- published: 07 Jan 2014
- views: 23721
Aristide Bruant (6 May 1851 – 10 February 1925(1925-02-10) (aged 73)) was a French cabaret singer, comedian, and nightclub owner. He is best known as the man in the red scarf and black cape featured on certain famous posters by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. He has also been credited as the creator of the chanson réaliste musical genre.
Born Louis Armand Aristide Bruand in the village of Courtenay, Loiret in France, Bruant left his home in 1866 at age fifteen, following his father's death, to find employment. Making his way to the Montmartre Quarter of Paris, he hung out in the working-class bistros, where he finally was given an opportunity to show his musical talents. Although bourgeois by birth, he soon adopted the earthy language of his haunts, turning it into songs that told of the struggles of the poor.
Bruant began performing at cafe-concerts and developed a singing and comedy act that led to his being signed to appear at the Le Chat Noir club. Dressed in a red shirt, black velvet jacket, high boots, and a long red scarf, and using the stage name Aristide Bruant, he soon became a star of Montmartre, and when Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec began showing up at the cabarets and clubs, Bruant became one of the artist's first friends.
Libéral Bruant (ca 1635 - Paris, 22 November 1697), was a French architect best known as the designer of the Hôtel des Invalides, Paris, now dominated by the dome erected by Jules Hardouin Mansart, his collaborator in earlier stages of the construction. A comparison of Bruant's central entrance to the Invalides, under an arched cornice packed with military trophies with Mansart's Eglise du Dome (see Les Invalides), gives a clear idea of the difference between Bruant's High Baroque and Hardouin-Mansart's restrained and somewhat academic Late Baroque.
Libéral Bruant was the most notable in a family that produced a long series of architects active from the 16th to the eighteenth century.
In 1660, Libéral Bruant was the architect chosen for rehabilitations to Louis XIII's old arsenal (the Salpêtrière), which was being converted into a combination workhouse and orphanage. It is now the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital.
In the Marais district of Paris, the hotel particulier Bruant built for himself in 1685, at rue de la Perle no.1 now houses the Bricard lock museum (Musée de la Serrure). Its Baroque facade of golden limestone is enlivened by windows set into blind arches that march across its front and busts in oval reserves, all under a richly-sculptured pediment that is pierced by an oval window.
Jean-Bertrand Aristide (born 15 July 1953) is a Haitian politician who became Haiti's first democratically elected president. A proponent of liberation theology, Aristide was appointed to a Roman Catholic parish in Port-au-Prince in 1982 after completing his studies to become a priest of the Salesian order. He became a focal point for the pro-democracy movement first under Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier and then under the military transition regime which followed. He won the Haitian general election between 1990 and 1991, with 67% of the vote and was briefly president of Haiti, until a September 1991 military coup. The coup regime collapsed in 1994 under US pressure and threat of force (Operation Uphold Democracy). Aristide was then president again from 1994 to 1996 and from 2001 to 2004. However, Aristide was ousted in a 2004 coup d'état, in which one of his former soldiers participated. He accused the United States of orchestrating the coup d'état against him with support from Jamaican prime minister P. J. Patterson, among others. Aristide was later forced into exile in the Central African Republic and South Africa. He finally returned to Haiti in 2011 after seven years in exile.
Le Chat Noir (French pronunciation: [lə ʃa nwaʁ]; French for "The Black Cat") was a nineteenth-century entertainment establishment, in the bohemian Montmartre district of Paris. It opened on 18 November 1881 at 84 Boulevard de Rochechouart by the impresario Rodolphe Salis, and closed in 1897 not long after Salis' death (much to the disappointment of Picasso and others who looked for it when they came to Paris for the Exposition in 1900).
Le Chat Noir is thought to be the first modern cabaret: a nightclub where the patrons sat at tables and drank alcoholic beverages while being entertained by a variety show on stage. The acts were introduced by a master of ceremonies who interacted with well-known patrons at the tables. Its imitators have included cabarets from St. Petersburg (Stray Dog Café) to Barcelona (Els Quatre Gats).
Perhaps best known now by its iconic Théophile Steinlen poster art, in its heyday it was a bustling nightclub that was part artist salon, part rowdy music hall. The cabaret published its own humorous journal Le Chat Noir until 1895.
Le Chat (English: The Cat) is a 1971 French-language drama film directed by Pierre Granier-Deferre and based on Georges Simenon's 1967 novel The Cat.
In 2012, Annie Cordy say in an Interview that she talked mainly of food and the Tour de France with Jean Gabin on the set. She haven't scene with Simone Signoret but one day she came on the set to see Annie Cordy act, and welcome her on the movie's set.
