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{{Short description|Entertainment establishment in Montmartre, Paris (1881-1897)}} |
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{{Other uses|Chat Noir (disambiguation)}} |
{{Other uses|Chat Noir (disambiguation)}} |
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[[Image:Théophile-Alexandre Steinlen - Tournée du Chat Noir de Rodolphe Salis (Tour of Rodolphe Salis' Chat Noir) - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|[[Théophile Steinlen]]'s 1896 poster advertising a tour to other cities ("coming soon") of |
[[Image:Théophile-Alexandre Steinlen - Tournée du Chat Noir de Rodolphe Salis (Tour of Rodolphe Salis' Chat Noir) - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|[[Théophile Steinlen]]'s 1896 poster advertising a tour to other cities ("coming soon") of {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir|italic=no}}'s troupe of cabaret entertainers]] |
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'''Le Chat Noir''' ({{IPA |
'''{{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir|italic=no}}''' ({{IPA|fr|lə ʃa nwaʁ}}; [[French language|French]] for "The Black Cat") was a 19th century entertainment establishment in the bohemian [[Montmartre]] district of [[Paris]]. It was opened on 18 November 1881 at 84 [[Boulevard de Rochechouart]] by [[impresario]] [[Rodolphe Salis]], and closed in 1897 not long after Salis' death. |
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{{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} is thought to be the first modern [[cabaret]]:<ref>"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}}</ref> 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]]'') to London's ''[[The Cave of the Golden Calf|Cave of the Golden Calf]]''. |
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In its heyday it was a bustling nightclub that was part artist [[Salon (gathering)|salon]], part rowdy [[music hall]]. From 1882 to 1895 the cabaret published a weekly magazine with the same name, featuring literary writings, news from the cabaret and Montmartre, poetry, and political satire.{{sfn|Vogel|2009|p=30}}<ref>Cate, Spirit of Montmartre</ref> It was the subject of an iconic [[Théophile Steinlen]] [[poster]] in 1896. |
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==Early history== |
==Early history== |
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The cabaret began by renting the cheapest accommodations it could find, a small two-room site located at 84 Boulevard Rochechouart, which is now commemorated by a historical plaque. [[File:Le Chat Noir Plaque.png|thumb|Le Chat Noir Cabaret original location at 84, Boulevard Rochechouart]] |
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⚫ | 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 – so they drink only wine"), 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 "[[Rabies|rabid]]" zeal with which they advocated their sociopolitical and aesthetic agendas. Goudeau's club met in his house on the ''[[Rive Gauche (Paris)|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 on rue de Laval (now rue Victor-Massé).<ref name=":0">{{cite web|url=http://www.bonjourparis.com/story/chat-noir-montmartre-cabaret/ |title=Le Chat Noir: Historic Montmartre Cabaret |website=Bonjour Paris |first=Anna |last=Meakin |access-date=2014-06-05}}</ref> |
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== Second site == |
== Second site == |
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⚫ | {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} soon outgrew its first site. In June 1885, three and a half years after opening, it moved to larger accommodations at 12 Rue Victor-Massé. The new venue was the sumptuous old private mansion of the Belgian painter [[Alfred Stevens (painter)|Alfred Stevens]], who, at Salis' request, transformed it into a "fashionable country inn" with the help of the architect Maurice Isabey. |
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[[Image:Le Chat noir 1929.jpg|thumb|Second location of ''Le Chat Noir'' was ''12 Rue Victor-Masse'' Paris (image from 1929)]] |
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Soon a growing crowd of poets and singers was gathering at {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}}, which offered an ideal venue and opportunity to practice their acts before fellow performers, guests and colleagues. |
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⚫ | Le Chat Noir soon outgrew its first site. |
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With exaggerated, ironic politeness, Salis most often played the role of conférencier (post-performance lecturer, or master of ceremonies). It was here that the ''[[Incoherents|Salon des Arts Incohérents]]'' (Salon of Incoherent Arts), |
With exaggerated, ironic politeness, Salis most often played the role of ''conférencier'' (post-performance lecturer, or master of ceremonies). It was here that the ''[[Incoherents|Salon des Arts Incohérents]]'' (Salon of Incoherent Arts), [[Shadow play#Europe|shadow plays]], and comic monologues got their start. |
