Bandit was designed by Germaine Cellier for Fracas. Its 1948 launch party featured models filing down the runway wearing leather bandit masks, and it is indeed a criminally odd fragrance.
Woodsy with notes of bitter leather and limes, it is a changeling--here dazzling, there bizarre. It is hard to imagine what the designer was thinking...an Old West bandit in leather chaps touring the dance halls of 20s Paris in a cloud of gunpowder and leftover eau de toilette from last night's French whorehouse? Oscar Wilde entertaining a surly audience of miners in San Francisco while wearing a large lily in his lapel?
Bandit is hard to place, a perfume out of time. For this reason, I have chosen the stunning actress Louise Brooks to illustrate the essential duality of Bandit. Like this piquant and hypnotically odd scent, Louise Brooks was crazily compelling but self-directed, even difficult. She was also notorious for her salty language, which she didn't hesitate to use whenever she felt like it. In addition, Brooks was said to have made a vow to herself never to smile on stage unless she felt compelled to.
Like Brooks, Bandit is a difficult demimondaine who finds smoothing out all her rough edges in "polite" company too big a compromise. Wear it if you're interesting, but make sure you're interesting first.
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