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Salle Ventadour

The Salle Ventadour, a former Parisian theatre in the rue Neuve-Ventadour, now the rue Méhul (2nd arrondissement of Paris), was built between 1826 and 1829 for the Opéra-Comique, to designs by Jacques-Marie Huvé, a prominent architect. The original theatre had a capacity of 1,106, but was subsequently taken over by the Théâtre-Italien and expanded to a capacity of 1,295 in 1841, thereafter becoming perhaps most noteworthy as the theatre in which the majority of the operas of the Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi were first performed in France. When the Théâtre-Italien company went out of business in 1878, the theatre was converted to offices.

Salle Ventadour
The Salle Ventadour as an opera house
in the mid 19th century.
Alternative names
  • Opéra-Comique (1829–32)
  • Théâtre Nautique (1834–35)
  • Théâtre-Italien (1838)
  • Théâtre de la Renaissance
         (1838–1841, 1868)
  • Théâtre-Italien (1841–1878)
General information
Typeopera house
offices (after 1878)
Locationrue Méhul
2nd arrondissement of Paris
Coordinates48°52′04″N 2°20′05″E / 48.8677°N 2.33485°E / 48.8677; 2.33485Coordinates: 48°52′04″N 2°20′05″E / 48.8677°N 2.33485°E / 48.8677; 2.33485
Current tenantsBanque de France
Construction started1826
Inaugurated20 April 1829
Cost4,620,000 francs[1]
Design and construction
Architect(s)Jacques-Marie Huvé[1][2]
Other designersde Guerchy[1]

Opéra-Comique

The Opéra-Comique first performed at the Salle Ventadour on 20 April 1829. The opening night audience was a distinguished one and found the new theatre luxurious and comfortable.[1] The program included the one-act opera Les deux mousquetaires by Henri Montan Berton, the overture to Étienne Méhul's opera Le jeune Henri, and the three-act opera La fiancée with music by Daniel Auber and a libretto by Eugène Scribe. The Opéra-Comique presented 32 premieres during its time at the Salle Ventadour, including one of François-Adrien Boieldieu's last operas Les deux nuits on 20 May 1829, Auber's Fra Diavolo (as L'hôtellerie de Terracine) on 28 January 1830, and Ferdinand Hérold's Zampa on 3 May 1831.[1][3][4] After 22 March 1832 the Opéra-Comique left the Salle Ventadour and moved to the Salle de la Bourse, where it opened on 24 September 1832.[1][5]

Théâtre Nautique

The Salle Ventadour was reopened on 10 June 1834[1] as the Théâtre Nautique — "nautique" since some of the main attractions were works performed in a basin of water on the stage. The programs included the ballet-pantomime Les ondines, which was based on Fouqué's novella Undine, about a water sprite who marries a knight in order to save her soul, and used music from E. T. A. Hoffmann's opera of the same name; a full-length ballet William Tell with music by the German composer Jacques Strunz; a one-act ballet Le nouveau Robinson which also utilized the water; and a chinoiserie entitled Chao-Kang. These were interspersed with choruses by Carl Maria von Weber and others, sung by the members of a German company that was being formed in Paris at that time. The entr'acte was the overture to Weber's opera Oberon. The reviews were not good, and the size of the audience decreased over time.

Harriet Smithson, the Irish actress who had married the French composer Hector Berlioz on 3 October 1833,[6] appeared with the Théâtre Nautique, opening on 22 November 1834 in a one-act pantomime put together by the resident choreographer Louis Henry. He called the concoction La derniére heure d'un condamné, and it used music by Cesare Pugni. The scenario took advantage of her talent for mad scenes: she had previously performed Ophelia in an English-language production of Shakespeare's Hamlet at the Théâtre de l'Odéon to great acclaim in 1827. The new piece was a pantomime, since Smithson's French was far from perfect (and remained so for the rest of her life).[7] Unfortunately, this new performance was not as favorably received. Jules Janin, writing in the Journal des débats described it as consisting of "the two or three dozen contortions that are known as the art of mime" and complained that "they have cut Miss Smithson's tongue out".[8] Berlioz anonymously wrote a positive review that appeared in the Gazette musicale but spent half of its time describing her previous appearance as Ophelia and the important influence it had had on the French style of acting. Not all the reviews were entirely negative: the English-language Galignani's Messenger praised Smithson, saying that the "single feature worth naming of this piece is the performance of Madame Berlioz, as the wife of the condamné, in which the agony and despair of such a situation is depicted with the fidelity and painful truth only within the reach of a perfect artiste."[8] But apparently her performances were not enough to rescue the enterprise, and the Théâtre Nautique closed in 1835.[1]

