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The '''Café des Ambassadeurs''', also known as '''Les Ambassadeurs''' or '''Les Ambass'''', was a ] located in the ] district, at 1 Avenue Gabriel, in the ], which opened in 1857 and closed in 1929. ''Les Ambassadeurs'' had its heyday during the ] in Paris when the café-concert became a regular destination of some of the best known figures of art and the ] in Paris. Painters such as ] and ] portrayed artists and visitors at the ''caf'conc'' and almost every ] and ] entertainer that mattered in those days performed in ''"Les Ambass"''. The '''Café des Ambassadeurs''', also known as '''Les Ambassadeurs''' or '''Les Ambass'''', was a ] located in the ] district, at 1 Avenue Gabriel, in the ], which opened around 1830 and closed in 1929. ''Les Ambassadeurs'' had its heyday during the ] in Paris when the café-concert became a regular destination of some of the best known figures of art and the ] in Paris. Painters such as ] and ] portrayed artists and visitors at the ''caf'conc'' and almost every ] and ] entertainer that mattered in those days performed in ''Les Ambass' ''. In the 1920s, the venue was transformed into an American-style music hall, which had American and African-American artists, singers, dancers and jazz orchestras performing to attract the growing number of American tourists in Paris.


==Early years== ==Early years==
The ''Café des Ambassadeurs'' was founded in 1764 as an open-air café near the hotels designed to house foreign ambassadors in Paris,{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}} built to the designs of the architect ].<ref name="cerises">{{cite web |title=L'Alcazar d'été et les Ambassadeurs |url=http://www.dutempsdescerisesauxfeuillesmortes.net/textes_divers/cafes_concerts_et_music_halls/alcazar_d_ete_et_ambassadeurs.htm |website=Du Temps des cerises aux Feuilles mortes |access-date=20 December 2024 |language=fr}}</ref> In 1772, a small pavilion was added, and around 1830, it became a '']'' when a few singers were allowed to entertain the public on a more or less improvised stage. Shortly before 1843, a new pavilion replaced the existing one, this time with an outdoor stage and in 1848 a roofed bandstand to protect the artists was added.{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}}<ref name="cerises" /> The ''Café des Ambassadeurs'' was founded in 1764 as an open-air café near the hotels designed to house foreign ambassadors in Paris,{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}} built to the designs of the architect ].<ref name="cerises">{{cite web |title=L'Alcazar d'été et les Ambassadeurs |url=http://www.dutempsdescerisesauxfeuillesmortes.net/textes_divers/cafes_concerts_et_music_halls/alcazar_d_ete_et_ambassadeurs.htm |website=Du Temps des cerises aux Feuilles mortes |access-date=20 December 2024 |language=fr}}</ref> In 1772, a small pavilion was added, and ''Les Ambassadeurs'' became an elegant meeting place where people could listen to music and drink, due to the improvements of the Champs-Élysées over the years.{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=32 and Annex III (pp. 303–305)}} Around 1830, it became a '']'' when a few singers and jugglers were allowed to entertain the public on a more or less improvised stage.{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=32 and Annex III (pp. 303–305)}}

In 1840, with the installation of ] on the Champs-Élysées, ''Les Ambassadeurs'' became a summer café-concert, whose makeshift stage became a kiosk surrounded by greenery, with tables and chairs set up in front of it. The kiosk was replaced by a more comfortable pavilion with an outdoor stage designed by ] shortly before 1843, and in 1848 a roofed bandstand to protect the artists was added.{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}}<ref name="cerises" />{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=32 and Annex III (pp. 303–305)}} In the 1860s, the Champs-Élysées became a fashionable place to stroll, and ''Les Ambassadeurs'' was the busiest of the twenty or so cafés on the avenue.{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=32 and Annex III (pp. 303–305)}}

''Les Ambassadeurs'' was situated in one of the most beautiful districts of Paris and in the open air and had the distinct advantage in the summer season of fresh air, whereas the other stuffy indoor, gaslit establishments, generally badly arranged from the point of view of ventilation, became suffocatingly insupportable in the summer months.{{Sfn|Caradec|Weill|1980|p=}} Most closed their doors for the summer season and the clientele moved to the ], where the cafconc' stars entertained under the trees in the lamplight at the summer ''Alcazar'' and ''Les Ambassadeurs''.{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}}


