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Paris: Palais Garnier
November 3, 2008, 5:30 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Paris: Palais Garnier

Astro Boy visits the home of the Phantom of the Opera

Astro Boy visits the home of the Phantom of the Opera

When visiting New York last year, I developed a new passion: musicals. In the space of a week I saw Chicago, Les Miserables, Spamalot, Rent, and, of course, The Phantom of the Opera. I became fascinated with the story: I have read the book in English (and, kind of, in French); I have four or five filmed versions on DVD; and I went to Melbourne to see the Australian performance. So, the Palais Garnier – the Parisien opera house where the story is set – was high on my to-do list when I arrived in Paris.

Funnily enough, our tour guide was a young French version of Andrew Lloyd Webber – skinny, with thin eyebrows, mascara and a bizarre accent. I had researched the building for a French assignment, so I was fairly familiar with it; we saw Le Grand Escalier (as also seen in Marie Antoinette), the Ice-Lickers (!) foyer and bar, and the auditorium. However, what I (and many other visitors) really wished to see where the underground lake and the incredible backstage.

it's BIG.

The Palais Garnier from Google Earth: its BIG

It was the home of opera in Paris from the 1870’s until the late 1980’s, when a monstrosity was built at Bastille. As you can see above, it is B I G. It swallows an entire block – however, only a fraction of that is taken up by the actual auditorium. To get an idea of what I mean, look at a model of the building (on display, apparently, at the Musee d’Orsay):

Model of the Palais Garnier

Model of the Palais Garnier

Compare the T I N Y auditorium, in the middle (red and gold) with the size of the stage: the stage area is as deep, and three times as high as the auditorium. A lot of space is taken up by the Grand Escalier, and the ‘intermission’ halls (the ‘Ice Lickers’ bar and foyer). The ‘lake’ is apparently under the stage. I’ve seen photos of the area, but it is closed, even to performers and technicians.

Main entrance, which faces towards the South

Main entrance, which faces towards the South

Tourists don’t enter from the main entrance (above); they go around the side, and enter via the ‘Subscribers Entrance’ – the private entrance of the rich.

Side entrance (used for tours)

Side entrance (used for tours) - the green dome is above where the auditorium is.

Of course, I took an incredibly huge amount of photos on the inside. They have a yellow cast due to the light. The Subscribers Lounge is directly underneath the auditorium.

Subscribers Lounge

Subscribers Lounge

Subscribers Lounge

Floor of the Subscribers Lounge

Floor of the Subscribers Lounge

The cieling rose of the Subscribers Lounge

The cieling rose of the Subscribers Lounge

Underneath the Grand Escalier

Underneath the Grand Escalier

The Grand Escalier

From the Subscribers Lounge, we moved to the Grand Escalier, a very famous staircase. It is the foyer of the opera house, a place where the 19th century aristocracy went to see and be seen. It has been used in several films (especially adaptations of Phantom of the Opera), most recently Marie Antoinette (a little ironic, as she was very much beheaded before the Palais Garnier was built).

Scene from Marie Antoinette (with Kirsten Dunst) on the Grand Escalier

Scene from Marie Antoinette (with Kirsten Dunst) on the Grand Escalier

Moving up to the Grand Escalier

Moving up to the Grand Escalier

Grand Escalier

Grand Escalier

Looking up, in the Grand Escalier

Looking up, in the Grand Escalier

The parents of this little girl took photos of her for a good ten minutes, so no hope of a clear shot of the stairs.

The parents of this little girl took photos of her for a good ten minutes, so no hope of a clear shot of the stairs.

Balconies overlooking Grand Escalier

Balconies overlooking Grand Escalier

Cieling of Grand Escalier

Cieling of Grand Escalier

A Wikipedia image of the Escalier

A Wikipedia image of the Escalier just so you can appreciate the size and the opulence.

Seriously. But there is more to come.

The Auditorium

The opera house was commissioned after the bloody revolutions, by Napoleon III apparently, so the use of ‘Royal Blue’ (as was traditional in auditoriums back then) was out; so Eugienie, his wife, demanded an Italian style red and gold auditorium. This is the opera house which makes the Princess Theatre back in Melbourne look like the Festival Centre in terms of beauty.

Palais Garnier Auditorium

Wikipedia image of the Palais Garnier Auditorium

Did I say the Palais Garnier was big? Well, remember how tiny the auditorium is in comparison to the rest of the opera house, and then look at the size of the auditorium in this pic. Damn.

I can assure you it is as opulent and well kept as it seems – apparently it underwent a major restoration a few years ago. But everything is still original.

The Phantom's Chandelier

The Phantoms Chadelier

This is the famous chandelier, which is still the original. It started out as a gas-light, and was converted to electricity in the 30s, I believe. The painting around the chandelier is from the 1970’s. Sorry, didn’t like it. Apparently noone else does either. This photo doesn’t show the scale of the thing – again, compare with the Wikipedia image above.

