Reader's Digest Asia Pacific

SCENT OF A WOMAN

Chanel No. 5 100 Years On

- BY Gary Mortimer AND Rebekah Russell-Bennett FROM THE CONVERSATI­ON

Marilyn Monroe was perhaps the most famous fan of the French perfume that celebrated its 100th birthday in May. Since it was launched by Coco Chanel on May 5, 1921, Chanel No. 5 has endured in popularity, selling an estimated ten million bottles globally every year.

Already a successful fashion designer and businesswo­man, Chanel became an icon at a time when women were mostly employed in agricultur­al or domestic duties. She trained as a seamstress, later working as a shop girl and cafe singer, and in 1910, opened her hat shop Chanel Modes at Number 21 rue Cambon, in the centre of Paris.

By 1913, she had opened stores in the French resort towns of Deauville and Biarritz, selling hats and a limited line of garments.

In 1918, she decided she needed larger premises in Paris and acquired the entire building at Number 31 rue Cambon.

Having been raised by nuns in an orphanage, the perfume she went on to create was inspired by their cleanlines­s and stark simplicity.

Fresh linens and yellow soap

Chanel was born Gabrielle Bonheur Chanel, on August 19, 1883, in Saumur, France. After her mother died, Chanel was sent, at the age of 12, to the Abbey of Aubazine Orphanage in Corrèze.

According to her biographer­s, her company logo, her signature colour of black, her minimalist style and, indeed, the number five (as one story has it, she would cross a series of five paths that led to the cathedral for daily prayer) were all inspired by life in Aubazine.

During the summer of 1920, on holiday on the Cote d’Azur, Chanel learned of a sophistica­ted perfumer called Ernest Beaux, who had worked for the Russian royal family and lived close by in Grasse, the centre of Europe’s perfume industry.

The fresh linens and the smell of the yellow soap used by girls at the orphanage had left an impression on Chanel. She asked Beaux to create a scent that would make “its wearer smell like a woman, and not a rose”.

Just like the fragrance, Chanel’s perfume bottle was as plain and

When Marilyn Monroe was asked, “What do you wear to bed?” she famously replied, “Just a few drops of No. 5.”

minimalist “as a laboratory vial”. Since the 1920s, it has only been modified eight times.

Up until the first half of the 20th century, fashion houses were not in the business of creating perfumes, but the launch of Chanel No. 5 inspired many. The House of Worth launched Dans La Nuit in 1922. Jeanne Lanvin launched My Sin in 1925, and Jean Patou launched Joy in 1930.

Today, couture and fragrances are nearly synonymous, with brands such as Yves Saint Laurent, Karl Lagerfeld, Guy Laroche, Pierre Cardin and Paco Rabanne all making perfume.

Iconic No. 5

An iconic brand has five key elements: it is aspiration­al, with strong visual identity and persona, it is omnipresen­t throughout society, and consumers feel a personal connection with it. Chanel No.5 ticks all these boxes.

Such brands transcend simple purchases. Brand charisma has been described as “sophist icated, iconic and magical” – offering consumers a touch of magic simply through owning the item.

It is, of course, not just the power

of the brand that makes No. 5 successful, but also the fragrance itself, with floral scents blended over what has been described as a “warm, woody base”.

Have you ever experience­d the f ragrance of Chanel No. 5 in a crowded shopping centre, or at a party, and immediatel­y thought of someone who wore it? Studies have determined a clear link between smell and emotions and memories.

For iconic brands, such as Chanel No. 5, it isn’t just the perfume being sold: it is also the history – a

history enhanced by the bitterswee­t quality of nostalgia in the ways our brains link scent and memory.

No.5 and tomorrow

Coco Chanel’s focus remained on fashion, running Chanel Couture until her death in 1971. In 1924, she had handed control of the distributi­on and production of all Chanel cosmetics and fragrances to her business partner, the venture capitalist Pierre Wertheimer.

Wertheimer launched the company’s perfume branch, Les Parfums Chanel in that year. It has created many more scents – but none as enduring or popular as Chanel No. 5.

Chanel and Marilyn Monroe weren’t the only faces of the perfume. Celebritie­s such as Audrey Tautou and Brad Pitt were paid to promote

No. 5. In 2004, the brand spent US$33 million on a three-minute ad starring Nicole Kidman and directed by Baz Luhrmann – that’s roughly 300,000 bottles of perfume worth.

Today, the company Chanel started as a small hat shop is ranked 52 in the world on Forbes’ list of most valuable brands, valued at US$12.8 billion.

Through it all, No. 5 has lived on.

Gary Mortimer is Professor of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour, Queensland University of Technology and Rebekah Russell-Bennett is a Social Marketing Professor, School of Advertisin­g, Marketing and Public Relations, Queensland University of Technology.

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Coco Chanel is arguably the most influentia­l fashion designer of all time
 ??  ?? Left to right: The romantic 2004 commercial starring Nicole Kidman presented like a short film; Chanel’s famed store at Number 31 rue Cambon in Paris, open since 1918
Left to right: The romantic 2004 commercial starring Nicole Kidman presented like a short film; Chanel’s famed store at Number 31 rue Cambon in Paris, open since 1918

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