A short visit by the Théâtre-Italien

The Salle Ventadour was used for a brief time by the Théâtre-Italien (30 January 1838 to 31 March 1838) after the destruction of the company's previous home, the Salle Favart, by fire on 15 January 1838. Only one opera new to Paris was presented, Gaetano Donizetti's Parisina. The company moved to the Odéon for three years before returning to the Salle Ventadour in 1841.[1][5][9]

Théâtre de la Renaissance

While the Théâtre-Italien company was at the Odéon, the Salle Ventadour was rented by Anténor Joly, who with the encouragement of the two great French romantic dramatists Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas, remodeled the theatre and renamed it the Théâtre de la Renaissance. Their aim was to bring together in one theatre the elitist and popular audiences of Paris.[10] The new company opened on 8 November 1838 with the premiere of Hugo's drama Ruy Blas with Frédérick Lemaître in the title role. It ran for 48 performances. Two new plays by Dumas were also presented, Bathilde (14 January 1839) and L'alchimiste (10 April 1839), although these were less successful.[11] The repertoire of the company was not limited to plays: Joly also mounted three new operas by Friedrich von Flotow, including Lady Melvil on 15 November 1838 (with some music also written by Albert Grisar[12] and Sophie Anne Thillon as Lady Melvil[13]), L'eau merveilleuse on 30 January 1839, and Le naufrage de la Méduse on 31 May 1839;[9][14] and on 6 August 1839 the premiere of Donizetti's Lucie de Lammermoor, a French version of his Lucia di Lammermoor, with Thillon as Lucia and Achille Ricciardi as Edgardo.[15] Joly's venture was short-lived however, closing on 16 May 1841.

The Théâtre-Italien settles in

 
A performance by the Théâtre-Italien at the Salle Ventadour (c. 1842).

After the Théâtre de la Renaissance closed in 1841 the theater was expanded to a capacity of 1,294[5] and was again used by the Théâtre-Italien company from 2 October 1841 to 28 June 1878.[9] During this time the company presented the premiere of Donizetti's Don Pasquale (3 January 1843) and the Paris premieres of 15 of Verdi's operas, including Nabucco (1845),[5] Ernani (1846, as Il Proscritto),[16] Il trovatore (23 December 1854), La traviata (6 December 1856), Rigoletto (19 January 1857), Un ballo in maschera (13 January 1861),[4] and Aida (22 April 1876) with Verdi conducting.[17] Among the important singers appearing in Verdi's operas were Giorgio Ronconi, Adelaide Borghi-Mamo, and Gaetano Fraschini.[5] Verdi is reported to have referred to the Salle Ventadour as his favorite opera house in Paris.[4][5]

Besides opera, the Salle Ventadour was also sometimes used for concerts. Giaocchino Rossini's Stabat Mater received its premiere there on 7 January 1842.[18] Richard Wagner conducted three concerts devoted to his own music, including extracts from The Flying Dutchman, Tannhäuser, Tristan und Isolde, and Lohengrin, on 25 January, and 1 and 8 February 1860.[4][19] Verdi conducted the Paris premiere of his Requiem on 30 May 1876.[1]

The Théâtre-Italien shared the theater briefly, from 26 June to 4 July 1853, with the Opéra-Comique,[20] and from 16 March 1868 to 5 May 1868 the theater was shared with a new company directed by Léon Carvalho, which was an extension of his Théâtre Lyrique on the Place du Châtelet. The name Théâtre de la Renaissance was revived for the use of Carvalho's venture, in order to distinguish it from the Théâtre-Italien. Carvalho had overextended himself, however, and soon went bankrupt.[9][21] The Théâtre-Italien also shared the theater with the Paris Opéra from 19 January to December 1874 (in the period after the Opéra's Salle Le Peletier burned down on 28 October 1873 and before the opening of the Opéra's new Palais Garnier on 5 January 1875).[22] Companies sharing the theatre usually performed on alternate nights.[23]

At the instigation of the French tenor Victor Capoul the first professional public performance of the opera Les amants de Vérone with text and music by the marquis d'Ivry [fr] was mounted at the Salle Ventadour on 12 October 1878. The libretto follows Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet more closely than that of the opera by Gounod, but the marquis d'Ivry's opera suffered in comparison. Capoul sang Romeo, and the Belgian soprano Marie Heilbronn sang Juliet. The same singers later appeared in a production at Covent Garden which was performed three times beginning on 24 May 1879. The text was considered "coarse", and the music received a lukewarm response.[1][24]

