REVIEW · PARIS
Paris Paradis Latin Cabaret Dinner and Show
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A Paris cabaret night with real stage energy. You’ll get a gourmet 3-course dinner in a famous historic venue, then settle in for a nonstop show that blends comedy, music, and sexy can-can flair. It’s one of the classic ways to enjoy Paris after dark, especially if you want something more playful than a museum circuit.
I especially love the setting: Le Paradis Latin sits in the Latin Quarter between Notre-Dame and the Pantheon, and it has strong Eiffel-era credentials. The second thing I like is the show style. It stays moving, includes audience interaction, and mixes modern choreography with traditional cabaret laughs. The main drawback to know up front: seating and sightlines can be tight, and you’re not assigned your seats until the day of your reservation.
In This Review
- Key things I’d plan around
- Le Paradis Latin: a classic Paris cabaret in an iconic theater
- What your dinner really includes: 3 courses, set menus, and real drinks
- Drinks included: know the amounts so you can plan your evening
- Upgrades and menu swaps for food needs
- The show: Kamel Ouali choreography with humor, music, and sensual can-can
- Timing and pacing: how a 7:30 pm start shapes your night
- When the show starts vs. photo rules
- Seating and sightlines: what you can control (and what you can’t)
- Who should book Paradis Latin dinner and show
- Price and value: is $217.22 a smart spend in Paris?
- Practical tips that make the night smoother
- Should you book this Paris cabaret dinner show?
Key things I’d plan around

- Eiffel-era venue in the Latin Quarter with a historic connection to Napoleon’s era
- 3-course meal + drinks (Bordeaux and Champagne are included in set amounts)
- Kamel Ouali’s new choreography with singers, comedians, dancers, and acrobatic moments
- A show that runs without an intermission, so you’re in the performance mode for the whole stretch
- Seat assignment happens the same day, so your view may vary by location
Le Paradis Latin: a classic Paris cabaret in an iconic theater

If you like Paris for its theater tradition, this is a strong pick. Le Paradis Latin is located in the Latin Quarter area, between Notre-Dame and the Pantheon, which makes it convenient for an evening that doesn’t require a long trek across town. The building story matters too. It was originally connected to Napoleon in the early 1800s and later rebuilt in the late 1800s by Gustave Eiffel, which gives the space a real sense of place.
Cabarets can be either slick and generic or charmingly specific. This one feels specific. The venue is built for visibility and spectacle, with a stage setup designed for fast costume changes and multi-performer numbers. You’ll notice that the night is planned like a show first, dinner second. Dinner is part of the experience, but the theater world is the main event.
One practical note: since you’re in a working cabaret theater, the performance vibe can be intense. Expect skin, sensuality, and a bit of cheek. If you’re comfortable with adult entertainment, you’ll likely have a great time.
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What your dinner really includes: 3 courses, set menus, and real drinks
This dinner isn’t just a snack before the show. You’re served a 3-course dinner, and the menu is presented in seasonal form (they list an Eiffel Menu and a Prestige Menu for Autumn/Winter). Your exact selection depends on the service you choose, but you can expect the meal to be presented as a proper plated dinner rather than a buffet shuffle.
Here’s a sample of the kind of dishes you might see:
- Starter: pressed poultry, celery, and duck foie gras
- Main: hake fish with a softy-crunchy fennel, fish broth, and a tea infusion (Earl Grey)
- Dessert: raspberry-passion dress or Cancan Chocolate
Portion size tends to be “enough for the night,” not a full heavy Paris feast. You’ll still feel satisfied, but you won’t leave feeling like you survived a three-course Thanksgiving-style ordeal. Several diners describe the meal as small portions that are well prepared, which lines up with the usual cabaret dinner format: keep you energized for the performance.
Drinks included: know the amounts so you can plan your evening
The package includes alcohol in set quantities:
- Half-bottle of Bordeaux wine
- Quarter-bottle of Champagne
- Bottled water (half-bottle)
That’s a nice touch if you want the classic “Paris at night” feel without negotiating drink prices at the table. It’s also useful for planning. If you’re not a heavy drinker, you may want to sip slowly and save some energy for the show portion later.
Upgrades and menu swaps for food needs
You can upgrade to the premium menu option. If you have allergies or a diet requirement, the menu can be adapted. That’s a big deal for comfort. Just make sure you share your needs clearly at booking so they can handle it.
The show: Kamel Ouali choreography with humor, music, and sensual can-can