Unintentionally, ''Les Ambassadeurs'' had a role in organising songwriters and composers and their fight for their rights. In 1847, three authors and composers of music, ], ] and ] refused to pay for their drinks because their music was played there without them receiving any royalties. They were sued, but they in turn took the manager to court. This was the beginning of the ] (''Société des Auteurs, Compositeurs et Éditeurs de Musique'').<ref name="cerises" /><ref name="mon280909">{{cite news |title=Ernest Bourget, défenseur du droit d'auteur, par Jacques-Marie Vaslin |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2009/09/28/ernest-bourget-defenseur-du-droit-d-auteur-par-jacques-marie-vaslin_1245995_3232.html |access-date=20 December 2024 |work=] |date=28 September 2009 |language=fr}}</ref> Unintentionally, ''Les Ambassadeurs'' had a role in organising songwriters and composers and their fight for their rights. In 1847, three authors and composers of music, ], ] and ] refused to pay for their drinks because their music was played there without them receiving any royalties. They were sued, but they in turn took the manager to court. This was the beginning of the ] (''Société des Auteurs, Compositeurs et Éditeurs de Musique'').<ref name="cerises" /><ref name="mon280909">{{cite news |title=Ernest Bourget, défenseur du droit d'auteur, par Jacques-Marie Vaslin |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2009/09/28/ernest-bourget-defenseur-du-droit-d-auteur-par-jacques-marie-vaslin_1245995_3232.html |access-date=20 December 2024 |work=] |date=28 September 2009 |language=fr}}</ref>


==Heyday during the Belle Époque== ==Heyday during the Belle Époque==
] ca. 1882]]
During the 1850s and 1860s, the reputation of the establishment gradually surpassed that of the nearby '']'', because although it presented more or less the same acts, it was more chic and attracted a more upmarket clientele.<ref name="cerises" /> With the arrival of Pierre Ducarre, a new director (1874 to 1902), a restaurant was added with the best chef in Paris, which transformed the place into a rendez-vous for gastronomes.{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}} The café-concert had its heyday during the ] in Paris when ''Les Ambassadeurs'' became a regular destination of some of the best known figures of art and the ]. During the 1850s and 1860s, the reputation of the establishment gradually surpassed that of the nearby '']'', because although it presented more or less the same acts, it was more chic and attracted a more upmarket clientele.<ref name="cerises" /> With the arrival of Pierre Ducarre, a new director (1874 to 1902), a restaurant was added with the best chef in Paris, which transformed the place into a rendez-vous for gastronomes.{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}} (From 1882, Ducarre also was in charge of the ''Alcazar d'Été''.{{Sfn|Gaillard|1990|p=}}) The café-concert had its heyday during the ] in Paris when ''Les Ambassadeurs'' became a regular destination of some of the best known figures of art and the ], and almost every ] and ] entertainer that mattered in those days performed there, such as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and last but not least ] and ].<ref name="cerises" />{{Sfn|Gaillard|1990|p=}}{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}}

''Les Ambassadeurs'' was situated in one of the most beautiful districts of Paris and in the open air and had the distinct advantage in the summer season of fresh air, whereas the other stuffy indoor, gaslit establishments, generally badly arranged from the point of view of ventilation, became suffocatingly insupportable in the summer months.{{Sfn|Caradec|Weill|1980|p=}} Most closed their doors for the summer season and the clientele moved to the ], where the cafconc' stars entertained under the trees in the lamplight at the summer ''Alcazar'' and ''Les Ambassadeurs''.{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}}


