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14 Famous Women And Their Favourite Perfumes

14 Famous Women And Their Favourite Perfumes

From Audrey Hepburn to Jackie Kennedy, here are 14 style icons and their signature scents

14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

Arguably the most personal and intimate of beauty products, the choice of perfume reveals volumes about its wearer—orientals are sexy and exotic, aldehydes bold and daring, florals romantic. Marilyn Monroe famously told interviewers that she wore Chanel No. 5 to bed (and nothing else), but it wasn't her only favorite...

From: Harper's BAZAAR US 

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Like millions of other women, Monroe was a fan of Chanel No 5. However, in 2002, it was revealed that she also had a secret penchant for Floris Rose Geranium. The eau de toilette was delivered in bulk to her at the Beverly Hills Hotel under a cloak and dagger alias while she filmed Some Like It Hot. Featuring notes of rose, geranium, citronella and sandalwood, the British eau de toilette has been discontinued and its scent is now only available as a bath essence.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

While Jackie wore several perfumes throughout her life, one of her favorites was the classic Joy by Jean Patou, known for years as the most expensive perfume in the world. For just one ounce of the heavily floral scent, more than 10,000 jasmine flowers and 28 dozen roses are required—a risky business decision, especially since the scent was created in 1929 at the start of the Great Depression. The aura of uber-luxury and prestige worked: Joy went on to become one of the most successful fragrances of all time, and was voted Scent of the Century in 2000 at the Fragrance Foundation's FiFi Awards.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

When Grace Kelly became Her Serene Highness Princess Grace of Monaco in 1956, walking down the aisle of Cathédrale Notre-Dame-Immaculée in front of guests including Cary Grant and Ava Gardner, she did so wearing Creed Fleurissimo. The fragrance, from the esteemed family-owned fragrance house, was commissioned specially by Prince Rainier for his bride to compliment her wedding bouquet and contains notes of bergamot, tuberose, Florentine iris, and Bulgarian rose.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

Nowadays, every boldface name has their own fragrance line—but Elizabeth Taylor was a pioneer when she launched her revolutionary perfume empire, spanning blockbuster scents like White Diamonds, Forever, and Passion. (To this day, White Diamonds remains the bestselling celebrity fragrance of all time.) In earlier days, however, Liz wore Jean Desprez Bal à Versailles, an oriental scent with notes of rosemary, orange blossom, sandalwood, and vanilla created in 1962. Taylor wore it on the set of Cleopatra, and also gifted the scent to Michael Jackson, who wore it for the rest of his life.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

An eternal fan of the delicate, romantic gardenia flower (there's even a gardenia on her gravestone), Natalie Wood wore Jungle Gardenia—first given to her by Old Hollywood star Barbara Stanwyck while filming The Bride Wore Boots in 1946. Known as "the most exotic fragrance in the world," the original juice contained notes of bitter orange, tuberose and heliotrope, and was famously reimagined—as an unsuccessful flop—by Coty in the 90s. This year, her daughter Natasha Gregson Wagner released a modern gardenia-laced fragrance in her mother's honor, called, simply, Natalie.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

A more modern but no less indelible icon, Princess Diana walked down the aisle at St. Paul's Cathedral bathed in Quelques Fleurs, a floral scent featuring notes of tuberose, rose, and jasmine. (Rumors abound that she accidentally spilled the juice on her wedding dress while trying to top up just before getting out of the carriage.) Later in life, Princess Diana was a fan of 24 Faubourg by Hermès, created by in 1995 by perfumer Maurice Roucel and named for the address of the Hermès flagship store in Paris. A sunny scent, it contains notes of orange blossom, peach, gardenia, and amber.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

The first black woman to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress, Dorothy Dandridge wore Tabu by Dana, a sexy fragrance that was supposedly created by perfumer Jean Carles with the risqué instructions to make a scent that a prostitute would wear. (Its tagline was "Tabu—the forbidden fragrance.") Notes include bergamot, clover, oriental rose, amber, moss, musk, patchouli, sandalwood, and vetiver.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

Ava Gardner was reportedly partial to Creed Fleurs de The Rose Bulgare, a rose scent that bergamot and green tea notes. Other scents favored by the Best Actress nominee included Guerlain Mitsouko and the bergamot, mandarin, and lilac-infused Fracas by Robert Piguet. While she was married to Frank Sinatra, stories circulated that she'd signal an end to one of their regular, titanic fights by spritzing the stairway with perfume as an invitation.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

Created specially for Audrey Hepburn by Hubert de Givenchy, L'Interdit—which means "forbidden" in French—was created in 1957. Rumors spread that Audrey didn't want Givenchy to release the scent, but it was ultimately made available for wide purchase in the 1960s. A floral aldehyde, L'Interdit's notes include bergamot, rose, jasmine, iris, violet, narcissus, and sandalwood. In later years, Audrey wore Creed Spring Flower, another scent created just for her.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

Aviation enthusiast Kate Hepburn was a fan of Jacques Guerlain's 1933 scent Vol de Nuit, which was created in homage to the Antoine de Saint-Exupéry book Night Flight. (The same author wrote the children's classic The Little Prince.) A woodsy and spicy floral, its notes included bergamot, jasmine, and vanilla, and the bottle displays a relief of a moving airplane propeller.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

Often photographed spritzing on perfume, Rita Hayworth was a fan the blockbuster 1925 oriental fragrance Guerlain Shalimar—which was rumored to have been created when Jacques Guerlain dumped vanillin into a bottle of the celebrated fougère scent Jicky as an experiment—as well as Lanvin Arpege, a sensual aldehydic floral.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

A world-famous American in Paris—as well-known for what she was wearing (a skirt made from bananas) as what she wasn't (clothing)—Josephine Baker liked to spritz herself in Guerlain Sous Le Vent. Created specially for her in 1934 by Jacques Guerlain, the scent fit the era's chypre trend, including oakmoss, dried tobacco leaves, basil, tarragon, and galbanum resin.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

The sultry half of one of Hollywood's greatest love stories was a fan of French luxury perfume house Diptyque Paris, wearing its blackcurrant and Bulgarian rose-scented L'Ombre Dans L'Eau and Opone (a woody Chypre featuring saffron, cumin, leather, and smoke).
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

When the real-life Scarlett O'Hara first met Clark Gable before filming Gone With the Wind, he is said to have noticed that she smelled like violets. However, like many starlets of the era including Olivia de Haviland, Mary Pickford, and Gloria Swanson, the British actress was a well-documented devotee of Joy by Jean Patou.
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14 Famous Women And Their Favorite Perfumes

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