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Famous men and women to patronize |
Famous men and women to patronize {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} included [[Jane Avril]], [[Franc-Nohain]], [[Adolphe Willette]], [[Caran d'Ache]], [[André Gill]], [[Émile Cohl]], [[Paul Bilhaud]], Sarah England, [[Paul Verlaine]], [[Henri Rivière (painter)|Henri Rivière]], [[Claude Debussy]], [[Erik Satie]], [[Charles Cros]], [[Jules Laforgue]], [[Yvette Guilbert]], Charles Moréas, [[Albert Samain]], Louis Le Cardonnel, [[Ernest Alexandre Honoré Coquelin|Coquelin Cadet]], [[Emile Goudeau]], [[Alphonse Allais]], [[Maurice Rollinat]], [[Charles Maurice Donnay|Maurice Donnay]], Armand Masson, [[Aristide Bruant]], [[Théodore Botrel]], [[Paul Signac]], Porfirio Pires, [[August Strindberg]], [[George Auriol]], [[Marie Krysinska]], and [[Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec]]. |
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The death of Rodolphe Salis in 1897 spelled the end of {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}}. By that time the fascination with Montmartre had already diminished, and Salis had already disposed of many of the club's assets and facilities. Soon after Salis' death, the artists dispersed, and {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} slowly disappeared. |
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== Last location == |
== Last location == |
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[[Image:Le Chat |
[[Image:Le Chat noir 1929.jpg|thumb|Third location of {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} at ''68 Boulevard de Clichy'' Paris (image from 1929)]] |
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[[File:Cafe Le Chat Noir c.1920.jpg|thumb|{{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} {{Circa|1920}}]] |
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[[Image:Le Chat Noir in 2007.jpg|thumb|Modern appearance of the last site of {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} at ''68, Boulevard de Clichy'']] |
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Ten years later, in 1907, Jehan Chargot opened an eponymous café in an effort to resurrect, modernize, and continue the work of his illustrious predecessor. This new ''Chat Noir'', located at 68, boulevard de Clichy, remained popular into the 1920s.{{sfn|Nichols|2002|p=119}} |
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The cabaret would later move to 68, Boulevard de Clichy. |
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Today a neon sign which incorporates Steinlen's iconic Chat Noir image is on display at 68, Boulevard de Clichy, now the site of a hotel by the same name. |
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⚫ | The last shadow play by Salis' |
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In December 1899 [[Henri Fursy]] opened his ''Boîte à Fursy'' cabaret in the former Chat Noir hôtel on rue Victor-Massé. |
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⚫ | Other cabarets successfully copied and adapted the model established by {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}}.{{sfn|Whiting|1999|p=52}} In December 1899, [[Henri Fursy]] opened his ''Boîte à Fursy'' cabaret in the former ''Chat Noir'' hotel on rue Victor-Massé. He claimed to have inherited the mantle of Salis, and said his cabaret "has thanks to Fursy become once again the goal of all who 'climb Montmartre' to hear their favorite ''chansonniers'' (singers)..."{{sfn|Whiting|1999|p=53}} |
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Le Chat Noir on Boulevard de Clichy remained popular into the 1920s.{{sfn|Nichols|2002|p=119}} |
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Today, this last location has been transformed into a modern boutique hotel, with a few nods to its raucous past. |
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==Shadow play== |
==Shadow play== |
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From its opening, {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} was thought of as a meeting point for artists, with an interior design in the style of [[Louis XIII of France|Louis XIII]]. In the beginning, poets, musicians, writers and singers performed on the stage, but they were quickly replaced as the shadow play medium developed at {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} and spread from there. The cabaret is still remembered for these. |
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⚫ | Under the management of [[Rodolphe Salis]], |
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The shadow play had already been established in France in the 18th century and made popular by [[François Dominique Séraphin|Dominique Séraphin]], but it had disappeared from the art world during the 19th century. {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} was the major cause of the shadow play's renewed popularity in France, as [[Lotte Reiniger]] was in Germany by her linking of such shows to the cinema by creating characters from cutout figures and projecting them as shadow puppets. |