Balconies

Balconies

Detail of plasterwork

Detail of plasterwork

Stalls and balconies near stage

Stalls and balconies near stage

The curtain (which is a painted canvas)

The curtain (which is a painted canvas)

Balconies

Balconies

(the box in the bottom left is the infamous ‘Box 5′ from the Gaston Leroux story).

The ‘Ice Lickers’ Foyer and Bar

This refers to the bar for intermission. I forget the French name, but ‘ice licker’ is the unfortunate translation, according to my Lloyd-Webber-esque guide.

These rooms – a circular bar, a long palisade, and a large foyer – can be seen to the left of the grand escalier in the model picture above. Huge, of course. And ridiculously opulent. I haven’t seen such overdone opulence since visiting Potsdam (near Berlin – the palaces at Potsdam aren’t much older than the Palais Garnier).

Dome of the bar, depicting Bacchus having a party

Dome of the bar, depicting Bacchus having a party

Statues and decorations in the bar

Statues and decorations in the bar

Beautiful entranceway

Beautiful entranceway

The intermission foyer, more amazing in real life.

The intermission foyer, more amazing in real life.

This foyer runs across the front (southern side, as seen in the photos with Astro Boy). It can be seen to the right in the model cutaway above. It is magnificient.

Decorations in the foyer

Decorations in the foyer

Decorations in the foyer

Decorations in the foyer

And that was the last I saw.

I really did want to see the incredible stage, or the incredible underground vaults. Our guide mentioned them – he said the water is emptied and the vaults cleaned every two years – but they have not been accessible by anyone. The Palais Garnier coordinators should consider an ‘ultimate’ tour: I’d pay well more to see the vaults, the rehearsal spaces, the huge dance room behind the stage, the pulley systems which control the sets. Previously, the opera house housed the opera: dancers, stars, technicians, artists all lived within it’s walls (!). With the tour you only see a tiny percentage of the opera: after my research, I would kill to see backstage and learn more about the operation of the theatre. Its history is far more incredible than we saw on the teeny tiny tour.



Frost, Beggars and Porcelaine
November 3, 2008, 4:02 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

The Good: The view from Sacre-Coeur; wonderful Couch-hosts, particuarly Rachel in Limoges; breaking open a pack of Fru-chocs when I got back.

The Bad: taking one pair of trousers for a 7 day trip, and not having a change of clothes after being stuck in freezing rain.

The Ugly: Do I look like a touristic victim? Why do all the bloody oppourtunists, beggars, scam artists and generally sketchy guys approach me  E V E R Y W H E R E  I go in Paris? Dude, I so could tell you were following me. And Other-Dude, I do not want your crappy embroidery-thread bracelets / glowing Eiffel Tour / imitation designer bags / chestnuts roasted on a trash can. Regardez! La police vient ! Now, G O   A W A Y!

For Toussaint vacation – 10 glorious days of no work – I was determined to go somewhere. The thought of camping out in my bedroom for those days was unbearable. I decided to risk financial risk a couple of weeks ago and bought a few TGV (French bullet train) tickets to Limoges and Paris: Limoges because, apparently, it has a big Halloween festival, and Paris because it’s on the way to Limoges.

Well, Limoges hasn’t had a huge halloween festival since the late 90’s (! – clearly the websites haven’t caught up with that – according to About.com, 40-50,000 people flock to Limoges every year for Halloween. Um, not really.) But the city’s quite lovely, I got to visit a World War II site at Oradour-sur-Glane, and I got to learn all about porcelaine. And I got to stay with the best couch-host (http://www.couchsurfing.com) ever.

Paris was Paris. Overpriced, crowded and full of the most beautiful buildings in the world. I’ve been before, of course, so this time around my focus was on walking around and seeing things I’d dismissed last time, or simply ran out of time to do. Also, I did everything I could that was free, due to my current poverty. Seriously, I was on 10euro a day ($20), which is miserable in a city when the cheapest lunch you can find is 4,50e ($9) for a yiros or a crepe, and admission fees usually range from 6e to 12e.

I have a lot to talk about, so I will work on several blogs over the next few days. Check back if you can.



Snakes in Australia are getting hungry
November 3, 2008, 8:50 am
Filed under: Weird News Stories

I had to post this for my non-Australian readers. Please, come visit our country – see the parrot eating snakes and spiders. Not even dogs or cats are safe.

***

Snake caught eating cocky

Monday, November 3, 2008

© The Cairns Post

Cindy Lane... A python eating a cockatoo at Clifton Beach on October 30, 2008.  Pic. Cindy Lane CC127969

MUST CREDIT: Cindy Lane... A python eating a cockatoo at Clifton Beach on October 30, 2008. Pic. Cindy Lane CC127969

LAST month, it was a spider chowing down on local birdlife that caused a media frenzy around the world.

