattered because the move was not an obvious prestige play. At the time, attaching a celebrity name to broadly accessible apparel could be read as a step down rather than a strategic expansion.

2. She treated the brand as work, not a licensing shortcut
What separated Smith from many celebrity tie-ins was the degree of involvement she described over the years. She did not present the collection as a name-only exercise. In interviews, she repeatedly framed branding as a hands-on commitment, saying, “If you do it for the paycheck, walk away.” That emphasis on day-to-day collaboration helped define her brand as an operating business rather than a publicity extension, and it gave consumers a reason to connect the product to the person behind it.

3. She helped normalize the idea that celebrity brands could have longevity
Celebrity fashion lines existed long before Smith, with roots stretching back to the 19th century and early 20th-century figures such as Jenny Lind and Irene Castle, according to fashion history of celebrity lines. What Smith added was modern staying power in the mass-market era. Her Kmart partnership began in 1985 and lasted 36 years, a rare span in a category known for short life cycles. That durability made her less an outlier than a proof of concept.

4. She built trust with shoppers, not just visibility with fans
Smith’s fame may have opened the door, but her staying power depended on repeat customers. She said, “Certainly my career brought the customers to Kmart but what made them come back to the store was the product.” That distinction became central to her legacy. The brand was positioned around practical wear, fit, and consistency for women with busy lives, which moved it away from novelty and toward habit. In celebrity commerce, habit is what turns recognition into a business.

5. She proved accessible fashion could still be identity-driven
Smith’s line did not rely on exclusivity. It relied on recognizability and usefulness. She often described her philosophy in terms of quality, value, and clothes for women “of all sizes and shapes,” while maintaining a distinct point of view rooted in timeless dressing. That balance mattered because it anticipated a now-common celebrity brand formula: a product line that feels personal without being niche, aspirational without becoming remote, and broad enough to scale.

6. Her business expanded beyond clothing before multi-category celebrity brands became routine
Over time, Smith’s name moved into home textiles, wigs, skincare, and furnishings-related categories. In one interview, she described running a business portfolio that extended well beyond apparel, while also linking some of that work to personal causes and long-term partnerships. That kind of brand architecture is now common among public figures, but Smith was building it decades earlier. She was not just selling tops and jackets; she was building an ecosystem around lifestyle, familiarity, and trust.

7. The scale of the brand showed that celebrity retail could become industrial, not occasional
By its peak years, the Jaclyn Smith collection generated $250 million to $300 million in annual sales and sold more than 100 million items, according to reporting on the collection’s long run. Those numbers changed how celebrity merchandising could be understood. This was no capsule or one-season experiment. It was a sustained consumer business with reach, replenishment, and broad category appeal. That scale is part of why Smith’s move still resonates in discussions about what celebrity entrepreneurship became.

8. She carried an early audience-first approach into a new era
Smith built her original brand through store appearances, television ads, and direct contact with shoppers. Later, she adapted to digital platforms and described social media as a new window into customer relationships. That continuity is striking because modern brand strategy often centers on audience intimacy, authenticity, and feedback loops. Current marketing analysis argues that celebrity partnerships work best when they feel aligned and consumer-aware, not random. Smith’s long practice of listening to her customer anticipated that shift well before it became standard language in branding.

At 80, Smith’s legacy is bigger than nostalgia for a television icon. Her most consequential career choice was taking celebrity seriously as a business framework and then proving that accessibility, consistency, and personal involvement could sustain it. That is why her story still matters. She did not invent celebrity branding, but she helped redefine what it could look like in modern retail: durable, multi-category, customer-led, and built to outlast the moment that made the celebrity famous.

