Bal Tabarin
Le Bal Tabarin was a Parisian nightclub that featured a variety of entertainment, including a line of showgirls dancing the can-can. Nightclubs in other cities used the name after the one in Paris became well known.
Nightclubs
- Bal Tabarin in San Francisco (1931–1951); the building changed ownership to become Bimbo's 365 Club
- Bal Tabarin (1918–1960s), a Times Square, New York, cabaret on 225 West 46th Street, opened in 1918 by Ted Lewis
- Bal Tabarin, a dance club in New York, was denied an entertainment license in 1911 for immoral conduct
- Bal Tabarin (1920s–1950s), a bar and lounge within the Hotel Sherman, Chicago
Media and art
- Bal Tabarin, a 1952 crime thriller film by Republic Pictures, directed by Philip Ford
- Bal Tabarin, a sculpture by Erté
- Bal Tabarin, a poem by Owen Dodson
- La Duquesa del Bal Tabarin, an operetta by Carlo Lombardi
- La duchessa del bal tabarin, a 1917 Italian silent film based on the operetta
- La Duquesa del Bal Tabarin, a 1992 recording made of the operetta's songs
- Dynamic Hieroglyphic of the Bal Tabarin, a 1912 oil painting with applied sequins, by Gino Severini
- Entrance to the Bal Tabarin, Paris, a 1932 photograph by Brassaï
- L'Heritier Du Bal Tabarin, a 1933 film made in France
- Minuit au bal tabarin, Paris, an oil painting by Michael Putz-Richard
Other
- Operation Tabarin (1943–1945), a British military operation, named after Bal Tabarin, to map the coast of Antarctica