The Alcazar d'Été was a café-concert which opened in 1860, at 8 Avenue Gabriel in the Jardin des Champs-Élysées in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, and closed in 1914.
However, from 1867 onwards when Thérésa had left, it was surpassed by the Café des Ambassadeurs closeby, which was more chic and attracted a more upmarket clientele.
[1] In 1886, Goubert opened En Revenant de la Revue (Returning from the revue) at the Alcazar d'Été, which became a tremendous success, mainly because of the personal magnetism of the legendary performer, Paulus, who very intense, scorched the stage as he paced frenetically with his top hat and cane.
[8] The title referred not a theatrical performance, but to a military review, and Paulus took advantage of the popularity of the revanchist and populist politician General Boulanger to mention him in a reworked verse of En revenant de la revue[9] on France's national day, 14 July 1886.
Closed at the end of the 1920s, the building remained unoccupied until after the Second World War, when it was once again used as a depot for the materials of the Marshall Plan.