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Cabaret in Paris

There are two kinds of cabaret in France: the kind most tourists have heard of, featuring a perfectly choreographed troupe of identical topless dancers; and the intimate, artistic cabaret that celebrates French chan- Nightlife , humorous wit, and artistic talent. You can enjoy both in Paris if you’re willing to stand in line with tour groups for the former, and poten- tially understand very little of the French language in the latter.

Bal du Moulin Rouge:

Moulin82 Boulevard de Clichy, 18th, M° Blanche, www.moulinrouge.fr. Dinner from 7pm, shows from 9pm and 11pm daily. Tickets from i82, dinner and show from i130. No kids under age six; formal attire requested. Opened in 1889 to an enthusiastic public, the Moulin Rouge has remained the most famous cabaret in the world. Its trademark red windmill, lively French cancan, sumptuous décor and beautiful dancers have been immor- talized in Toulouse Lautrec’s paintings

Le Paradis Latin:

28 Rue Cardinal Lemoine, 5th, M° Cardinal Lemoine, www.paradis-latin.com. Show tickets i75 (includes champagne), dinner-show tickets i109-i200. Closed Tuesday. Dinner from 8pm, shows from 9:30pm. Set in a theater built by Gustave Eiffel, the Paradis Latin calls itself the most Parisian of the Paris cabarets. Its Left Bank location gives it a bit of an off-the-beaten-track feel, but it has a similar show to the one at the Moulin Rouge, with dazzling choreographed dancing and music.

Crazy Horse: 12 Avenue George V, 8th, M° Alma-Marceau, www.lecrazyhorseparis.com. Nightly shows at 8:30pm and 11pm, three shows on Saturday. Show with drinks only, i29-i110. Dinner shows i130-i160. The relatively small theater of this cabaret allows for no elaborate special effects, just the enviable perfection of the 20 nude dancers and their elab- orate Teasing show. Like other cabarets of its kind, there are also magic and comedy acts while the ladies change their barely-there costumes.

Au Lapin Agile:

22 Rue des Saules, 18th, M° Lamarck-Caulaincourt, www.au-lapin-agile.com. Shows Tuesday through Sun- day, 9pm to 2am. Entry i24 (includes first drink). Reservations recom- mended. This tiny Montmartre country house has been a popular cabaret for over 150 years. The main room is low-lit, with red lampshades, dark walls cov- ered in old paintings and drawings, and set with ancient wooden tables and benches to hold about 60 people. There is a piano, but no stage. The performers sing and play their instruments right in the center of the room, everything from old Edith Piaf songs with an accordion to piano- accompanied poetry.

Petite St. Vincent (PSV Resort) Grenadines

If you decide to climb the 400 steps to visit the Notre Dame tower, and try as soon as possible ranking - sible, in order to avoid "traffic jam" of claustrophobic spiral staircase. Free guided tours in English can be Wednesday and Thursday 12:00, Saturday, 2:30 pm, 2:30 p.m. every day in August. Do not forget to ask your guide to explore the 14-ton church bell, "Emmanuel."

 

Mopion Island - Grenadines

The supremacy of the Butte Montmartre, the white dome of Sacred Heart is an indispensable component of the city skyline.

 

 

Louvre Museum opening hours from 9:00 to 6 pm December 22 to February 24, until 21:45 (the main collection only), Monday and Wednesday. The main entrance of the pyramid (through 99 Rio Road, the first) open 9:00 until closing. If you do not want on the outside, enter through the Carrousel du Louvre business center (TIL opening 22:00 of the entrance was in the 99 Rivoli Street,in the garden, or directly from the subway Palace Theater, on the 1st exports.

 

 

 

Eiffel Tower, the quintessential symbol both of Paris and the brilliance of industrial engineering, was designed to be a temporary structure for a fair, the 1889 Exposition Universelle.When completed, the tower was the tallest building in the world, at 300m. Outraged critics protested against this “grimy factory chimney”, though Eiffel himself (not surprisingly) thought it was beautiful in its sheer structural efficiency:“To a certain extent,” he wrote, the tower was formed by the wind itself.”

 

 

 

The Arc de Triomphe still exudes a certain grandeur despite the crowds of tourists and the tacky souvenir shops. Beneath it is the tomb of the Unknown Soldier, where an eternal flame commemorates those who lost their lives in the war.

French art from 18th to early 20th centuries in a converted rail station; this includes the world's greatest and largest collection of those crowd-pleasin' Impressionists and post-Impressionists, such as Monet, Degas, and Renoir...