After the Théâtre-Italien company went out of business in 1878, the Salle Ventadour was sold on 20 January 1879 and transformed into offices. The building has been primarily occupied by the Banque de France since 1893.[4] Gustave Chouquet, writing in the 1900 edition of George Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, described the renovated building as follows: "its pediment, still decorated with statues of the Muses, now bears the words 'Banque d'escompte de Paris,' a truly exasperating sight".[1]

References

Notes
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Chouquet, Gustave. "Ventadour, Théâtre" in Grove (1900) 4: 237–238. Copy at Wikisource.
  2. ^ Bauchal, Charles (1887). Nouveau dictionnaire biographique et critique des architects français. Paris: André, Daly fils. (in French) Full view at Google Books. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
  3. ^ Wild and Charlton (2005), pp. 77–78.
  4. ^ a b c d e Simeone (2000), p. 196.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Charlton, David. "Paris. 4. 1789–1870." in Sadie (1992) 3: 867, 869, 871.
  6. ^ Cairns (1999), p. 11.
  7. ^ Cairns (1969), pp. 619–620; Barzun (1969) 1: 264; 2: 29.
  8. ^ a b Cairns (1999), pp. 36–40.
  9. ^ a b c d Levin, Alicia C. "A documentary overview of musical theaters in Paris, 1830–1900" in Fauser (2009), pp. 379–402.
  10. ^ Londré 1991, p. 235.
  11. ^ Hochman 1984, p. 53.
  12. ^ Boyd, Malcolm; Lindgren, Lowell. "Grisar, Albert" in Sadie (1992) 2: 546–547.
  13. ^ Anonymous. "Thillon [née Hunt], Sophie Anne" in Sadie (1992) 4: 725.
  14. ^ Cohen, Peter. "Flotow, Friedrich (Adolph Ferdinand)" in Sadie (1992) 2: 242–246.
  15. ^ Ashbrook, William. "Lucia di Laamermoor" in Sadie (1992) 3: 69–72.
  16. ^ Budden, Julian (1973). The operas of Verdi: from Oberto to Rigoletto, p. 146. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-520030-6.
  17. ^ Busch, Hans, ed. and translator (1978). Verdi's Aida: the history of an opera in letters and documents, p. 395n. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-0798-3.
  18. ^ Rossini, Gioacchino; Tomlleri, Luciano, editor (1957). Stabat Mater per due soprani, tenore, basso, coro ed orchestra. Mainz: Eulenberg. OCLC 632707761.
  19. ^ Wagner, Richard (1860). Concert de Richard Wagner [25 janvier, 1er et 8 février 1860, salle Ventadour]. Dans l'impossibilité de faire entendre en entier ses opéras [Le Vaisseau-fantôme, Tannhaeuser, Tristan et Isolde, Lohengrin], l'auteur se permet d'offrir au public quelques lignes d'explication qui lui feront mieux comprendre le sens des morceaux détachés qu'il lui soumet aujourd'hui. Paris: Aubusson et Kugelmann. OCLC 458820627.
  20. ^ Wild and Charlton (2005), p. 85.
  21. ^ Walsh 1981, pp. 235–238.
  22. ^ Langham Smith, Richard. "Paris. 5. 1870–1902." in Sadie (1992) 3: 874.
  23. ^ Apthorp, William F. (1892). "Paris theatres and concerts. II. The Opéra, the Opéra-Comique, and the Conservatoire." Scribner's Magazine 11: 350–365.
  24. ^ Forbes, Elizabeth. "Ivry, Paul Xavier Désiré, Marquis d' [Yrvid, Richard]" in Sadie (1992) 2: 862–863.
Cited sources
Other sources
  • Fouqué, Octave (1881). Histoire du Théâtre-Ventadour, 1829–1879: Opéra-Comique, Théatre de la Renaissance, Théatre-Italien at Google Books. Paris: G. Fischbacher. (in French) OCLC 457304597, 10766694, 475491162.

