Another notable advertisement featuring Oscar Wilde on his lecture tour of America in 1882.
This time his pants.
Further to my recent post featuring advertisements that used Oscar Wilde’s name and image during his lecture tour, here is another notable example.
It shows Oscar in a quite demure pose as if he had something to hide. But fear not, he is exposed only below the knee.
Wilde’s long hair and knee-breeches excited many a soirée in 1882, prompting one commentator to note that Oscar “pants after” a certain celebrity, but that he should make it two because a pair of pants is something he obviously needs.
Advertisers, too, had Wilde’s trousers in mind. This example uses an image of a long-haired Oscar and the slogan Pants Down Again—presumably referring to the price. What advertisers did not realise was that Oscar would soon take the slogan literally.
When he returned to America in 1883, he had abandoned the signature long tresses and knee breeches, thus reversing the trend. Oscar confounded observers by wearing his hair up and his pants down once again.
© John Cooper, 2015.


John, I don’t want to make work for you, but have you given us some perspective on Napoleon Sarony. He’s just such an intriguing usher to late 19th celebrity — photographer to the stars as it were.
This is not really directly related, but I have not decided yet whether I like Oscar best, or his father, Sir William, that polymath. Also, Oscar has kind of a unique face – that smoothness. Unfortunately he looks like my Irish brother – the PhD who watches sports on TV. Well – back to Oscar. See my article on OW The Complete Environmentalist, in this week’s Bay Area Reporter – and I got paid for it too. In the Arts section. Peter Garland (The new Oscar Wilde?)