ANNA PAVLOVA – pink hybrid tea rose – BEAann
With its pastel-pink, high-centred blooms and romantic form, Anna Pavlova brings a touch of theatre to an everyday family garden while remaining reassuringly reliable. Bred in Britain for garden and exhibition use, it combines very strong fragrance with low-maintenance, upright growth that fits beautifully into a mixed cottage-style border. Own-root plants develop steadily for a long garden life, quietly strengthening below ground so you can enjoy structural stability and graceful top growth with minimal intervention. In typical UK gardens it copes calmly with blustery weather and heavier soils, especially where modest improvements help it manage persistent wind and rain on exposed plots. The large, double, softly coloured flowers are ideal for cutting, allowing you to bring their perfume indoors for afternoon tea moments. Its healthy, glossy foliage and sparse prickles make routine deadheading and light shaping easier for beginners. As an own-root rose it regenerates well from the base, avoiding graft problems and supporting a genuinely long lifespan. From the first season’s quiet rooting to the second year’s fuller shoots and the third year’s complete garden presence, it settles into a mature, balanced role in your planting. Whether you are planning a “girly” cottage border or a more formal layout, this variety offers dependable flowering performance with a classically elegant look that never feels out of place.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Main view from patio or seating area |
Large, high-centred blooms in soft pink draw the eye from a terrace or seating nook, giving a gentle focal point without overwhelming a small family garden. The upright habit keeps it tidy around furniture and play space, suiting homeowners. |
| Traditional cottage-style mixed border |
Classic hybrid tea form and repeat flowering sit naturally among cottage staples such as phlox, geraniums and daisies, extending colour between their flushes. Its long-lived, own-root framework suits borders that are replanted infrequently by romantic-gardeners. |
| Cutting patch near kitchen door |
Solitary, long-stemmed flowers with a very strong, sweet fragrance are perfect for vases, so a small cutting row provides regular stems for the house. This makes sense for busy households wanting reliable indoor flowers from limited-time. |
| Front garden feature for kerb appeal |
An upright, moderately dense plant with glossy, dark green leaves and pastel blooms gives a tidy, welcoming impression from the street, without constant clipping. Own-root resilience keeps the display stable over years for image-conscious. |
| Low-effort family flower bed |
Good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust means far fewer sprays and less troubleshooting, even in humid, disease-prone summers. This supports relaxed, low-input gardening for beginner-owners. |
| Urban and small-space gardens |
Compact height with a clear vertical habit slots easily into limited beds or paved gardens, offering scent and bloom power in modest footprints that are common for town plots, bringing pleasure to urban-residents. |
| Large container on terrace or balcony |
In a generously sized pot of 40–50 litres with good drainage, its upright growth and repeat flowering create a moveable, fragrant accent. This suits renters or balcony users who need flexible planting but still value container-gardeners. |
| Exposed, breezy garden corners |
Its sturdy, upright structure and well-anchoring own-root system cope well in gardens that regularly face strong onshore winds and persistent rain during the growing season, making it a reassuring choice for coastal-leaning garden-owners. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE-TEA-BORDER – Plant Anna Pavlova with garden phlox, meadow cranesbill and oxeye daisy for a loose pastel border that flowers through summer – ideal for lovers of soft, romantic cottage scenes.
- PERFUMED-PATH – Line a sunny path with spaced specimens so their strong rose scent greets you on everyday walks – perfect for families wanting impact from just a few well-placed plants.
- PASTEL-CUTTING-BED – Combine with other long-stemmed, scented roses and annuals for regular cut blooms indoors – suited to home florists who enjoy arranging their own garden flowers.
- FRONT-GARDEN-FOCAL – Use one or three plants against dark evergreen hedging to highlight its pale blooms and glossy foliage – good for homeowners improving kerb appeal with minimal upkeep.
- LARGE-POT-RETREAT – Grow it in a 40–50 litre container beside a bench, where repeat flowers and strong fragrance enhance an “afternoon tea” corner – ideal for balcony or terrace gardeners seeking romance in small spaces.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid Tea group rose, registered as BEAann, marketed as Anna Pavlova Hybrid tea rose BEAann; ARS exhibition name Anna Pavlova, premium silver quality own-root container plant. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Peter Leslie Beales, United Kingdom, 1981; introduced and initially distributed by Peter Beales Roses Ltd., parentage unrecorded, reflecting classic late twentieth-century hybrid tea selection. |
| Awards and recognition |
Genoa Rose Competition Silver medal, Italy, 1986, acknowledging its ornamental quality and performance; valued by exhibitors and collectors for bloom form and fragrance on suitable sites. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright habit, 80–120 cm high and 100–140 cm wide, moderately dense, dark glossy foliage, sparsely thorned stems; most spent blooms remain and benefit from manual deadheading for neatness and repeat. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, high-centred cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals, borne mostly solitary on stems; good repeat-flowering with notably abundant second flush in suitable cultural conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft pastel pink with deeper central flush; ARS code LP, RHS 65D outer and 62C inner; opens porcelain-pink with salmon tones, then fades towards cream with a gentle powder-pink centre by senescence. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, classic sweet rose scent that carries well in still air, providing a garden-filling perfume; primarily ornamental, with double flowers offering limited accessibility for pollinating insects. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set generally sparse due to very double flowers; when present, ovoid orange-red hips 8–12 mm in diameter, offering modest late-season interest without significant self-seeding. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy approximately to −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b), suitable for most UK garden climates with normal care practices. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun, in improved, well-drained soil; low maintenance once established. Recommended spacings: 120 cm for mass plantings, 110 cm for hedging, 200 cm for specimens; typical densities 0.7–0.8 plants/m². |
Anna Pavlova Hybrid tea rose BEAann offers richly scented cut flowers, disease-resilient, easy-care garden performance and long-lived, regenerating own-root growth; a thoughtful choice if you favour enduring, romantic planting.