Not to be outdone, a python has taken up the challenge with a hapless sulphur-crested cockatoo (bird) falling victim to its hungry jaws last Thursday night.

Artist and Clifton Beach resident Cindy Lane was painting in her studio around 8pm when she heard a “couple of loud squawks” coming from the bougainvillea tree in her backyard.

View more photos of the snake eating the huge cockatoo bird.

On closer inspection, she found the python coiling itself tightly around the bird high in the tree’s branches.

“I considered jumping in to save him, but his last breath was literally being squeezed from him as we approached,” she told The Cairns Post.

She said the python then took about two hours to complete his meal after “one false start” with another half hour to enjoy his spoils before moving on.

“It was difficult to watch but at the same time mesmerising,” Ms Lane said.

“It was just so clever how it used his upper coils to get the wings aligned so it could swallow the whole thing.”

Python feasts on pet cat

Saturday, March 1, 2008

A MICROCHIP implanted in a Cairns family’s missing cat helped them track down their pet – inside a 4m python.

The owner of the Siamese-Persian said her cat went missing on Wednesday night and when she searched for it the following morning, she instead found a python with a suspiciously looking bulge in its belly.

“My heart started to leap and I thought, ‘oh no, that’s it’,” the woman, who did not want to be named, said.

Wildlife rescue worker Michael Stevens took the python to Southside Veterinary Surgery at Woree, where vet Wade McAuley scanned it for the cat’s microchip and found a positive match.

“We did have him microchipped so that put our minds at rest, but it was still very sad,” the cat’s owner said.

The snake has since been released into the wild at the back of Edmonton.

A 5m python that stalked and killed a Kuranda family’s pet dog this week is also set for release
after vet and reptile expert Andrew Easton gave it a clean bill of health.

The snake, nicknamed Fluffy, created headlines when The Cairns Post revealed how it ate the Peric family’s dog - after pythons also ate their cat and guinea pigs.

“The snake is in a pretty healthy condition,” Dr Easton from Kuranda Veterinary Surgery said.

“We’ve had a feel over him and we had a look in his mouth to see whether there were any injuries from his recent escapade.

“The only potential problems are things like collars, but most of the time they’ll be passed right through.”

Dr Easton said it could take the snake two to four weeks to fully digest his latest meal.

“If everything goes fine with him, we’ll probably look over him once more before his release to make sure he has no diseases before he goes into the wild,” he said.

Queensland Parks and Wildlife northern division spokesman Scott Sullivan said the amethystine or scrub python was the largest of the Queensland python species.

Mr Sullivan said the largest authenticated specimen was recorded at 5.6m, weighing about 28kg.

Monster python eats pet

Sophia Browne

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

VIDEO AND PHOTO GALLERY: A Kuranda couple fears for their children’s safety after a 5m python devoured their dog in front of them, just weeks after other snakes killed their cat and guinea pig.

Daniel Peric said he now would not leave his two children, aged five and seven, alone in any part of the house, after the “enormous” python ate his silky terrier-cross chihuahua about 9pm on Monday.

“Actually watching it unfold before your eyes was pretty gut wrenching,” he said.

“We’d had the dog about five years, so it was part of the family.”

Mr Peric said in the weeks before, the family had found their cat’s body, which looked like something had attempted to swallow it and on Sunday a smaller python had eaten their pet guinea pig.

“When it happens once, you think it’s a one-off, but last night I thought “this is serious,” he said.

“We have ducted air-conditioning. Call it paranoia, but my big fear is that a snake will get in there.”

Australian Venom Zoo owner Stuart Douglas took the call from the distressed Peric family on Monday night and arrived to remove the scrub python within 20 minutes.

“They were very upset but they still had the decency to call us to come and get it,” Mr Douglas said.

“It was at the bottom of the veranda, they’d thrown chairs at it (the python) to try to stop it, but it had already eaten the animal.”

Mr Douglas said by the time he arrived, all that could be seen of the dog was its back legs and tail.

“It only took about 30 minutes to eat the dog, but it will be digesting it for two days,” he said.

Mr Douglas said pythons were amazing animals that belonged in the Far North but people needed to be aware that pets were potential prey.

“These pythons used to feed on wallabies but now they feed on cats and dogs in suburbia,” he said.

“This python actively stalked their dog.”

He said if anyone saw a large snake near their home they should call someone to remove it as soon as possible.

“There’s someone in every area of Queensland who will come around for a donation and basically volunteer to collect it.”

Mr Douglas said he would wait until the python had fully digested its prey before releasing it.

Snake’s wallaby meal

Thursday, February 28, 2008

WARNING! GRAPHIC IMAGES & VIDEO: Darren Cleland could not believe his eyes when he saw this monster python on the banks of the Barron River west of Cairns.

