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・ Le Conte Station
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・ Le Contrat de mariage
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Le Chat Noir
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・ Le chemin (Emmanuel Moire album)


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Le Chat Noir : ウィキペディア英語版
Le Chat Noir

Le Chat Noir ((:lə ʃa nwaʁ); French for "The Black Cat") was a nineteenth-century entertainment establishment, in the bohemian Montmartre district of Paris. It opened on 18 November 1881 at 84 Boulevard de Rochechouart by the impresario Rodolphe Salis, and closed in 1897 not long after Salis' death (much to the disappointment of Picasso and others who looked for it when they came to Paris for the Exposition in 1900).
''Le Chat Noir'' is thought to be the first modern cabaret:〔"Hommage à Salis le Grand", in ''88 notes pour piano solo'', Jean-Pierre Thiollet, Neva Editions, 2015, p. 146. ISBN 978 2 3505 5192 0〕 a nightclub where the patrons sat at tables and drank alcoholic beverages while being entertained by a variety show on stage. The acts were introduced by a master of ceremonies who interacted with well-known patrons at the tables. Its imitators have included cabarets from St. Petersburg (''Stray Dog Café'') to Barcelona (''Els Quatre Gats'').
Perhaps best known now by its iconic Théophile Steinlen poster art, in its heyday it was a bustling nightclub that was part artist salon, part rowdy music hall. The cabaret published its own humorous journal ''Le Chat Noir'' until 1895.
==Early history==

The cabaret began by renting the cheapest accommodations it could find, a small two-room site located at ''84 Boulevard Rochechouart,'' (now commemorated only by a historical plaque). Its success was assured with the wholesale arrival of a group of radical young writers and artists called ''Les Hydropathes'' ("those who are afraid of water"), a club led by the journalist Émile Goudeau. The group claimed to be averse to water, preferring wine and beer. Their name doubled as a nod to the "rabid" zeal with which they advocated their sociopolitical and aesthetic agendas. Goudeau’s club met in his house on the ''Rive Gauche'' (left bank), but had become so popular that it outgrew its meeting place. Salis met Goudeau, whom he convinced to relocate the club meeting place across the river to ''84 Boulevard Rochechouart''.
The cabaret began by serving bad wine and had a rather inferior decor, but from the first, at the door, guests were greeted by a Swiss guard, splendidly bedecked and covered with gold from head to foot. The guard supposedly was responsible for bringing in the painters and poets who arrived, while barring the "infamous priests and the military." Eventually Salis' tongue-in-cheek admirational piece was on a high marble fireplace: ''The skull of Louis XIII as a child''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Le Chat Noir」の詳細全文を読む



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