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The birth of the shadow plays in {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} took place in a peculiar way. By the end of 1885, the painter Henry Sommer and the illustrator [[George Auriol]] built a puppet theater there, intended for adults-only performances. One day [[Henri Rivière (painter)|Henri Rivière]] placed a white napkin in front of the opening of the small puppet theater and moved a cardboard puppet behind the white screen with lighting from behind, while Jules Jouy sang, accompanying himself on piano. This was the first shadow play in {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}}. |
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In 1887 Rivière replaced the puppet theater with a proper shadow theater, with a screen 44 inches high and 55 inches wide, held by a huge frame. Artists such as cartoonist [[Adolphe Willette]], painter [[Caran d'Ache]], [[Henri Rivière (painter)|Henri Rivière]] and [[George Auriol]] created the cabaret's shadow plays. They used zinc to create the silhouettes of a few characters (although initially they used cardboard), which they used as puppets, projecting their shadow onto a white screen which was illuminated from behind with electric lights. This was an evolutionary development in the art of shadow plays. |
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⚫ | |||
Writers who frequented the club wrote stories for the shadow theater that [[Rodolphe Salis]], the owner of the cabaret, would read out loud after the performance. Thanks to the collaboration of many of the artists of that time, the stories were accompanied by some very complex colour, sound, and movement effects, making them more dynamic and exciting, as well as piano accompaniment. |
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Over an eleven-year span these plays were presented nightly in the Shadow Theater, totaling more than forty. The Montmartre museum still has a few zinc shapes that had been used in the plays. |
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The spread of this type of show became successful because of [[Théophile Steinlen]]'s poster announcing "''la tournée du Chat Noir avec Rodolphe Salis"'', a Shadow Theater tour from {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}}. |
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{{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} made many tours with the Shadow Theater. These started in 1892, basically around France during the summer, although Salis and the company went to Tunis, Algeria, and other French-speaking countries such as Belgium. Some of the artists who played in Salis' performances became so famous that they founded their own cabarets or shows. {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} was supposed to have its last show and tour in January 1897, since Salis died just after that. However, it was his wife who took the charge of the cabaret and organised other tours. During these shows, Dominique Bonnaud replaced Salis and became the storyteller. Although he did it well, the quality of the performances declined. By then, other establishments had become popular by copying {{Lang|fr|Le Chat noir}}{{'}}s techniques, shows and decor. |
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⚫ | Under the management of [[Rodolphe Salis]], {{Lang|fr|Le Chat noir}} produced 45<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/events/exhibitions/in-the-musee-dorsay/exhibitions-in-the-musee-dorsay/article/le-cabaret-du-chat-noir-1881-1897-6768.html?cHash=2525e3a5cd|title=Le Cabaret du Chat Noir (1881-1897)|publisher=Musée d'Orsay|access-date=10 February 2017}}</ref> ''théatre d'ombres'' ([[shadow play]]) shows between 1885 and 1896, as the art became more popular in Europe. Behind a screen on the second floor of the establishment, the artist [[Henri Rivière (painter)|Henri Rivière]] worked with up to 20 assistants in a large, [[oxy-hydrogen]] backlit performance area and used a double optical [[Magic lantern|lantern]] to project backgrounds. Originally cardboard cutouts were used, but zinc figures took their place after 1887. Various artists took part in the creation, including [[Steinlen]], [[Adolphe Willette]] and [[Albert Robida]]. [[Caran d'Ache]] designed around 50 cutouts for the very popular 1888 show ''L'Epopée''. |
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*French-Colombian street artist [[Chanoir]] chose his nickname in reference to the poster. |
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*A poster of {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} may also be seen prominently in the movie ''[[Breakfast at Tiffany's (film)|Breakfast at Tiffany's]]'' hanging on the wall over the staircase. |
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*{{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} was referenced in ''[[Sakura Taisen]]''. |
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*A {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} painting is noticeably a background piece in the movie ''[[The Secret Life of Pets]]''. |
