Mac Rating: 5.00 | Votes: 1 | Date: 03/07/2026 00:33:00
Canada's largest casino keeps a jewel-box theatre wired with technology few concert halls can match. The Cabaret du Casino de Montreal sits inside the Casino de Montreal at 1 Avenue du Casino on Ile Notre-Dame in Parc Jean-Drapeau, the former French pavilion of Expo 67 that Loto-Quebec converted into a gaming palace in 1993. The Cabaret emerged from the casino's multi-year renovation program and reopened in its current form in 2015 after an extensive rebuild, re-engineered as a genuinely multipurpose hall. The specifications are remarkable for a 616-seat room: Canada's largest Meyer Sound Constellation active acoustic system - the first three-dimensional psychoacoustic installation in a Quebec venue - lets engineers reshape the room's reverberation electronically for anything from an unplugged singer to a rock production. An 800,000-watt lighting rig, 98 robotic projectors and 44 LED-lit ceiling domes that double as video surfaces complete a technical plant that would flatter an arena. The standard configuration seats 532 in dinner-show format plus 84 theatre-style balcony seats, and the floor rescales from 200 to 800 depending on the event. The programming leans into Montreal's deep cabaret heritage - the city where Frank Sinatra, Edith Piaf, Oscar Peterson and Lili St-Cyr worked the supper clubs of the Main - with tribute productions, comedy, chanson and variety sharing the calendar with prestige boxing cards, World Series of Poker events, and a steady trade in corporate galas and fundraisers that book the room Sunday through Wednesday. The setting completes the experience: the casino complex houses restaurants including the acclaimed L'Instant, operates around the clock, and sits amid the parkland and Grand Prix circuit of Parc Jean-Drapeau, a metro ride from downtown. For visitors the Cabaret is the polished evening anchor of the island - dinner, a show under the LED sky, and the gaming floors a staircase away.
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