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A revue at the Nouvelle Eve is
on the borderline between "music-hall" and "cabaret".
It's a clever mixture of feathers and conviviality. This lively show will
enable you to participate, with humour and boldness. Here the concept of
the Parisian cabaret is much in evidence. You'll marvel at the enchantment
of feathers and the splendour of The Woman. You'll be entertained thanks
to cheerful and fabulous attractions.
For Paris je t'aime, Lianne Scrivener, has usedher dynamic
choreography to successfully merge the typical Parisian review with new artistic techniques .
Essentially, the review is a puzzle, a kaleidoscope of influences, eras, and cultural images. Trough six different scenes,You’ll discover a range of styles from the disco music of "Cupid" to the baroque of "Fire", and the spectacular scene of the elastics, an allusion to modern day Pigalle.
However, the Parisian spirit of the review did not disappear completly. Paris je t'aime is also a tribute to the capital's rich artisitic historythrough the
music of a legendary figure of parisian mythology from the Pigalle area: Edith Piaf
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| La vie en
rose |
La vie en
rose |
The legend of "la Môme Piaf " is that of an extraordinary woman and an exceptional singer. Her songs are among the most important of the French inheritance of the twentieth century.
Describing with accuracy and emotion the life of the small Parisian districts and the people of modest means who tried to survive in it, her songs are more than simple texts, they are simply timeless. They continue to convey a flood of images and feelings, such as her famous song "la Vie en Rose",
her first post-war success and one of the most popular songs of all times, that Nicolas Skorsky updated for this review as a tango.
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| French
cancan |
French
cancan |
Finally, the highlight of this show is the reknowned French Cancan.
This “quadrille” dance inherited from Celestial Mogador, Rose pompom and Nini "Patte en l’air» is most inspired by dances of the Sunday laundresses of Montmartre at the beginning of the century. This 12 minute scene will take your breath away! Performed to the music of Offenbach, the art of Can Can is doing the splits, showing breeches and raising laces and frous frous!
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