- Théâtre de la Gaîté
Opened in 1792 on the
boulevard du Temple ,Paris , the Théâtre de la Gaîté was the successor to the Théâtre des Grands-Danseurs du Roi directed byJean-Baptiste Nicolet . The Grands-Danseurs du Roi were a troop created by Nicolet, which had obtained its royal title on 23 April 1772. Contrary to its name, it contained not only dancers but actors, tight-rope walkers, acrobats and artists in all performance genres.Jean-Baptiste Nicolet had built the Théâtre de Nicolet and put on a spectacle to the taste of those who liked the '
Théâtre de la foire ', and this attracted an increasing audience despite the complaints of theComédie-Italienne , officially protected by their privilege granted by the king. In 1772, he obtained authorisation for his theatre to become the Théâtre des Grands Danseurs du Roi, in 1792 renaming it the Théâtre de la Gaîté and the company the Danseurs de la Gaîté. Entirely rebuilt on the same site, the theatre reopened on3 November 1808 . Burned down in 1835 during a dress rehearsal, it was again rebuilt on the same site.Destroyed in 1861 by the construction of the boulevard Voltaire, the Théâtre de la Gaîté was rebuilt on rue Papin by the architect
Alphonse Cusin . It was also known as the Théâtre de la Gaîté-Lyrique and was at its height during theSecond French Empire .Jacques Offenbach was its director from 1872, and it became a temple tooperetta until 1963. In 1918, theBallets russes ofSerge Diaghilev put their show on here, to great success and in the 1930s "le Pays du Sourire", withWilly Thunis , was put on here.After the
Second World War , Henri Montjoye and his wife Germaine Roger became the theatre's directors. Numerous successes were put on : "Andalousie", "Chevalier du Ciel" and "Visa pour l'amour" withLuis Mariano , "Collorado" with Michel Dens, Minnie Moustache with les compagnons de la Chanson. In 1974, the "Carré Silvia-Monfort" and the first circus school based themselves here for a time.Closed since 1989 due to bankruptcy, from 1989 to 1991 the theatre was largely destroyed and transformed into an
amusement park by Jean Chalopin. The main auditorium, holding 1500, and the orchestra pit large enough for 40 musicians were among the parts of the building lost at this time. The mairie of Paris now intends to turn it into an arts and modern music centre, due to open in 2008.Premieres
* 1872:
Jacques Offenbach 'sopéra-bouffe -féerie "Le roi Carotte "
* 1874: Offenbach's revisedOpéra-féerie version of "Orphée aux enfers (Orpheus in the Underworld )"
* 1875: Offenbach's revisedOpéra-bouffe version of "Geneviève de Brabant "
* 1875: Offenbach'sopéra-féerie "Le voyage dans la lune "See also
*
Théâtre de la Gaîté-Montparnasse External links
* [http://cesar.org.uk/cesar2/places/places.php?fct=edit&location_UOID=200619 Shows put on by Les Grands-Danseurs du Roi and at the Gaîté from 1789 to 1799] on [http://cesar.org.uk CÉSAR]
* [http://cesar.org.uk/cesar2/places/places.php?fct=edit&location_UOID=101984 All the Grands-Danseurs du Roi's repertoire and productions (1772-1792)] on CÉSAR
* [http://www.planetemagique.com Site on the 1989-1991 amusement park]
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