Cabaret
is a form of entertainment featuring comedy, song, dance, and theatre, distinguished mainly by the performance venue — a restaurant or nightclub with a stage for performances and the audience sitting at tables (often dining or drinking) watching the performance being introduced by a master of ceremonies, or MC.
Cabaret also refers to a Mediterranean-style brothel — a bar with tables and women who mingle with and entertain the clientele. Traditionally these establishments can also feature some form of stage entertainment: often singers & dancers.
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French cabaret
The first cabaret was opened in 1881 in
Montmartre,
Paris:
Rodolphe Salís' "cabaret artistique." Shortly after it was founded, it was renamed
Le Chat Noir (The Black Cat). It became a locale in which up-and-coming cabaret artists could try their new acts.
The
Moulin Rouge
, built in 1889 in the
red-light district of
Pigalle near Montmartre, is famous for the large red imitation windmill on its roof.
The
Folies-Bergère
continued to attract a large number of people even though it was more expensive than other cabarets. People felt comfortable at the cabaret: They did not have to take off their hat, could talk, eat, and smoke when they wanted to, etc. They did not have to stick to the usual rules of society.
At the
Folies-Bergère
, as in many
cafés-concerts
, there were a variety of acts: singers, dancers, jugglers, and clowns.
Le Lido
, on the Champs-Elysées has been a venue of the finest shows with the most famous names since 1946 including
Edith Piaf,
Laurel & Hardy,
Shirley MacLaine,
Elton John,
Marlene Dietrich,
Maurice Chevalier, and
Noel Coward among them.
American Cabaret
In the United States, cabaret diverged into several different styles of performance mostly due to the influence of
Jazz Music. Chicago cabaret focused intensely on the larger band ensembles and reached its peak in the
speakeasies, and
steakhouses (like
The Palm) of the
Prohibition Era.
New York cabaret never developed to feature a great deal of social commentary. When New York cabarets featured jazz, they tended to focus on famous vocalists like
Nina Simone,
Bette Midler,
Eartha Kitt,
Peggy Lee, and
Hildegarde rather than instrumental musicians.
Cabaret in the United States began to disappear in the sixties, due to the rising popularity of
rock concert shows and television
variety shows. The art form still survives in two popular entertainment formats:
Stand-up comedy and in the
drag show performances.
Cabaret is currently undergoing a renaissance of sorts in the United States, particularly in New Orleans, Seattle and Portland, as new generations of performers reinterpret the old forms in both music and theatre.
Dutch cabaret
thumb during a cabaret show in 2007
In the Netherlands cabaret or
kleinkunst
is a popular form of entertainment. In its capital city Amsterdam, there is the Kleinkunstacademie (English: Cabaret Academy). It is often a mixture of (stand up) comedy, theatre, and music.
In the twentieth century, 'the big three' are
Wim Sonneveld,
Wim Kan, and
Toon Hermans. Other popular artists are
Youp van 't Hek,
Freek de Jonge,
Herman Finkers,
Brigitte Kaandorp,
Bert Visscher,
Hans Liberg,
Hans Teeuwen, and
Theo Maassen.
Famous cabarets
- The Butterfly Club in Melbourne, Australia
- Le Lido, Moulin Rouge and Lapin Agile in Paris, France
- , Famous international cabaret & burlesque agents and producers
- Cabaret Voltaire in Zürich
- Tropicana in Havana, Cuba
- The Blue Angel in New York, New York
- , Cabaret variety night in Sydney & Mebourne Australia
- Can Can in Seattle, Washington
- Bistro by the Sea in Matunuck, Rhode Island
- Metro Chicago in Chicago, Illinois
See also
- Burlesque
- Café Society
- Cabaret Paradis
- Revue
- Striptease
- Le Scandal Cabaret
- Cabaret (film)