Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Charles-Joseph Zidler (1831–1897) was a French impresario. He co-founded the Paris cabaret Moulin Rouge with Joseph Oller. Portrayals in movies. Harold Kasket in Moulin Rouge, 1952 movie directed by John Huston. Jean Gabin in French Cancan, 1955 movie directed by Jean Renoir.

  2. Charles Zidler. 1830-1897. THE FOUNDER OF THE MOULIN ROUGE. Joseph Oller created the Moulin Rouge. An audacious perfectionist, his ambition was to create ‘the biggest and most beautiful of cabarets; a temple dedicated to Woman, the Dance and the Cancan.’.

  3. Charles-Joseph Zidler est un impresario et homme de spectacle français, né le 29 décembre 1831 à Saint-Cloud 2 et mort le 10 novembre 1897 dans le 9e arrondissement de Paris 3. Il fut notamment le fondateur du Moulin-Rouge financé par Joseph Oller, et le maître d’œuvre de deux cavalcades du Carnaval de Paris . Biographie.

  4. Charles Zidler est un homme de spectacle et entre au Moulin Rouge pour seconder Joseph Oller dès 1889. Il est le « frère » des artistes et l’homme de l’ombre qui surveille d’un œil bienveillant mais d’une main de fer les danseuses et l’ensemble du personnel.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Moulin_RougeMoulin Rouge - Wikipedia

    Moulin Rouge [1] ( / ˌmuːlæ̃ˈruːʒ /, French: [mulɛ̃ ʁuʒ]; lit.'"Red Mill"') is a cabaret in Paris, on Boulevard de Clichy, at Place Blanche, the intersection of, and terminus of Rue Blanche. In 1889, the Moulin Rouge was co-founded by Charles Zidler and Joseph Oller, who also owned the Paris Olympia.

  6. Jul 13, 2022 · Some of the characters are loosely based on people from the real Moulin Rouge’s history. A man named Charles Zidler was one of the club’s co-founders (alongside Joseph Oller), and that’s where Harold Zidler, the club owner in the Moulin Rouge! musical and movie, got his name.

  7. The masters of the place were Joseph Oller and Charles Zidler. They nicknamed their establishment Le Premier Palais des Femmes (the first Women Palace) and bet on their success, enthusiastically claiming to whoever listened that the Moulin Rouge would become a temple of music and dance.