The Paris opera is an example of neoclassicism: It has an
ornamented facade, monumental stairs and Italian type hall
with Chagall paintings on the ceiling. Maria Callas and
Rudolf Noureev are among the many artists who wrote its
history as one of the world foremost scenic stages for opera
and ballet alike. Since the opening of the Opçra Bastille
in 1989, the Opçra Garnier is devoted to ballets.
Construction started in 1861 and lasted for 14 years. The massive works were slowed down by the discovery of a water table that had to be drained before building an enormous concrete well designed to carry the gigantic stage and fly tower. The well was filled with water in order to counter the water pressure (hence the legend of the underground lake popularized by Gaston Leroux's Phantom of the Opera). The 1870 Franco-Prussian war and the Commune interrupted the construction works, but the fire at the old opera in Rue Le Peletier in 1873 hastened the completion of the monument. It was officially inaugurated during the Third Republic by Field Marshall de Mac-Mahon on 5 January 1875.
The building hides its iron frame under flamboyant decoration.
The overall impression is harmonious in spite of the diversity
of its inspiration and the temes taken up by Charles Garnier.
He personally supervised the integration in the architecture
of decorative works entrusted to sculptors, painters and
mosaic artists representative, as himself was, of state-sponsored
artists.
From 1881 down to the present day, several restoration and modernization programmes have made the theatre increasingly functional without lessening its appeal as a monument: technical progress and the evolution of sets under the influence of "verism". The next step was the building of a modern and popular opera house: Opera Bastille.