The Grévin is Paris's No. 1 waxworks. Comparisons to Madame Tussaud's are almost irresistible, but it isn't all blood and gore and doesn't shock as much as Tussaud's. It presents French history in a series of tableaux. Depicted are the 1429 consecration of Charles VII in the Cathédrale de Reims (armored Joan of Arc, carrying her standard, stands behind the king); Marguerite de Valois, first wife of Henri IV, meeting on a secret stairway with La Molle, who was soon to be decapitated; Catherine de Médicis with Florentine alchemist David Ruggieri; Louis XV and Mozart at the home of the marquise de Pompadour; and Napoleon on a rock at St. Helena, reviewing his victories and defeats. There are also displays of contemporary sports and political figures, as well as 50 of the world's best-loved film stars.
Two shows are staged frequently throughout the day. The first, called the "Palais des Mirages," starts off as a sort of Temple of Brahma and, through magically distorting mirrors, changes into an enchanted forest, then a fête at the Alhambra in Granada. A magician is the star of the second show, "Le Cabinet Fantastique"; he entertains children of all ages.
10 bd. Montmartre, 9e.Phone: 01-47-70-85-05.Open: Daily 10am-7:30pm. Ticket office closes 1 hr. before museum.Admission 15€ adults, 9€ children 14 and under.Métro: Grands Boulevards.