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  1. Élisabeth-Céleste Vénard, épouse de Chabrillan, née le 27 décembre 1824 à Paris et morte le 18 février 1909 à Paris 18 e [1], est une prostituée, galante, courtisane, comédienne, danseuse, actrice, autrice, chanteuse, propriétaire et directrice de théâtre, française, connue sous le nom de scène de « la Mogador ».

  2. Élisabeth-Céleste Venard, countess of Chabrillan (27 December 1824 – 18 February 1909), better known by her stage name Céleste Mogador and often referred to simply as Mogador, was a French dancer and writer.

  3. Chabrillan, Céleste de (1824–1909) Parisian-born dancer, courtesan, novelist and autobiographer whose five volumes of memoirs scandalized France. Name variations: Comtesse de Moreton de Chabrillan; Celeste or Céleste Mogador, Mme Mogador, La Mogador. Born Céleste Vénard in Paris, France, on December 27, 1824; died in 1909; married Lionel ...

  4. Céleste de Chabrillan (1824-1909), courtesan and author, illegitimate daughter of Anne-Victoire Vénard, was born on 27 December 1824 in Paris. Her childhood was unhappy and at 15 she was imprisoned for vagrancy.

  5. 25 de abr. de 2024 · "Céleste de Chabrillan" published on by null. (1824–1909),born Paris, had a colourful career as a dancer (‘La Mogador’) and courtesan before marrying the impecunious Lionel, Comte de Chabrillan, who vainly tried his luck on the Victorian ...

  6. 17 de may. de 2016 · At 16 she entered a brothel but left within six months to become Céleste Mogador, dancer at the Bal Mabille and the Théâtre Beaumarchais and toast of Paris as the Hippodrome’s star horse-rider. She became the mistress of Lionel, comte de Chabrillan, who was busily wasting his fortune.

  7. In 1854, Céleste de Chabrillan embarked from England on the Croesus to begin a new life in Australia, leaving behind a life spent in Paris in an era so vividly described in the novels of Honoré de Balzac and Victor Hugo.