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*A poster of {{Lang|fr|Le Chat Noir}} is seen hanging in the bedroom of Claire Carlin, played by [[Maude Apatow]], in the 2020 film ''[[The King of Staten Island]]''. |
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*The name Chat Noir is taken by the French superhero "Chat Noir" in the popular French kid's television show [[Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir]]. |
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== References == |
== References == |
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{{ |
{{Reflist}} |
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{{Commons category|Le Chat Noir}} |
{{Commons category|Le Chat Noir}} |
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===Sources=== |
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{{refbegin}} |
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*{{cite book|ref=harv |
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*{{cite book|ref=harv |
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|year=2002|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-23736-0}} |
|year=2002|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-23736-0}} |
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*{{cite book |
*{{cite book|last=Vogel|first=Shane|title=The Scene of Harlem Cabaret: Race, Sexuality, Performance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0KhrX5Q4_AoC&pg=PA30|year=2009|publisher=U of Chicago P|isbn=9780226862521|page=30}} |
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*{{cite book|ref=harv |
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|date=1999-02-18|publisher=Clarendon Press|isbn=978-0-19-158452-7}} |
|date=1999-02-18|publisher=Clarendon Press|isbn=978-0-19-158452-7}} |
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*{{cite book|last=Crépiat|first=Caroline|title=Le Chat Noir exposed : The absurdist spirit behind a 19th Century French cabaret|year=2021|publisher=Black Scat Books|isbn=978-1-7356159-6-7|page=182}} |
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{{refend}} |
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==Further reading== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb34427442r/date ''Le Chat Noir'' |
*[http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb34427442r/date ''Le Chat Noir'' 1882-1891] at [[Bibliothèque nationale de France|BnF]] |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Chat Noir}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Chat Noir}} |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:1897 disestablishments in France]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:French companies established in 1881]] |
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[[Category:Companies disestablished in 1897]] |
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[[Category:1880s in Paris]] |
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[[Category:1890s in Paris]] |
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[[Category:Cabarets in Paris]] |
[[Category:Cabarets in Paris]] |
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[[Category:Montmartre]] |
[[Category:Montmartre]] |
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[[Category:Shadow play]] |
Latest revision as of 11:42, 21 August 2024
Le Chat Noir (French pronunciation: [lə ʃa nwaʁ]; French for "The Black Cat") was a 19th century entertainment establishment in the bohemian Montmartre district of Paris. It was opened on 18 November 1881 at 84 Boulevard de Rochechouart by impresario Rodolphe Salis, and closed in 1897 not long after Salis' death.
Le Chat Noir is thought to be the first modern cabaret:[1] 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) to London's Cave of the Golden Calf.
In its heyday it was a bustling nightclub that was part artist salon, part rowdy music hall. From 1882 to 1895 the cabaret published a weekly magazine with the same name, featuring literary writings, news from the cabaret and Montmartre, poetry, and political satire.[2][3] It was the subject of an iconic Théophile Steinlen poster in 1896.
Early history
[edit]The cabaret began by renting the cheapest accommodations it could find, a small two-room site located at 84 Boulevard Rochechouart, which is now commemorated 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 – so they drink only wine"), 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 on rue de Laval (now rue Victor-Massé).[4]
Second site
[edit]Le Chat Noir soon outgrew its first site. In June 1885, three and a half years after opening, it moved to larger accommodations at 12 Rue Victor-Massé. The new venue was the sumptuous old private mansion of the Belgian painter Alfred Stevens, who, at Salis' request, transformed it into a "fashionable country inn" with the help of the architect Maurice Isabey.
Soon a growing crowd of poets and singers was gathering at Le Chat Noir, which offered an ideal venue and opportunity to practice their acts before fellow performers, guests and colleagues.
