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Théâtre des Folies-Marigny : ウィキペディア英語版
Théâtre des Folies-Marigny

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The Théâtre des Folies-Marigny, a former Parisian theatre with a capacity of only 300 spectators, was built in 1848 by the City of Paris for a magician named Lacaze and was originally known as the Salle Lacaze.〔Faris 1980, p. 48.〕 It was located at the east end of the Carré Marigny of the Champs-Élysées, close to the Avenue Marigny, but faced west toward the Cirque National on the other side of the square.
In 1855 the Salle Lacaze became the home of Jacques Offenbach's Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens, where he first built his reputation as a theatre composer. It was subsequently used unsuccessfully by several companies until 1864, when it again became a profitable operetta theatre called the Folies-Marigny. When this company diminished in popularity, the theatre was closed. It was demolished in 1881 and replaced with the Panorama Marigny which was converted into the Théâtre Marigny in 1893.
==Salle Lacaze==
The first recorded entertainment use of the site dates to 1835, when a showman set up attractions at the Marigny junction. After the French Revolution of 1848 a small theatre called the Salle Lacaze was built for a magician named Lacaze.〔Levin 2009, p. 401, identifies the theatre as the "Salle Lacaze". Yon 2000, p. 111, describes it as a "petit théâtre de magie que le 'physicien' Lacaze a rouvert..." ("little theatre of magic that the 'conjurer' Lacaze opened..."). In this context, "physicien" has been translated as "conjurer"; see Faris, p. 48; Kracauer 2002, p. 166; Spiers 1908 (''A New French-English General Dictionary''), (p. 537 ). "Conjurer" is chiefly a British term, meaning "magician".〕
It was a summer theatre, and in it he presented "legerdemain and amusing physical representations."〔Galignani 1852, (p. 495 ).〕 His theatre was also known as the Château d'Enfer (Castle of the Underworld).〔Duneton 1998, (p. 921 ).〕
Lacaze began losing money, and sometime after 1852 he closed down.

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