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Before it was a theater, the playhouse on St. Philip Street was a
ballroom, and it would revert to its original ballroom status several times during its
lifetime, alternatively known as the Salle Chinoise, the Winter Tivoli, and, in perhaps its
most famous incarnation, the Washington Ballroom. Under the ownership of Bernardo
Coquet, the St. Philip Street ballroom was the scene of the first balls for free people of
color, and in 1805, when it was leased by Auguste Tessier, it became the first hall to
host quadroon balls. Between 1808 and 1832, when it became the Washington
Ballroom, the theater competed first with the St. Peter Street Theater and later with the
Orleans Theater to be the premier site of French opera in New Orleans.
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