A tragic figure in Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire who manages a plantation before being driven to madness. 4. Modern Inspirations
The name "Bibette" is likely a play on "Bibendum" mixed with the French diminutive suffix -ette .
While Bibendum was created in 1898, Bibette appeared in early 20th-century promotional materials, such as cast-iron signs and figurines.
If your interest in "Lady Bibette" stems from a literary or pop-culture reference, you may be thinking of these prominent "":
The flirtatious feather duster and love interest of Lumiere in the Disney musical.
It is often confused with Babette , a French diminutive of Elizabeth ("God is my oath") or Barbara ("foreign woman").
The quirky, high-voiced neighbor in the TV series Gilmore Girls , known for her love of gnomes and her husband, Morey.
In recent years, the name has seen creative revivals, such as: 'bimbette': meaning and origin - word histories