] ]
] ]
Painters such as ] (who painted the ] and ] here) and ] portrayed visitors at the café-concert and almost every ] and ] entertainer that mattered in those days performed there, such as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and last but not least ] and ].<ref name="cerises" /> Painters such as ] (who painted the ] and ] here) and ] portrayed visitors at the venue. The chansonnier Aristide Bruant, a close friend of Toulouse-Lautrec, insisted that Ducarre should commission a poster of him by Toulouse-Lautrec when he moved to ''Les Ambassadeurs'' in 1892. Toulouse-Lautrec painted a romantic and imposing picture of Bruant, with his cape thrown over his shoulders and his famous red scarf around his neck. Ducarre was appalled and ordered to take it down, but Bruant threatened to not perform if he did so. Instead, he compelled the director to cover the whole venue and stage with the poster. When the success of the chansonnier, and of his image, was overwhelming, Ducarre admitted that he had been wrong. Bruant forced him to display the now iconic poster all over Paris.{{Sfn|Néret|1999|pp=}}

Of the many artist, Yvette Guilbert deserves special attention. Her debut in 1892 changed the atmosphere at the Ambass' overnight. Before her, the audience was noisy, the artists often heckled and bullied. With Guilbert, singers were finally able to perform in peace. For eight years, every summer, she returned to ''Les Ambassadeurs''.{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}} In 1893, she urged Pierre Ducarre to put a roof over the garden, not only to improve acoustics, but also so that the café-concert could remain open even on rainy days.{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=32 and Annex III (pp. 303–305)}}{{Sfn|Gaillard|1990|p=}}{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}}

In 1902, the ''Ambassadeurs'' and the ''Alcazar d'Été'' changed management. Ducarre, well into his seventies, felt his strength failing him and ended his reign. He was succeeded by his son-in-law, a doctor called Pinard. With little talent for show business, he had to call on two 'kings' of the Paris nightlife: Eugène Cornuché (]), creator of the famous restaurant ], and Henri Chauveau to manage the place artistically.{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=32 and Annex III (pp. 303–305)}}{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}} During the winter of 1903, the restoration and conversion of the Hittorf pavilion led to some regrettable mutilations. The sole managers from 1912, Cornuché and Chauveau led ''Les Ambassadeurs'' until 1923.{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}} Inspiring and following the emerging trend in Paris between 1900 and the First World War, they modeled the existing extravagant ] into the breath-taking, exotic, fast-moving spectacle that was to reach its peak in the ] in the 1920s, while abandoning the café-concert formula to become a music hall.{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=32 and Annex III (pp. 303–305)}}{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}}

==American-style music hall and closure==
]
The outbreak of the ] in 1914 changed everything. ''Les Ambassadeurs'' reopened in the summer of 1915 with the stars of the moment, but the Belle Époque atmosphere was gone. After several changes in the management, the director of the Casino Kursaal of ], Edmond Sayag, took over the lease of the venue in 1925, with the ambition of transforming the venue into a sumptuous American-style music hall. The City of Paris, which owned the property, allowed this to happen. Hittorf's beautiful façade was initially preserved, as was the stage, albeit modernised, but the auditorium changed completely. The armchairs were replaced by a dance floor around which tables and chairs were set up; behind the boxes, a gallery; on the first floor, a balcony; the whole profusely flowered by heavy beds of roses, wisteria, stylised plants and intoxicatingly fragrant flowers, stretching up to the roof, giving the place the allure of a garden from ], sparkling with luminous fountains. It was inaugurated in May 1926 as the ''Restaurant-Théâtre des Ambassadeurs''.{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}}{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=43}}