With exaggerated, ironic politeness, Salis most often played the role of conférencier (post-performance lecturer, or master of ceremonies). It was here that the Salon des Arts Incohérents (Salon of Incoherent Arts), shadow plays, and comic monologues got their start.
Famous men and women to patronize Le Chat Noir included Jane Avril, Franc-Nohain, Adolphe Willette, Caran d'Ache, André Gill, Émile Cohl, Paul Bilhaud, Sarah England, Paul Verlaine, Henri Rivière, Claude Debussy, Erik Satie, Charles Cros, Jules Laforgue, Yvette Guilbert, Charles Moréas, Albert Samain, Louis Le Cardonnel, Coquelin Cadet, Emile Goudeau, Alphonse Allais, Maurice Rollinat, Maurice Donnay, Armand Masson, Aristide Bruant, Théodore Botrel, Paul Signac, Porfirio Pires, August Strindberg, George Auriol, Marie Krysinska, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
The last shadow play by Salis' company was staged in January 1897, after which Salis took the company on tour. Salis was talking of plans to move the cabaret to a location in Paris itself, but he died on 19 March 1897.
The death of Rodolphe Salis in 1897 spelled the end of Le Chat Noir. By that time the fascination with Montmartre had already diminished, and Salis had already disposed of many of the club's assets and facilities. Soon after Salis' death, the artists dispersed, and Le Chat Noir slowly disappeared.
Last location
[edit]Ten years later, in 1907, Jehan Chargot opened an eponymous café in an effort to resurrect, modernize, and continue the work of his illustrious predecessor. This new Chat Noir, located at 68, boulevard de Clichy, remained popular into the 1920s.[5]
Today a neon sign which incorporates Steinlen's iconic Chat Noir image is on display at 68, Boulevard de Clichy, now the site of a hotel by the same name.
Other cabarets successfully copied and adapted the model established by Le Chat Noir.[6] In December 1899, Henri Fursy opened his Boîte à Fursy cabaret in the former Chat Noir hotel on rue Victor-Massé. He claimed to have inherited the mantle of Salis, and said his cabaret "has thanks to Fursy become once again the goal of all who 'climb Montmartre' to hear their favorite chansonniers (singers)..."[7]
Shadow play
[edit]From its opening, Le Chat Noir was thought of as a meeting point for artists, with an interior design in the style of Louis XIII. In the beginning, poets, musicians, writers and singers performed on the stage, but they were quickly replaced as the shadow play medium developed at Le Chat Noir and spread from there. The cabaret is still remembered for these.
The shadow play had already been established in France in the 18th century and made popular by Dominique Séraphin, but it had disappeared from the art world during the 19th century. Le Chat Noir was the major cause of the shadow play's renewed popularity in France, as Lotte Reiniger was in Germany by her linking of such shows to the cinema by creating characters from cutout figures and projecting them as shadow puppets.
The birth of the shadow plays in Le Chat Noir took place in a peculiar way. By the end of 1885, the painter Henry Sommer and the illustrator George Auriol built a puppet theater there, intended for adults-only performances. One day Henri Rivière placed a white napkin in front of the opening of the small puppet theater and moved a cardboard puppet behind the white screen with lighting from behind, while Jules Jouy sang, accompanying himself on piano. This was the first shadow play in Le Chat Noir.
In 1887 Rivière replaced the puppet theater with a proper shadow theater, with a screen 44 inches high and 55 inches wide, held by a huge frame. Artists such as cartoonist Adolphe Willette, painter Caran d'Ache, Henri Rivière and George Auriol created the cabaret's shadow plays. They used zinc to create the silhouettes of a few characters (although initially they used cardboard), which they used as puppets, projecting their shadow onto a white screen which was illuminated from behind with electric lights. This was an evolutionary development in the art of shadow plays.
Writers who frequented the club wrote stories for the shadow theater that Rodolphe Salis, the owner of the cabaret, would read out loud after the performance. Thanks to the collaboration of many of the artists of that time, the stories were accompanied by some very complex colour, sound, and movement effects, making them more dynamic and exciting, as well as piano accompaniment.