External links

  • Facade of the former Salle Ventadour (Google Maps street view at the intersection of the rue Méhul with the rue Marsollier and the rue Dalayrac).

salle, ventadour, former, parisian, theatre, neuve, ventadour, méhul, arrondissement, paris, built, between, 1826, 1829, opéra, comique, designs, jacques, marie, huvé, prominent, architect, original, theatre, capacity, subsequently, taken, over, théâtre, itali. The Salle Ventadour a former Parisian theatre in the rue Neuve Ventadour now the rue Mehul 2nd arrondissement of Paris was built between 1826 and 1829 for the Opera Comique to designs by Jacques Marie Huve a prominent architect The original theatre had a capacity of 1 106 but was subsequently taken over by the Theatre Italien and expanded to a capacity of 1 295 in 1841 thereafter becoming perhaps most noteworthy as the theatre in which the majority of the operas of the Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi were first performed in France When the Theatre Italien company went out of business in 1878 the theatre was converted to offices Salle VentadourThe Salle Ventadour as an opera housein the mid 19th century Alternative namesOpera Comique 1829 32 Theatre Nautique 1834 35 Theatre Italien 1838 Theatre de la Renaissance 1838 1841 1868 Theatre Italien 1841 1878 General informationTypeopera houseoffices after 1878 Locationrue Mehul2nd arrondissement of ParisCoordinates48 52 04 N 2 20 05 E 48 8677 N 2 33485 E 48 8677 2 33485 Coordinates 48 52 04 N 2 20 05 E 48 8677 N 2 33485 E 48 8677 2 33485Current tenantsBanque de FranceConstruction started1826Inaugurated20 April 1829Cost4 620 000 francs 1 Design and constructionArchitect s Jacques Marie Huve 1 2 Other designersde Guerchy 1 Contents 1 Opera Comique 2 Theatre Nautique 3 A short visit by the Theatre Italien 4 Theatre de la Renaissance 5 The Theatre Italien settles in 6 References 7 External linksOpera Comique EditThe Opera Comique first performed at the Salle Ventadour on 20 April 1829 The opening night audience was a distinguished one and found the new theatre luxurious and comfortable 1 The program included the one act opera Les deux mousquetaires by Henri Montan Berton the overture to Etienne Mehul s opera Le jeune Henri and the three act opera La fiancee with music by Daniel Auber and a libretto by Eugene Scribe The Opera Comique presented 32 premieres during its time at the Salle Ventadour including one of Francois Adrien Boieldieu s last operas Les deux nuits on 20 May 1829 Auber s Fra Diavolo as L hotellerie de Terracine on 28 January 1830 and Ferdinand Herold s Zampa on 3 May 1831 1 3 4 After 22 March 1832 the Opera Comique left the Salle Ventadour and moved to the Salle de la Bourse where it opened on 24 September 1832 1 5 Theatre Nautique EditThe Salle Ventadour was reopened on 10 June 1834 1 as the Theatre Nautique nautique since some of the main attractions were works performed in a basin of water on the stage The programs included the ballet pantomime Les ondines which was based on Fouque s novella Undine about a water sprite who marries a knight in order to save her soul and used music from E T A Hoffmann s opera of the same name a full length ballet William Tell with music by the German composer Jacques Strunz a one act ballet Le nouveau Robinson which also utilized the water and a chinoiserie entitled Chao Kang These were interspersed with choruses by Carl Maria von Weber and others sung by the members of a German company that was being formed in Paris at that time The entr acte was the overture to Weber s opera Oberon The reviews were not good and the size of the audience decreased over time Harriet Smithson the Irish actress who had married the French composer Hector Berlioz on 3 October 1833 6 appeared with the Theatre Nautique opening on 22 November 1834 in a one act pantomime put together by the resident choreographer Louis Henry He called the concoction La derniere heure d un condamne and it used music by Cesare Pugni The scenario took advantage of her talent for mad scenes she had previously performed Ophelia in an English language production of Shakespeare s Hamlet at the Theatre de l Odeon to great acclaim in 1827 The new piece was a pantomime since Smithson s French was far from perfect and remained so for the rest of her life 7 Unfortunately this new performance was not as favorably received Jules Janin writing in the Journal des debats described it as consisting of the two or three dozen contortions that are known as the art of mime and complained that they have cut Miss Smithson s tongue out 8 Berlioz anonymously wrote a positive review that appeared in the Gazette musicale but spent half of its time describing her previous appearance as Ophelia and the important influence it had had on the French style