]in September 1926.]]
The chansonnier Aristide Bruant, a close friend of Toulouse-Lautrec, contributed to the breakthrough of the artist. He insisted that Ducarre should commission a poster of him by Toulouse-Lautrec when he moved to ''Les Ambassadeurs'' in 1892. Toulouse-Lautrec painted a romantic and imposing picture of Bruant, with his cape thrown over his shoulders and his famous red scarf around his neck. Ducarre was appalled and ordered to take it down, but Bruant threatened to not perform if he did so. Instead, he compelled the director to cover the whole venue and stage with the poster. When the success of the chansonnier, and of his image, was overwhelming, Ducarre admitted that he had been wrong. Bruant forced him to display the now iconic poster all over Paris.{{Sfn|Néret|1999|pp=}}
The new formula lasted until 1929, and was a real success, mainly due to the arrival in France of excellent American and African American artists, singers, dancers and jazz orchestras, to attract the growing number of American tourists.{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}}{{Sfn|Levenstein|1998|pp=}}{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=207}} (Each summer from 1926 to 1929, well over a quarter of a million Americans came to Paris.{{Sfn|Levenstein|1998|p=}}) Following the success of ] in the ''Revue Nègre'' in 1925, ''Les Ambassadeurs'' imported ], ] and ] with ] and the ] in May 1926,<ref name="jac1">{{cite web |title=The Ambassadeur Show 1926 |url=https://www.jazzageclub.com/the-ambassadeur-show-1926/1975/ |website=Jazz Age Club |access-date=27 December 2024 |date=8 August 2011}}</ref><ref>, Bibliothèque nationale de France, département Arts du spectacle, 8-RO-18740</ref> ] in 1927, and ]'s ''Ambassador's show'' (''La Revue des Ambassadeurs''){{Sfn|McBrien|1998|p=}} and ] in 1928.<ref name="jac2">{{cite web |title=The Ambassadeur Show 1928 |url=https://www.jazzageclub.com/the-ambassadeurs-show-1928/2091/ |website=Jazz Age Club |access-date=27 December 2024 |date=20 October 2011}}</ref>{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}}{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}} Despite the recognition for the quality of the show, there was also disapproval for the, by French standards, exorbitantly high prices for the show and food and drink, growing discomfort with American tourists in Paris and the fact that the performance was in English and not French, in combination with a certain nostalgia for the traditional cafe-concert, which drew criticism in the French press.{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=214}}{{Sfn|Levenstein|1998|p=; }}


In the long run, however, it proved too expensive to ensure the profitability of the operation, in particular with the steady rise in the French franc to the U.S. dollar from 1927, which made Paris less attractive for American tourists and residents. The ] and the ] exacerbated the problem.{{Sfn|Costille|2016|p=215}}{{Sfn|Levenstein|1998|p=}} The venue closed in 1929 when it was completely demolished and replaced by a theatre built in 1931, also called ''Les Ambassadeurs'', and a ].{{Sfn|Sallée|Chauveau|1985|p=}}{{Sfn|Leslie|1978|p=}}
==Decline and closure==
The outbreak of the ] in 1914 changed everything. ''Les Ambassadeurs'' reopened in the summer of 1915 with the stars of the moment, but the Belle Époque atmosphere was gone. As the clientele was becoming increasingly scarce, the director of the ''Casino Kursaal'' of ], Edmond Sayag, decided in 1925 to transform the place into an American-style ], a play garden, a restaurant-theatre, a theatre and then, finally, into anything and everything.<ref name="cerises" /> It closed in 1929 when it was demolished and replaced by a théâtre built in 1931, also called ''Les Ambassadeurs'', and a ].


