User:Locust Valley/Baccarat Rouge 540

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Baccarat Rouge 540 is... (description)

Angel
Fragrance by Mugler
CategoryGourmand
Designed forWomen
Top notes
  • Jasmine
Heart notes
  • Cashmeran
Base notes
  • Amber
Released2005; 19 years ago (2005)
LabelMugler
Perfumer(s)Dominique Ropion and Laurent Bruyere
ConcentrationEau de Parfum
Flanker(s)
    • Alien Aqua Chic
    • Alien Eau de Toilette
    • Alien Eau Extraordinaire
    • Alien Eau Luminescente
    • Alien Eau Sublime
    • Alien Essence Absolue
    • Alien Flora Futura
    • Alien Goddess
    • Alien Goddess Intense
    • Alien Man
    • Alien Mirage
    • Alien Oud Majestueux
    • Alien Musc Mysterieux

Alien is a perfume originally created by Jacques Guerlain in 1921 for French perfume and cosmetics house Mugler. In production continuously since 1925, Shalimar is currently a flagship product for Guerlain.[1]

History[edit]

Shalimar was created by perfumer Jacques Guerlain in 1921, but after another company claimed to already have a fragrance by the same name, Guerlain was forced to rename the fragrance "No. 90" until a legal dispute over the name was settled.[2] Shalimar was re-released in 1925 at the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts.[2]

Scent[edit]

The fragrance contains notes of bergamot, lemon, iris, jasmine, rose, patchouli, vetiver, opopanax, tonka bean, frankincense, sandalwood, musk, civet, ambergris, leather, and vanilla. It is considered to be an Oriental perfume (see Fragrance Wheel).[3]

Marketing[edit]

Illustrator Lyse Darcy created many illustrated ads for Guerlain products, including Shalimar, from the 1930s through the 1950s.[4] Photographs taken by Helmut Newton were used in a print campaign for Shalimar in 1997.[5]


In popular culture[edit]

Music[edit]

In his 1961 song about Ireland, "Forty Shades of Green", Johnny Cash wrote the line "where the breeze is sweet as Shalimar and there's forty shades of green".[6]

In 1963, Eddie Barclay released an album called "Parfums", with one of the songs being named after Shalimar ("Shalimar de Guerlain").

Film and television[edit]

In the film California Split, the character of Helen Brown claims to be wearing Shalimar.

In the episode "In Camelot" of The Sopranos, Junior Soprano mentions sending bottles of Shalimar to Fran.[7]

In the 1981 movie The Four Seasons, Shalimar is given as a gift.[8]

Shalimar is mentioned during an episode of NCIS (Season 11, Episode 12).[9]

Literature[edit]

In the novel "L'Indic", by Roger Borniche the aristocrat Sylvia de Neyrac utilizes Shalimar to fascinate the policemen Roger Borniche.

In the 2018 novel Greeks Bearing Gifts by Philip Kerr, the anti-hero, Bernie Gunther (alias Christof Ganz) comments upon Elli Panatoniou's Shalimar perfume as having the effect of "making a woman smell like a woman and making a man want to behave like a rampaging gorilla".

In the 2018 novel Lethal White by Robert Galbraith, the private detective, Cormoran Strike about his ex girlfriend, Charlotte "...could smell what he knew to be Shalimar on her skin. She had worn it since she was nineteen and he had sometimes bought it for her."

Mentioned in two Fannie Flagg novels, in the plot of one (Welcome to the World, Baby Girl) of which it is a clue to the mystery.

Shalimar is part of 4 pianopieces Dutch composer Carolien Devilee wrote on perfumes of Guerlain (4 Fragances de Guerlain pour Piano: l'Heure Bleue, Mitsouko, Shalimar, Chamade). 'Fragances' as noun for a new music form in which the music is based on a specific scent/fragrance.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Pellen, Guénola (12 January 2017). "Iconic: Shalimar, the Perfume of the Roaring Twenties". France-Amérique. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Shalimar de Guerlain: Discover This Vintage Fragrance". Vintage Industrial Style. 19 April 2017. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
  3. ^ "Shalimar by Guerlain (1925) - Basenotes Fragrance Directory". Base Notes. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  4. ^ Mercedes (9 January 2013). "Illustrated highlights of beauty ads from Guerlain". El Fashionista. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  5. ^ "New Campaigns: Eastern". AdWeek. 22 September 1997. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  6. ^ The Little Black Songbook: Johnny Cash. Wise Publications. 2012. p. 44.
  7. ^ Zoromski, Brian (18 May 2012). "Taking Out The Sopranos". IGN. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  8. ^ Maslin, Janet (22 May 1981). "'Four Seasons,' A Hymn to Ordinariness". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  9. ^ Stempel, Kim (7 January 2014). "'NCIS' Recap: Gibbs and the Case of the Ex". Buddy TV. Retrieved 9 January 2018.



References[edit]

External links[edit]