of acting Not all the reviews were entirely negative the English language Galignani s Messenger praised Smithson saying that the single feature worth naming of this piece is the performance of Madame Berlioz as the wife of the condamne in which the agony and despair of such a situation is depicted with the fidelity and painful truth only within the reach of a perfect artiste 8 But apparently her performances were not enough to rescue the enterprise and the Theatre Nautique closed in 1835 1 A short visit by the Theatre Italien EditThe Salle Ventadour was used for a brief time by the Theatre Italien 30 January 1838 to 31 March 1838 after the destruction of the company s previous home the Salle Favart by fire on 15 January 1838 Only one opera new to Paris was presented Gaetano Donizetti s Parisina The company moved to the Odeon for three years before returning to the Salle Ventadour in 1841 1 5 9 Theatre de la Renaissance EditWhile the Theatre Italien company was at the Odeon the Salle Ventadour was rented by Antenor Joly who with the encouragement of the two great French romantic dramatists Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas remodeled the theatre and renamed it the Theatre de la Renaissance Their aim was to bring together in one theatre the elitist and popular audiences of Paris 10 The new company opened on 8 November 1838 with the premiere of Hugo s drama Ruy Blas with Frederick Lemaitre in the title role It ran for 48 performances Two new plays by Dumas were also presented Bathilde 14 January 1839 and L alchimiste 10 April 1839 although these were less successful 11 The repertoire of the company was not limited to plays Joly also mounted three new operas by Friedrich von Flotow including Lady Melvil on 15 November 1838 with some music also written by Albert Grisar 12 and Sophie Anne Thillon as Lady Melvil 13 L eau merveilleuse on 30 January 1839 and Le naufrage de la Meduse on 31 May 1839 9 14 and on 6 August 1839 the premiere of Donizetti s Lucie de Lammermoor a French version of his Lucia di Lammermoor with Thillon as Lucia and Achille Ricciardi as Edgardo 15 Joly s venture was short lived however closing on 16 May 1841 The Theatre Italien settles in Edit A performance by the Theatre Italien at the Salle Ventadour c 1842 After the Theatre de la Renaissance closed in 1841 the theater was expanded to a capacity of 1 294 5 and was again used by the Theatre Italien company from 2 October 1841 to 28 June 1878 9 During this time the company presented the premiere of Donizetti s Don Pasquale 3 January 1843 and the Paris premieres of 15 of Verdi s operas including Nabucco 1845 5 Ernani 1846 as Il Proscritto 16 Il trovatore 23 December 1854 La traviata 6 December 1856 Rigoletto 19 January 1857 Un ballo in maschera 13 January 1861 4 and Aida 22 April 1876 with Verdi conducting 17 Among the important singers appearing in Verdi s operas were Giorgio Ronconi Adelaide Borghi Mamo and Gaetano Fraschini 5 Verdi is reported to have referred to the Salle Ventadour as his favorite opera house in Paris 4 5 Besides opera the Salle Ventadour was also sometimes used for concerts Giaocchino Rossini s Stabat Mater received its premiere there on 7 January 1842 18 Richard Wagner conducted three concerts devoted to his own music including extracts from The Flying Dutchman Tannhauser Tristan und Isolde and Lohengrin on 25 January and 1 and 8 February 1860 4 19 Verdi conducted the Paris premiere of his Requiem on 30 May 1876 1 The Theatre Italien shared the theater briefly from 26 June to 4 July 1853 with the Opera Comique 20 and from 16 March 1868 to 5 May 1868 the theater was shared with a new company directed by Leon Carvalho which was an extension of his Theatre Lyrique on the Place du Chatelet The name Theatre de la Renaissance was revived for the use of Carvalho s venture in order to distinguish it from the Theatre Italien Carvalho had overextended himself however and soon went bankrupt 9 21 The Theatre Italien also shared the theater with the Paris Opera from 19 January to December 1874 in the period after the Opera s Salle Le Peletier burned down on 28 October 1873 and before the opening of the Opera s new Palais Garnier on 5 January 1875 22 Companies sharing the theatre usually performed on alternate nights 23 At the instigation of the French tenor Victor Capoul the first professional public performance of the opera Les amants de Verone with text and music by the marquis d Ivry fr was mounted at the Salle Ventadour on 12 October 1878 The libretto follows Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet more closely than that of the opera by Gounod but the marquis d Ivry s opera suffered in comparison Capoul sang Romeo and the Belgian soprano Marie Heilbronn sang Juliet The same singers later appeared in a