==References== ==References==
Line 59: Line 70:
* {{cite book |last1=Caradec |first1=François |last2=Weill |first2=Alain |title=Le café-concert |date=1980 |publisher=Hachette/Massin |location=Paris |isbn=2-01-006940-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/lecafeconcert0000cara/ |language=fr}} * {{cite book |last1=Caradec |first1=François |last2=Weill |first2=Alain |title=Le café-concert |date=1980 |publisher=Hachette/Massin |location=Paris |isbn=2-01-006940-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/lecafeconcert0000cara/ |language=fr}}
* {{cite thesis |last1=Costille |first1=Marine |title=Spectacles au music-hall. Le cas de quatre salles parisiennes, 1917-1940 |journal=Histoire |date=2016 |doi= |url=https://dumas.ccsd.cnrs.fr/dumas-01417493/document |language=fr}} * {{cite thesis |last1=Costille |first1=Marine |title=Spectacles au music-hall. Le cas de quatre salles parisiennes, 1917-1940 |journal=Histoire |date=2016 |doi= |url=https://dumas.ccsd.cnrs.fr/dumas-01417493/document |language=fr}}
* {{cite book |last1=Gaillard |first1=Marc |title=Les belles heures des Champs-Élysées |date=1990 |publisher=Martelle editions |location=Amiens |isbn=2-87890-050-2 |url=https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k3331060q |language=fr}}
* {{cite book |last1=Leslie |first1=Peter |title=A Hard Act to Follow: A Music Hall Review |date=1978 |publisher=Paddington Press |location=New York |isbn=0-7092-0466-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/hardacttofollow00lesl/}} * {{cite book |last1=Leslie |first1=Peter |title=A Hard Act to Follow: A Music Hall Review |date=1978 |publisher=Paddington Press |location=New York |isbn=0-7092-0466-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/hardacttofollow00lesl/}}
*{{cite book |last1=Néret |first1=Gilles |title=Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, 1864-1901 |date=1999 |publisher=Benedikt Taschen Verlag |location=Köln |isbn=3-8228-6524-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/henridetoulousel0000nere/}} * {{cite book |last1=Levenstein |first1=Harvey A. |title=Seductive Journey: American Tourists in France from Jefferson to the Jazz Age |date=1998 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |location=Chicago |isbn=0-226-47376-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/seductivejourney00leve/ |access-date=28 December 2024}}
* {{cite book | last=McBrien | first=William | year=1998 | title=Cole Porter: A Biography | location=New York | publisher=Alfred A. Knopf | isbn=0-394-58235-7 | url=https://archive.org/details/coleporterbiogra00mcbr_0 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Néret |first1=Gilles |title=Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, 1864-1901 |date=1999 |publisher=Benedikt Taschen Verlag |location=Köln |isbn=3-8228-6524-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/henridetoulousel0000nere/}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sallée |first1=André |last2=Chauveau |first2=Philippe |title=Music-hall et café-concert |date=1985 |publisher=Bordas |location=Paris |isbn=2-04-015378-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zNX_EAAAQBAJ |language=fr}}


{{Commons category|Café des Ambassadeurs}} {{Commons category|Café des Ambassadeurs}}

Latest revision as of 22:11, 28 December 2024

Former café-concert in Paris, France
Café des Ambassadeurs
Café-Concert at Les Ambassadeurs by Edgar Degas, 1876–77
Café des Ambassadeurs is located in ParisCafé des AmbassadeursCafé des AmbassadeursLocation within Paris
Address1 Avenue Gabriel
8th arrondissement of Paris
France
Coordinates48°52′02″N 2°19′18″E / 48.86732°N 2.32155°E / 48.86732; 2.32155
DesignationCafé-concert
Opened1830
Closed1929

The Café des Ambassadeurs, also known as Les Ambassadeurs or Les Ambass', was a café-concert located in the Champs-Élysées district, at 1 Avenue Gabriel, in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, which opened around 1830 and closed in 1929. Les Ambassadeurs had its heyday during the Belle Époque in Paris when the café-concert became a regular destination of some of the best known figures of art and the demi-monde in Paris. Painters such as Edgar Degas and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec portrayed artists and visitors at the caf'conc and almost every vaudeville and music hall entertainer that mattered in those days performed in Les Ambass' . In the 1920s, the venue was transformed into an American-style music hall, which had American and African-American artists, singers, dancers and jazz orchestras performing to attract the growing number of American tourists in Paris.

Early years

The Café des Ambassadeurs was founded in 1764 as an open-air café near the hotels designed to house foreign ambassadors in Paris, built to the designs of the architect Ange-Jacques Gabriel. In 1772, a small pavilion was added, and Les Ambassadeurs became an elegant meeting place where people could listen to music and drink, due to the improvements of the Champs-Élysées over the years. Around 1830, it became a café chantant when a few singers and jugglers were allowed to entertain the public on a more or less improvised stage.

In 1840, with the installation of gas lighting on the Champs-Élysées, Les Ambassadeurs became a summer café-concert, whose makeshift stage became a kiosk surrounded by greenery, with tables and chairs set up in front of it. The kiosk was replaced by a more comfortable pavilion with an outdoor stage designed by Jacques Hittorff shortly before 1843, and in 1848 a roofed bandstand to protect the artists was added. In the 1860s, the Champs-Élysées became a fashionable place to stroll, and Les Ambassadeurs was the busiest of the twenty or so cafés on the avenue.

