Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

The Trianon - Paris 18th

Patrimoine classé
Théâtre
Théâtre ou salle de spectacle de Paris
Paris

The Trianon - Paris 18th

    80 Boulevard de Rochechouart
    75018 Paris
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème
Le Trianon - Paris 18ème

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1894
Initial construction
1900
Destroyer fire
1902
Reconstruction and reopening
1908
Opera-Comics Branch
1936
Conversion to cinema
1988
Registration for Historic Monuments
2009-2010
Restoration and reopening
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Joseph Cassien-Bernard - Architect Reconstructed the Trianon in 1902, the pupil of Charles Garnier.
Mistinguett - Music-hall artist It was produced at the Trianon-Concert in 1895.
Pierre (directeur) - Director of the Trianon Died around 1928, father of Jacqueline Joubert.
Jacques Brel - Composer-author Attended Trianon cinema in the 1950s.
Guy Balensi - Impresario Relaunched the Trianon as a theatre in 1992.
Julien Labrousse - Owner and restaurant Buy and restore the Trianon in 2009-2010.

Origin and history

The Trianon, originally called Trianon-Concert, was built in 1894 at the site of the old garden of the Élysée-Montmartre, a famous Parisian café-concert. As early as 1895, he welcomed renowned artists such as Mistinguett, La Goulue or Valentin the Boneless, marking the beginnings of the Belle Époque. However, in 1900, a fire ravaged the room and part of the outbuildings of the Élysée-Montmartre, requiring complete reconstruction.

The architect Joseph Cassien-Bernard, student of Charles Garnier and designer of the Alexandre-III bridge, oversees the reconstruction of the theatre, which reopens in 1902 under the name Trianon-Théâtre. Over the years, he changed his name several times: theatre Victor-Hugo (1903), Trianon-Lyrique, then simply Trianon. In 1908, he became a branch of the Opéra Comique, specialized in operetta. After the death of its director Pierre around 1928 (father of Jacqueline Joubert, future TV presenter), the place turned to music-hall in the 1930s, welcoming stars like Yvette Guilbert or Fréhel.

In the 1936s, the Trianon became a cinema, attracting figures like Jacques Brel in the 1950s. Faced with the cinema crisis in the 1980s, he became a theatre again in 1992 under the impetus of Guy Balensi. Listed in the historical monuments inventory in 1988, it was restored in 2009 by Julien Labrousse and Abel Nahmias. Since then, its eclectic programming includes theatre, concerts (Carla Bruni, Benabar), operas, musicals, and events such as the New Star finals or sports competitions.

The Art Deco-style building also houses Le Petit Trianon, a café-restaurant reopened in 2011 after twenty years of closure. Located at 80 boulevard Marguerite-de-Rochechouart, it remains a major cultural place in the 18th arrondissement, served by the Antwerp metro station (line 2).

External links