Cabaret: The Inside Story at the World-Famous Lido de Paris

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Cabaret: The Inside Story at the World-Famous Lido de Paris
Let’s take a glimpse behind the scenes at Lido de Paris to revisit misconceptions about one of the city’s earliest art forms – the cabaret. After the Second World War, a location that started out providing free underground swimming baths to impoverished Parisians transformed into a glamorous cabaret renowned the world over. Le Lido employed creatives such as artistic director Franco Dragone, also known for his work on Cirque de Soleil, and costume stylist Nicolas Vaudet, who can boast collaborations with Jean Paul Gaultier, Christian Lacroix and Louis Vuitton. Plus celebrity guests over the year have included Edith Piaf, Marlene Dietrich, Laurel and Hardy, Liza Minelli and even Elton John. Yet in spite of all these prestigious credentials, some would still hesitate to visit le Lido, automatically building a stereotype for it as a sexist gentlemen’s show. Let’s separate the myths and legends from the reality and find out exactly what the ingredients are for the Champs-Élysées’ most prominent performance. STRIP-TEASE OR PERFORMANCE ART? The show is snubbed by some as “glorified striptease.” However anyone who confuses the two will instantly be relieved of this illusion after a night at le Lido. Sure, there are sexy moments, but unless a strip-show in your town comprises of trapeze artistry and astonishingly intricate aerial acrobatics, then the two experiences are probably incomparable. Plus the average stripper’s repertoire is unlikely to include decades of experience in classical dance, or the ability to do the splits in mid-air while suspended upside down from a rapidly spinning cage, either. That is not to say that sexuality shouldn’t have a place in performance, but rather that, in the case of le Lido, sex appeal does not supplant talent. Visitors should have no qualms about bringing their children either, as this comfortably qualifies as ‘wholesome’ family entertainment. The show is no more salacious or offensive than an artistic nude that you might see in the Louvre. Yet it takes only for a handful of enraged TripAdvisor reviewers to claim that the show has set feminism back by 50 years for negative expectations to set in. Au contraire – to the dancers here, topless cabaret is part of the fabric of French culture and to unravel it is to rip apart exactly what makes the show meaningful. When I retreat to a quiet corner backstage to discuss the politics of it all with one of the show’s most popular dancers, Bluebell Girl Victoria, she is keen to challenge the stereotypes. “Topless showgirls have been a tradition for centuries in Paris,” she argues, pointing out that le Lido has been entertaining revelers since the 1940s. Although one of the comparatively newer cabarets in the city, it has also recently celebrated the 70th anniversary of its iconic Bluebell Girl dancers. Upon asking her whether she sees cabaret as a form of feminist empowerment, her face lights up in recognition. “In a word, absolutely,” she confirms. “Women are celebrated in our show – the beauty of the women, and the men as well, and being able to go onstage and be who we want to be is really important. Paris is definitely one of the most liberated places in the world. Our shows would probably have been perceived quite differently in England, but in Paris, it’s traditional to be topless and show a bit more skin – it’s very much accepted here and it makes us feel powerful.” For women like Victoria, le Lido allows her to demonstrate a dance talent she has been studiously honing since the age of three while combining it with the freedom and fun of feeling glamorous. Liberté, egalité…. cabaret! Plus while (according to le Lido’s website) the show is still demure enough for a four-year-old’s eyes, it simultaneously cracks the stereotype that a woman with sex appeal automatically lacks skill. It’s an intriguing paradox and for Victoria, this freedom of spirit represents exactly what is distinctive about life in France. “This is the longest time that I’ve ever stayed somewhere,” she comments of her six years at le Lido. “I started in London, then realized there was a world outside of London, got the travel bug and performed everywhere before I landed in Paris. There’s a reason that girls stay here for many, many years. It holds a special place in our hearts.” Of course, the city is famed for introducing cabaret to Europe back in the 1800s. Shows like le Lido are regarded not as a scandal but as a welcomed art form and dancers find acceptance as part of it. Paris has also won awards for being the most liberal city in the world, which was described at the time as “the least surprising news of the year.” MELDING TRADITIONAL WITH MODERN Clearly le Lido offers a mischievous glimpse into the libertine spirit that lights up Parisians’ veins – yet what else is special about the show? First, there are the feats of balance that perhaps only a trained ballet dancer can fully master. For instance, one showgirl spins round violently while standing on a swing inside a giant bird-cage suspended from the ceiling, while the cage spins around at high speed too. One of the few who can achieve this without falling flat on her face in a fraction of a second, she elicits gasps from the audience.
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Lead photo credit : Bluebell Girl Victoria backstage at the Lido. Photo: Chloe Govan

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Chloe Govan is an award-winning writer and channel-hopping Francophile with a penchant for Parisian life. After achieving degrees in Psychology and Magazine Journalism and working as a travel editor and columnist, she developed her freelance career, during which she authored 11 books. Whether she is sleeping in a bubble under the stars in the forests around Marseille or horse-back riding with the chateaux of the Loire Valley as a backdrop, her heart can often be found somewhere in France.