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Kabarett

Kabarett (pronúncia em alemão: [kabaˈʁɛt]; do Francês cabaret = taberna) é a revista satírica, uma forma de cabaré que se desenvolveu na França por Rodolphe Salis em 1881 como o cabaret artistique. Chamava-se Le Chat Noir e era centrado em eventos políticos e sátiras. Posteriormente, inspirou a criação dos locais Kabarett na Alemanha a partir de 1901, com a criação do Überbrettl em Berlim, e na Áustria, com a criação do Jung-Wiener Theatre zum lieben Augustin, localizado no Theater an der Wien. Na era de Weimar, em meados da década de 1920, era caracterizado pela sátira política e pelo humor negro.[1][2] Compartilhava a atmosfera de intimidade característica com o cabaré francês de onde era importado, mas o humor negro era um aspecto alemão distinto.

  1. (1997) The new encyclopaedia Britannica, Volume 2, p.702 quote:
    It retained the intimate atmosphere, entertainment platform, and improvisational character of the French cabaret but developed its own characteristic gallows humour. By the late 1920s the German cabaret gradually had come to feature mildly risque musical entertainment for the middle-class man, as well as biting political and social satire. It was also a centre for underground political and literary movements. [...] They were the centres of leftist of opposition to the rise of the German Nazi Party and often experienced Nazi retaliation for their criticism of the government.
  2. Schönfeld, Christiane; Finnan, Carmel (2006). Practicing modernity: female creativity in the Weimar Republic. [S.l.: s.n.] ISBN 9783826032417 

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Kabarett ALS Kabarett BAR Kabarett BR Kabarett German Kabarett English קברט גרמני HE Kabarett VI

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