Théâtre des Variétés
The théâtre des Variétés, c. 1820
Address7, boulevard Montmartre, 2nd.
Paris
France
Construction
Opened1807 (1807)
ArchitectJacques Cellerier, Jean-Antoine Alavoine
Website
www.theatre-des-varietes.fr

The Théâtre des Variétés is a theatre and "salle de spectacles" at 7–8, boulevard Montmartre, 2nd arrondissement, in Paris. It was declared a monument historique in 1974.

History

It owes its creation to the theatre director Mademoiselle Montansier (Marguerite Brunet). Imprisoned for debt in 1803 and frowned upon by the government, a decree of 1806 ordered her company to leave the Théâtre du Palais-Royal which then bore the name of "Variétés". The decree's aim was to move out Montansier's troupe to make room for the company from the neighbouring Théâtre-Français, which had stayed empty even as the Variétés-Montansier had enjoyed immense public favour. Strongly unhappy about having to leave the theatre by 1 January 1807, the 77-year-old Montansier gained an audience with Napoleon himself and received his help and protection. She thus reunited the "Société des Cinq", which directed her troupe, in order to found a new theatre, the one which stands at the side of the passage des Panoramas. It was inaugurated on 24 June 1807. The theatre plays a prominent role in Émile Zola's 1880 novel, Nana, as it is the theatre in which the title character achieves celebrity in the opening chapters.

Other activities

In 2012 the theatre began to host technical conferences such as dotJS or dotScale.[1]

Premieres at the theatre

The théâtre des Variétés in 2012

Directors

  • 1807–19 : Mlle Montansier
  • 1820–30 : Mira Brunet
  • 1930–36 : Armand Dartois
  • 1836 : Jean-François Bayard
  • 1837–39 : Philippe Pinel-Dumanoir
  • 1839 : Jouslin de la Salle
  • 1840 : M. Leroy
  • 1840–47 : Nestor Roqueplan
  • 1847–49 : M. Morin
  • 1849–51 : M. Thibeaudeau-Milon
    (M. Bowes, proprietor)
  • 1851–54 : M. Carpier (M. Bowes, proprietor)
  • 1855 : MM. Laurencin & Zacheroni (M. Bowes, proprietor)
  • 1855 : Hippolyte & Théodore Cogniard
  • 1856–69 : Hippolyte Cogniard & Jules Noriac
  • 1869–91 : Eugène Bertrand
  • 1892–1914 : Fernand Samuel
  • 1914–40 : Max Maurey
  • 1940–43 : Émile Petit
  • 1944–45 : Max Maurey & Émile Petit
  • 1946–47 : Max & Denis Maurey
  • 1947–75 : Denis & Marcel Maurey
  • 1975–89 : Jean-Michel Rouzière
  • 1989–91 : Francis Lemonnier
  • 1991–2004 : Jean-Paul Belmondo
  • since 2005 : Jean-Manuel Bajen

See also

References

  1. "DotJS".

48°52′16″N 2°20′31″E / 48.87111°N 2.34194°E / 48.87111; 2.34194

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.