[2] The company was granted to a man by the name of Texier (or Teissier) who had Abraham, one of the dancers from the Opera, as his partner.
[3] In 1777, Mr. Texier, aiming to profit from the students of the Conservatory at the Académie Royale de Musique, began construction of the new theatre.
[3] The premiere performance included 80 students as the actors who began with a pantomime titled Jerusalem Delivered (French: La Jérusalem délivrée).
[2] The entrepreneurs failed to pay their creditors and actors, leading to a royal order in September 1780 mandating the theatre's closure.
[4] The theatre, with a new director, shifted genres and repertoire, reestablishing itself as the Théâtre de Beaujolais.