rdfs:comment
| - Cabaret may refer to:
* Cabaret (Tropico 1)
* Cabaret (Tropico 3 and 4)
* Cabaret (Tropico 5)
- Chercher "cabaret" sur dicod'Òc (dictionnaires en ligne sur le site du Congrès permanent de la lenga occitana)
- Cabaret is the thirteenth episode of the Canadian television series, Degrassi: The Next Generation.
- There have been two pinball machines named Cabaret:
* The 1968 Williams machine
* The 1975 Recreativos Franco machine
- Cabaret is a production, and this is a general overview of that production.
- A cabaret was a type of entertainment venue. Rigel II had a cabaret. In 2267, while on the Shore Leave Planet, Leonard McCoy recalled two girls from the chorus line there. (TOS: "Shore Leave" )
- [[w:|]][[Category: derivations|Cabaret]], from [[w:|]][[Category: derivations|Cabaret]] [[cambret#|cambret]], from [[w:|]][[Category: derivations|Cabaret]] camberete, diminutive of cambre (“‘chamber’”), from [[w:|]][[Category: derivations|Cabaret]] camera, from [[w:|]][[Category: derivations|Cabaret]] καμάρα (kamara), “‘vaulted chamber’”).
- Cabaret is a secondary quest in The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. The quest automatically begins after completion of the main story quest A Poet Under Pressure.
- Cabaret is a stage musical based on a set of short stories by Christopher Isherwood (collected in Goodbye To Berlin), which in turn were based on real events and people. It also drew enormous influence from I Am A Camera (1951), a straight play based on Goodbye to Berlin. Cabaret itself was adapted into a film of the same name in 1972. No two versions of this story are the same, all starring wildly different characters, or different versions of the same characters, and following different events. Hell, even the musical itself differs somewhat in content based on what revision you're talking about.
- Cabaret is a form of entertainment featuring comedy, song, dance, and theatre, distinguished mainly by the performance venue — a restaurant or nightclub with a stage for performances and the audience sitting around the tables (often dining or drinking) watching the performance. The turn of the 20th century introduced a revolutionized cabaret culture. Performers included the spectacular Josephine Baker and the legendary infamous Brazilian drag performer João Francisco dos Santos (aka Madame Satã), both of African descent. The venue itself can also be called a "cabaret." These performances could range from political satire to light entertainment, each being introduced by a master of ceremonies, or MC.
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