The former Cairns councillor was at his rural property at Bilwon last month when he heard a neighbour’s dog barking and rushed down to the water’s edge to find the snake devouring a full-size wallaby with a joey in its pouch.

He estimated the python was at least 5m long.

“We were more amazed than anything that a python could get its mouth around an animal of that size,” he told The Cairns Post last night.

“We’ve seen a few snakes but never anything this big.”

Mr Cleland said the experience was a good lesson for his children to be wary of all snakes.

“We figured if it could eat the wallaby, it could easily eat our five-year-old.”

Mr Cleland sent the images to The Cairns Post after it yesterday revealed how a 5m python swallowed the Peric family’s pet dog on Monday night.

Daniel Peric said he now would not leave his two children, aged five and seven, alone in any part of their Kuranda house.

The python was removed from the Peric’s home by Australian Venom Zoo owner Stuart Douglas.

It will be released back into the wild away from humans and roads in the next few days, after being checked by a reptile specialist and officers from Queensland Parks and Wildlife.

In the meantime the python, named Fluffy because of its appetite for furry animals, is curled up in a special room at the Venom Zoo while it digests its prey.

Mr Douglas said scrub pythons grew up to 8m in length and there was documentary evidence they could break a man’s arm or strangle an adult to death.

The Cairns Post had a huge response to yesterday’s story, with more than 20,000 page views of the article at www.cairns.com.au.

had a huge response to yesterday’s story, with more than 20,000 page views of the article at www.cairns.com.au.

More than 6000 people have already viewed our python picture gallery on the site.

Spider eats bird

Thursday, October 23, 2008

© The Cairns Post

THESE amazing images of a mammoth spider devouring a bird were taken in the backyard of an Atherton property, west of Cairns.

And the images, which are being cirulated via email worldwide, are real, according to wildlife experts.

See all the photos of the spider eating the bird

The photos, believed to have been taken earlier this week, show the spider clenching its legs around a lifeless bird trapped in a web.

Joel Shakespeare, the head spider keeper at NSW’s Australian Reptile Park, told ninemsn that the spider was a Golden Orb Weaver.

Another brutal wildlife meal

Monster python eats pet

Check out our insect gallery

“Normally they prey on large insects, it’s unusual to see one eating a bird,” he said.

Mr Shakepeare told ninemsn he had seen golden orb weaver spiders as big as a human hand but the northern species in tropical areas were known to grow larger.

Mr Shakespeare said the bird, a Chestnut-breasted Mannikin which appears frozen in an angel-like pose in the pictures, is likely to have flown into the web and got caught.

“It wouldn`t eat the whole bird,” he told ninemsn.

“It uses its venom to break down the bird for eating and what it leaves is a food parcel,” he said.

Queensland Museum’s Greg Czechura is reported ninemsn as saying cases of the Golden Orb Weaver eating small birds were “well known but rare”.

“It builds a very strong web,” he told ninemsn.

But he said the spider would not have attacked until the bird weakened due to its struggle to free its wings.

“The more they struggle, the more tangled up and exhausted they get and they go into stress.”

“If a spider gets a bird, it`s a very lucky spider,” Mr Czechura said.

Read our exclusive story about the photographer who took these amazing images and check out The Weekend Post tomorrow for our exclusive interview and more images.



Aussie iPods cheapest in the world
November 3, 2008, 8:36 am
Filed under: Weird News Stories

Well, at least theres some positives to our miserable dollar …

***

iPod index reflects dive of Australian dollar

The Australian

November 03, 2008 12:00am

  • Australia cheapest place in world for iPods
  • Highlights dramatic fall of Aussie dollar
  • “iPod index” compares currencies

AUSTRALIA is the cheapest place in the world to buy an Apple iPod, according to a study to be released today, highlighting the dramatic fall in the Australian dollar in the past several months, The Australian reports.

CommSec will today release details of its “iPod index”, which measures the price of an 8GB iPod nano in 62 countries to compare currencies.

CommSec chief economist Craig James said Australia had jumped to the cheapest spot after being placed 14th cheapest in July. An 8GB iPod costs $US131.95.

In July, a 4GB iPod (then considered the entry-level product) cost $US181.50.

“It’s quite remarkable, we are the cheapest by a long way,” Mr James said.

“Our currency has fallen dramatically.”

Yup, we are the cheapest place to buy an iPod Nano in the world… If you don’t live here!

Lonski

It would be about 25 per cent cheaper for a British tourist to buy their iPod in Australia, rather than at home, Mr James said.

But while having an Australian dollar at US65c-67c was good news for manufacturers and other exporters as well as the tourism industry, Mr James said the iPod index shows the Australian dollar may have fallen too far too quickly.