production at Covent Garden which was performed three times beginning on 24 May 1879 The text was considered coarse and the music received a lukewarm response 1 24 After the Theatre Italien company went out of business in 1878 the Salle Ventadour was sold on 20 January 1879 and transformed into offices The building has been primarily occupied by the Banque de France since 1893 4 Gustave Chouquet writing in the 1900 edition of George Grove s Dictionary of Music and Musicians described the renovated building as follows its pediment still decorated with statues of the Muses now bears the words Banque d escompte de Paris a truly exasperating sight 1 References EditNotes a b c d e f g h i j k l Chouquet Gustave Ventadour Theatre in Grove 1900 4 237 238 Copy at Wikisource Bauchal Charles 1887 Nouveau dictionnaire biographique et critique des architects francais Paris Andre Daly fils in French Full view at Google Books Retrieved 30 April 2010 Wild and Charlton 2005 pp 77 78 a b c d e Simeone 2000 p 196 a b c d e f Charlton David Paris 4 1789 1870 in Sadie 1992 3 867 869 871 Cairns 1999 p 11 Cairns 1969 pp 619 620 Barzun 1969 1 264 2 29 a b Cairns 1999 pp 36 40 a b c d Levin Alicia C A documentary overview of musical theaters in Paris 1830 1900 in Fauser 2009 pp 379 402 Londre 1991 p 235 Hochman 1984 p 53 Boyd Malcolm Lindgren Lowell Grisar Albert in Sadie 1992 2 546 547 Anonymous Thillon nee Hunt Sophie Anne in Sadie 1992 4 725 Cohen Peter Flotow Friedrich Adolph Ferdinand in Sadie 1992 2 242 246 Ashbrook William Lucia di Laamermoor in Sadie 1992 3 69 72 Budden Julian 1973 The operas of Verdi from Oberto to Rigoletto p 146 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 520030 6 Busch Hans ed and translator 1978 Verdi s Aida the history of an opera in letters and documents p 395n Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 0798 3 Rossini Gioacchino Tomlleri Luciano editor 1957 Stabat Mater per due soprani tenore basso coro ed orchestra Mainz Eulenberg OCLC 632707761 Wagner Richard 1860 Concert de Richard Wagner 25 janvier 1er et 8 fevrier 1860 salle Ventadour Dans l impossibilite de faire entendre en entier ses operas Le Vaisseau fantome Tannhaeuser Tristan et Isolde Lohengrin l auteur se permet d offrir au public quelques lignes d explication qui lui feront mieux comprendre le sens des morceaux detaches qu il lui soumet aujourd hui Paris Aubusson et Kugelmann OCLC 458820627 Wild and Charlton 2005 p 85 Walsh 1981 pp 235 238 Langham Smith Richard Paris 5 1870 1902 in Sadie 1992 3 874 Apthorp William F 1892 Paris theatres and concerts II The Opera the Opera Comique and the Conservatoire Scribner s Magazine 11 350 365 Forbes Elizabeth Ivry Paul Xavier Desire Marquis d Yrvid Richard in Sadie 1992 2 862 863 Cited sourcesBarzun Jacques 1969 Berlioz and the romantic century 3rd edition 2 volumes New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 03135 6 Cairns David editor and translator 1969 The memoirs of Hector Berlioz 2002 edition New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 375 41391 9 Cairns David 1999 Berlioz Volume Two Servitude and greatness 1832 1869 pp 36 40 Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 22200 7 Fauser Annegret ed Everist Mark ed 2009 Music theater and cultural transfer Paris 1830 1914 Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 23926 2 Grove George 1900 A dictionary of music and musicians 4 volumes London Macmillan Copy at Wikisource WorldCat search results Hochman Stanley editor 1984 McGraw Hill Encyclopedia of World Drama second edition 5 volumes New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 079169 5 Londre Felicia Hardison 1991 The History of World Theatre From the English Restoration to the Present New York Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 0485 5 Sadie Stanley ed 1992 The new Grove dictionary of opera 4 volumes London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 228 9 Simeone Nigel 2000 Paris a musical gazetteer Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08053 7 Wild Nicole Charlton David 2005 Theatre de l Opera Comique Paris repertoire 1762 1927 Sprimont Belgium Mardaga ISBN 978 2 87009 898 1 Other sourcesFouque Octave 1881 Histoire du Theatre Ventadour 1829 1879 Opera Comique Theatre de la Renaissance Theatre Italien at Google Books Paris G Fischbacher in French OCLC 457304597 10766694 475491162 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Salle Ventadour Facade of the former Salle Ventadour Google Maps street view at the intersection of the rue Mehul with the rue Marsollier and the rue Dalayrac Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Salle Ventadour amp oldid 1034464248, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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