Les Ambassadeurs was situated in one of the most beautiful districts of Paris and in the open air and had the distinct advantage in the summer season of fresh air, whereas the other stuffy indoor, gaslit establishments, generally badly arranged from the point of view of ventilation, became suffocatingly insupportable in the summer months. Most closed their doors for the summer season and the clientele moved to the Champs Elysees, where the cafconc' stars entertained under the trees in the lamplight at the summer Alcazar and Les Ambassadeurs.

Unintentionally, Les Ambassadeurs had a role in organising songwriters and composers and their fight for their rights. In 1847, three authors and composers of music, Paul Henrion, Victor Parizot and Ernest Bourget refused to pay for their drinks because their music was played there without them receiving any royalties. They were sued, but they in turn took the manager to court. This was the beginning of the SACEM (Société des Auteurs, Compositeurs et Éditeurs de Musique).

Heyday during the Belle Époque

In the Café des Ambassadeurs, painting by Jean Béraud ca. 1882

During the 1850s and 1860s, the reputation of the establishment gradually surpassed that of the nearby Alcazar d'Été, because although it presented more or less the same acts, it was more chic and attracted a more upmarket clientele. With the arrival of Pierre Ducarre, a new director (1874 to 1902), a restaurant was added with the best chef in Paris, which transformed the place into a rendez-vous for gastronomes. (From 1882, Ducarre also was in charge of the Alcazar d'Été.) The café-concert had its heyday during the Belle Époque in Paris when Les Ambassadeurs became a regular destination of some of the best known figures of art and the demi-monde, and almost every vaudeville and music hall entertainer that mattered in those days performed there, such as Aristide Bruant, Zulma Bouffar, Polaire, Paula Brébion, Paulus, Eugénie Fougère, Anna Judic, Fragson, and last but not least Mistinguett and Yvette Guilbert.

Ducarre at the Ambassadeurs by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1893)
Ambassadeurs: Aristide Bruant dans son cabaret (1892) by Henri Toulouse-Lautrec

Painters such as Edgar Degas (who painted the Café-Concert at Les Ambassadeurs and Singer with a Glove here) and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec portrayed visitors at the venue. The chansonnier Aristide Bruant, a close friend of Toulouse-Lautrec, insisted that Ducarre should commission a poster of him by Toulouse-Lautrec when he moved to Les Ambassadeurs in 1892. Toulouse-Lautrec painted a romantic and imposing picture of Bruant, with his cape thrown over his shoulders and his famous red scarf around his neck. Ducarre was appalled and ordered to take it down, but Bruant threatened to not perform if he did so. Instead, he compelled the director to cover the whole venue and stage with the poster. When the success of the chansonnier, and of his image, was overwhelming, Ducarre admitted that he had been wrong. Bruant forced him to display the now iconic poster all over Paris.

Of the many artist, Yvette Guilbert deserves special attention. Her debut in 1892 changed the atmosphere at the Ambass' overnight. Before her, the audience was noisy, the artists often heckled and bullied. With Guilbert, singers were finally able to perform in peace. For eight years, every summer, she returned to Les Ambassadeurs. In 1893, she urged Pierre Ducarre to put a roof over the garden, not only to improve acoustics, but also so that the café-concert could remain open even on rainy days.

In 1902, the Ambassadeurs and the Alcazar d'Été changed management. Ducarre, well into his seventies, felt his strength failing him and ended his reign. He was succeeded by his son-in-law, a doctor called Pinard. With little talent for show business, he had to call on two 'kings' of the Paris nightlife: Eugène Cornuché (fr), creator of the famous restaurant Maxim's, and Henri Chauveau to manage the place artistically. During the winter of 1903, the restoration and conversion of the Hittorf pavilion led to some regrettable mutilations. The sole managers from 1912, Cornuché and Chauveau led Les Ambassadeurs until 1923. Inspiring and following the emerging trend in Paris between 1900 and the First World War, they modeled the existing extravagant revue into the breath-taking, exotic, fast-moving spectacle that was to reach its peak in the années folles in the 1920s, while abandoning the café-concert formula to become a music hall.

American-style music hall and closure

A sketch of the interior of the new Ambassadors theatre-restaurant with the Blackbirds show of 1926 in progress with Florence Mills performing.