Over an eleven-year span these plays were presented nightly in the Shadow Theater, totaling more than forty. The Montmartre museum still has a few zinc shapes that had been used in the plays.
The spread of this type of show became successful because of Théophile Steinlen's poster announcing "la tournée du Chat Noir avec Rodolphe Salis", a Shadow Theater tour from Le Chat Noir.
Le Chat Noir made many tours with the Shadow Theater. These started in 1892, basically around France during the summer, although Salis and the company went to Tunis, Algeria, and other French-speaking countries such as Belgium. Some of the artists who played in Salis' performances became so famous that they founded their own cabarets or shows. Le Chat Noir was supposed to have its last show and tour in January 1897, since Salis died just after that. However, it was his wife who took the charge of the cabaret and organised other tours. During these shows, Dominique Bonnaud replaced Salis and became the storyteller. Although he did it well, the quality of the performances declined. By then, other establishments had become popular by copying Le Chat noir's techniques, shows and decor.
Under the management of Rodolphe Salis, Le Chat noir produced 45[8] théatre d'ombres (shadow play) shows between 1885 and 1896, as the art became more popular in Europe. Behind a screen on the second floor of the establishment, the artist Henri Rivière worked with up to 20 assistants in a large, oxy-hydrogen backlit performance area and used a double optical lantern to project backgrounds. Originally cardboard cutouts were used, but zinc figures took their place after 1887. Various artists took part in the creation, including Steinlen, Adolphe Willette and Albert Robida. Caran d'Ache designed around 50 cutouts for the very popular 1888 show L'Epopée.
Cultural associations
[edit]- French-Colombian street artist Chanoir chose his nickname in reference to the poster.
- A poster of Le Chat Noir may be seen prominently in the crime scene photographs from the 2001 death of Kathleen Peterson.
- A poster of Le Chat Noir may also be seen prominently in the movie Breakfast at Tiffany's hanging on the wall over the staircase.
- Le Chat Noir is the name of the nightclub where Frank Sinatra and Natalie Wood rekindle their relationship, in the 1958 movie Kings Go Forth. There is also the famous cat painting with blinking eyes on the entrance wall.
- Le Chat Noir was referenced in Sakura Taisen.
- A Le Chat Noir painting is noticeably a background piece in the movie The Secret Life of Pets.
- A poster of Le Chat Noir is seen hanging in the bedroom of Claire Carlin, played by Maude Apatow, in the 2020 film The King of Staten Island.
- The name Chat Noir is taken by the French superhero "Chat Noir" in the popular French kid's television show Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir.
References
[edit]- ^ "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
- ^ Vogel 2009, p. 30.
- ^ Cate, Spirit of Montmartre
- ^ Meakin, Anna. "Le Chat Noir: Historic Montmartre Cabaret". Bonjour Paris. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
- ^ Nichols 2002, p. 119.
- ^ Whiting 1999, p. 52.
- ^ Whiting 1999, p. 53.
- ^ "Le Cabaret du Chat Noir (1881-1897)". Musée d'Orsay. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
Sources
[edit]- Nichols, Roger (2002). The Harlequin Years: Music in Paris, 1917-1929. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-23736-0. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
- Vogel, Shane (2009). The Scene of Harlem Cabaret: Race, Sexuality, Performance. U of Chicago P. p. 30. ISBN 9780226862521.
- Whiting, Steven Moore (18 February 1999). Satie the Bohemian : From Cabaret to Concert Hall: From Cabaret to Concert Hall. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-158452-7. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
- Crépiat, Caroline (2021). Le Chat Noir exposed : The absurdist spirit behind a 19th Century French cabaret. Black Scat Books. p. 182. ISBN 978-1-7356159-6-7.
Further reading
[edit]- Baldran, Jacqueline (2002). Paris, carrefour des arts et des lettres: 1880-1918. L'Harmattan. p. 62. ISBN 978-2-7475-3141-2.