Actors: Claude Rich (actor), Margaret Ménégoz (producer), Elsa Zylberstein (actress), Nicolas Silberg (actor), Anémone (actress), Rosette (actress), Marie Pillet (actress), Yvon Back (actor), Philippe Clay (actor), Joseph Malerba (actor), Victor Garrivier (actor), Philippe Morier-Genoud (actor), Jocelyn Quivrin (actor), Jean-Marie Bigard (actor), Patricia Karim (actress),
Genres: Biography, Comedy, Drama,Actors: André Chanu (actor), Henri Bosc (actor), Julien Carette (actor), Georges Bever (actor), René Blancard (actor), Georges Bever (actor), Alain Bouvette (actor), Edmond Beauchamp (actor), Andrex (actor), Louis Arbessier (actor), Amédée (actor), Georges Bever (actor), Antoine Balpêtré (actor), Aimé Clariond (actor), René Berthier (actor),
Plot: A witty journey through the history of Paris told to a group of students by Sacha Guitry, from its foundation at the time of Caesar to 1955. Among others you will meet King Charles VII making Agnès Sorel his mistress; you will witness the creation of printing spurred on by King Louis XI; share the life in the Louvres Palace at the time of King François Ier; spend the last night before St Bartholomew's massacre; be horrified by the murder of Henri III by a fanatical monk, watch the abjuration of protestantism by King Henri IV; try to resolve the Man in the Iron Mask enigma; take part in the storming of the Bastille, be present at the execution of King Louis XVI and at the trial of Queen Marie-Antoinette; participate in the Paris Commune, take sides in the Dreyfus affair.
Keywords: city-name-in-title, paris-franceDans la rue chanté par Aristide Bruant 1912 disque Pathé 3120 matrice 528 Gravures de Steinlein extraites du livre "Dans la rue"
Le Meilleure d'Aristide Bruant A great selection of the most famous french music 1 Meunier, Meunier Tu Es Cocu 0:00 2 Belleville - Ménilmontant 2:39 3 Le Chat Noir 4:55 4 Chant D'apaches 8:12 5 Á La Bastoche 11:13 6 Le P'tit Gris 14:02 7 Á Montpernasse 17:02 8 Á Montmertre 20:01 9 Les Grandes Manoeuvres 22:50 10 Chanson De La France 26:54 11 Á La Bastille 29:51 12 Á Saint-Ouen 32:42 13 La Trompette 35:30 14 Á Saint Lazare 38:41 15 Aux Oiseaux 41:35 16 Nini Peau D'chien 44:56
Aristide Bruant, Vol. 1 « Chansons françaises des années 1900 » (Album complet) ▼▼▼ Cliquez sur le lien « PLUS » ci-dessous pour voir la liste complète des titres ▼▼▼ Retrouvez cette vidéo dans les playlists suivantes : - Années 1900 en France : http://goo.gl/KqktpK 00:00:00 « Le chat noir » - Aristide Bruant 00:03:15 « A la Bastille » - Aristide Bruant 00:06:05 « Ah ! Les salauds » - Aristide Bruant 00:08:48 « A la Bastoche » - Aristide Bruant 00:11:36 « A Saint-Lazare » - Aristide Bruant 00:14:29 « A Saint-Ouen » - Aristide Bruant 00:17:15 « Dans la rue » - Aristide Bruant 00:20:03 « Nini peau d'chien » - Aristide Bruant 00:23:03 « A Batignolles » - Aristide Bruant 00:26:17 « A la Glacière » - Aristide Bruant 00:29:13 « A la Goutte-d'Or » - Aristide Bruant 00:31:59 « Sur la route de...
Ah! Les salauds! 1911 (musique et paroles d'Aristide Bruant) chanté par Aristide Bruant disque Pathé 3362 matrice 169 paroles et dessins de Poulbot extraits du livre "Dans la rue" (troisième volume)
Le chat noir enregistré par Aristide Bruant en 1911 disque Pathé 188 Gravures extraites du livre "Chansons et monologues d'Aristide Bruant"
Le p'tit gris 1910 (paroles et musique d'Aristide Bruant) chanté par Aristide Bruant disque Pathé 3124 matrice 652 Paroles et dessins de Poulbot extraits du troisième volume de "Dans la rue"
"Le chat noir" (paroles et musique d'Aristide Bruant) par le Cabaret Aristide Bruant en 2009 au Palais Mascotte de Genève
A la Bastille 1910 chanté par Aristide Bruant disque Orphée 13 textes et gravures de Steinlein extraits du livre "Dans la rue"
A Batignolles 1911 chanté par Aristide Bruant disque Pathé 3110 matrice 164 gravures de Steinlen et textes extraits du livre "Dans la rue"
Pour chanter Veni Creator
Il faut une chasuble d'or
Pour chanter Veni Creator
Il faut une chasuble d'or
Nous en tissons pour vous, grands de l'?glise
Et nous, pauvres canuts, n'avons pas de chemise
C'est nous les canuts
Nous sommes tout nus
Pour gouverner, il faut avoir
Manteaux ou rubans en sautoir
Pour gouverner, il faut avoir
Manteaux ou rubans en sautoir
Nous en tissons pour vous grands de la terre
Et nous, pauvres canuts, sans drap on nous enterre
C'est nous les canuts
Nous sommes tout nus
Mais notre r?gne arrivera
Quand votre r?gne finira :
Mais notre r?gne arrivera
Quand votre r?gne finira :
Nous tisserons le linceul du vieux monde,
Car on entend d?j? la temp?te qui gronde
C'est nous les canuts