The outbreak of the First World War in 1914 changed everything. Les Ambassadeurs reopened in the summer of 1915 with the stars of the moment, but the Belle Époque atmosphere was gone. After several changes in the management, the director of the Casino Kursaal of Ostend, Edmond Sayag, took over the lease of the venue in 1925, with the ambition of transforming the venue into a sumptuous American-style music hall. The City of Paris, which owned the property, allowed this to happen. Hittorf's beautiful façade was initially preserved, as was the stage, albeit modernised, but the auditorium changed completely. The armchairs were replaced by a dance floor around which tables and chairs were set up; behind the boxes, a gallery; on the first floor, a balcony; the whole profusely flowered by heavy beds of roses, wisteria, stylised plants and intoxicatingly fragrant flowers, stretching up to the roof, giving the place the allure of a garden from Arabian Nights, sparkling with luminous fountains. It was inaugurated in May 1926 as the Restaurant-Théâtre des Ambassadeurs.

Blackbirds of 1926 – Florence Mills, Johnny Hudgins and chorus girls rehearse on roof of the London Pavilionin September 1926.

The new formula lasted until 1929, and was a real success, mainly due to the arrival in France of excellent American and African American artists, singers, dancers and jazz orchestras, to attract the growing number of American tourists. (Each summer from 1926 to 1929, well over a quarter of a million Americans came to Paris.) Following the success of Josephine Baker in the Revue Nègre in 1925, Les Ambassadeurs imported Florence Mills, Edith Wilson and Johnny Hudgins with Lew Leslie's Blackbirds and the Paul Whiteman Orchestra in May 1926, Irving Aaronson and his Commanders in 1927, and Cole Porter's Ambassador's show (La Revue des Ambassadeurs) and Buster West in 1928. Despite the recognition for the quality of the show, there was also disapproval for the, by French standards, exorbitantly high prices for the show and food and drink, growing discomfort with American tourists in Paris and the fact that the performance was in English and not French, in combination with a certain nostalgia for the traditional cafe-concert, which drew criticism in the French press.

In the long run, however, it proved too expensive to ensure the profitability of the operation, in particular with the steady rise in the French franc to the U.S. dollar from 1927, which made Paris less attractive for American tourists and residents. The Wall Street crash of 1929 and the Great Depression exacerbated the problem. The venue closed in 1929 when it was completely demolished and replaced by a theatre built in 1931, also called Les Ambassadeurs, and a new restaurant bearing the same name.

References

  1. ^ Leslie 1978, p. 65.
  2. ^ "L'Alcazar d'été et les Ambassadeurs". Du Temps des cerises aux Feuilles mortes (in French). Retrieved 20 December 2024.
  3. ^ Costille 2016, p. 32 and Annex III (pp. 303–305).
  4. Caradec & Weill 1980, p. 21.
  5. Leslie 1978, p. 155.
  6. "Ernest Bourget, défenseur du droit d'auteur, par Jacques-Marie Vaslin". Le Monde (in French). 28 September 2009. Retrieved 20 December 2024.
  7. Leslie 1978, p. 67.
  8. ^ Gaillard 1990, p. 24.
  9. ^ Sallée & Chauveau 1985, p. 121.
  10. Néret 1999, pp. 100-102.
  11. Leslie 1978, p. 158.
  12. Costille 2016, p. 43.
  13. Levenstein 1998, pp. 243–244.
  14. Costille 2016, p. 207.
  15. Levenstein 1998, p. 275.
  16. "The Ambassadeur Show 1926". Jazz Age Club. 8 August 2011. Retrieved 27 December 2024.
  17. Recueil factice de documents concernant la revue des Ambassadeurs, 1926, Bibliothèque nationale de France, département Arts du spectacle, 8-RO-18740
  18. McBrien 1998, p. 119.
  19. "The Ambassadeur Show 1928". Jazz Age Club. 20 October 2011. Retrieved 27 December 2024.
  20. Leslie 1978, p. 205.
  21. Sallée & Chauveau 1985, p. 122.
  22. Costille 2016, p. 214.
  23. Levenstein 1998, p. 257; 269.
  24. Costille 2016, p. 215.
  25. Levenstein 1998, p. 278.
  26. Leslie 1978, p. 232.

Sources

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