The headline for the performance is the choreography. This show is described as a new show choreographed by Kamel Ouali, a famous French choreographer. That name matters because Ouali-style work tends to be precise, theatrical, and energetic—less sleepy “sit and watch,” more “stage craft with momentum.”
What you’ll see is a mix of:
- dancers and cabaret choreography
- singers with live performance
- comedians for humor
- international-style attractions and acrobatics
The tone runs from playful to quite sensual. It can feel risqué in the way a classic cabaret does: teasing, playful, and very much adults-only entertainment. You don’t have to be a burlesque superfan to enjoy it, but you should be fine with exposed skin and shirtless male performers as part of the aesthetic.
A helpful detail for your expectations: the show is modern, poetic, and sensual, and it includes real interaction with the public. That “we’re all part of the same room” feeling is one of the reasons this cabaret style can beat more detached stage productions.
Also, the pacing is designed to keep attention. It’s described as having no intermission, so once you’re seated, you’re in for a long stretch of performance rather than a mid-show break.
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Timing and pacing: how a 7:30 pm start shapes your night

The start time is 7:30 pm. That matters more than you might think because cabaret dinners don’t run like museum tours where you can wander until the last minute. You’ll want to be ready to settle in on time for the dinner sequence.
Even though the tour duration is listed as about 3 hours, plan for a night that can run longer. Some evenings stretch beyond that, mostly because the dinner-to-show transition and the show run time add up. One practical way to handle it: treat the whole evening as a single block—dinner, then performance, then you’re done. Don’t schedule a hard second dinner reservation right after. Put yourself on “Paris after dark time,” not “train timetable time.”
When the show starts vs. photo rules
Photography rules are worth noting. You may be able to take photos during the dinner part, but once the cabaret performance begins, photos are not allowed. The transition can happen around the time the evening shifts from dinner ambience to full-on stage spectacle, so if photos matter to you, get them done early.
Seating and sightlines: what you can control (and what you can’t)

You don’t pick your seat in advance. The seating plan is made the same day by the hall manager based on your reservation and chosen services. That’s common for big theater dinners, but it affects your view.
Two issues are realistic:
- Tight seating around tables and in the viewing area
- Potential sightline blocks from structural elements for some seats
The theater uses a stage design that works well for many angles, but not every table gets a perfect unobstructed view. If you’re very sensitive to seeing every moment, you may want to choose your service carefully and arrive with low expectations about getting the center-line view every time.
My advice: go for the atmosphere first. The show is designed as a full-room experience, and even if your view isn’t perfectly “stage in frame,” you’ll still feel the energy.
Who should book Paradis Latin dinner and show

This is a good match if you want:
- a classic Paris cabaret night that feels local and adult
- a mix of dinner + a real stage production in one outing
- a date-night or friend-night activity with lots of performer energy
- a theater evening in a famous venue near central landmarks (Notre-Dame and the Pantheon area)
It’s not ideal if you:
- need a family-friendly environment. They don’t suggest the show for children under 6.
- are uncomfortable with exposed skin and adult sensuality
- want a quiet, low-stimulation dinner. This is a show-first format.
Dress code is not spelled out in the package details you provided, but practical advice from real-world theater behavior helps: show venues can be strict at the door. If you’re thinking about wearing shorts, bring a safer backup outfit. Better to be slightly overdressed than rejected and scrambling for a change.
Price and value: is $217.22 a smart spend in Paris?

At $217.22 per person for a roughly 3-hour theater-and-dinner experience, you’re paying for a few things at once:
- the historic theater setting
- the production value of a full cabaret show (multiple performers, choreography, comedy, and acrobatics)
- a 3-course dinner
- set drinks: Bordeaux wine + Champagne, plus water
In Paris, dinner alone can eat a big chunk of the budget—especially if you choose a “sit down, course meal” plan. Add in the show production, and the overall value starts to make sense. This isn’t a bargain cabaret. It’s closer to paying for a full evening package: one ticket type, one main event, and a meal that’s integrated into the experience.
Where you should be honest with yourself: if you only care about the show and not the dinner, you may feel like dinner is “extra you didn’t need.” But if you want the full French nightlife rhythm—arrive, eat, then shift into performance—this package approach can feel like good value.
Practical tips that make the night smoother

- Arrive on time for the 7:30 pm seating. The dinner portion runs within a schedule, and the night can feel rushed if you’re late.
- Expect a tight setup. Plan to be comfortable in close quarters with other diners.
- Don’t plan on photos during the show. Take any dinner photos before the performance portion fully starts.
- Use menu adaptation for allergies. The menu can be adapted, but you need to communicate requirements.
- Dress with the theater in mind. If you’re unsure, go dressier rather than casual.
Should you book this Paris cabaret dinner show?
Book it if you want an easy, high-energy evening that mixes a proper dinner with an actual production in a famous Paris venue. This is especially worth it for couples and groups who like adult entertainment and want a night that feels unmistakably Paris, not just another generic show.
Skip or reconsider if you dislike sensual cabaret content, hate tight seating and variable sightlines, or you want a calm dinner with a long unhurried meal pace. Also think twice if you’re sensitive to blocked views—you won’t control seating ahead of time.
If you’re the type who loves a “one ticket, one night, done right” plan, Paradis Latin is a strong choice.





























