Rosa 'Cécile Brünner, also known as Mlle Cécile Brünner, Sweetheart Rose, Malteser Rose, or Mignon, is a light pinkpolyantha rose bred in France by Marie Ducher and introduced by her son-in-law, Joseph Pernet-Ducher in 1881. Its parents were a double-flowered R. multiflora and a hybrid tea rose, either 'Souvenir d'un Ami' or a seedling of 'Mme de Tartas'. It is not clear if the rose was named after the sister or daughter of Ulrich Brunner fils.
Description
'Cécile Brünner' has small double flowers, developing from high-centered buds to form pom-poms with a diameter of 2 to 6.5 cm. Their pink colour fades from the outside with age, resulting in pale pink edges with yellow undertones and a deeper pink center. The flowers appear abundantly in large clusters throughout the season and are moderately scented. The shrub is short but vigorous, with very few prickles, smooth, midgreen leaves, and a height of 60 to 120 cm at an average width of 60 cm. 'Cécile Brünner' tolerates shade and poorer soils, is very disease resistant and winter hardy up to −26 °C. 'Cécile Brünner' can also be grown as a garden plant or in pots and greenhouses and is available in commerce.
Sports
Several sports of 'Cécile Brünner' were introduced, including climbing forms, a dwarf white-flowered form, and deeper pink variants. The climbing sports normally grow 6 m tall and 3 m wide, but can reach a height of up to 10 m. Their flowers strongly resemble those of 'Cécile Brünner', and appear in a single flush in early summer with a few scattered later blooms. The climber tolerates half shade and can develop some globose, orange hips. Recently, it was confirmed by DNA analyses that 'Spray Cécile Brünner' is identical with the plants now grown under the name of the cultivar 'Bloomfield Abundance' and is a sport of 'Cécile Brünner', not related to the original 'Bloomfield Abundance' which was a hybrid seedling of 'Sylvia' and 'Dorothy Page-Roberts'.
Awards
'Cécile Brünner' was inducted into the Old Rose Hall of Fame in 1988. Its sport 'Climbing Cécile Brünner' gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit in 1993, the original form followed in 1994.