Homosexuality had been decriminalized in France since 1791 during the
French Revolution, and a law of 1880 opened free trade to businesses selling alcohol. The loosening of restrictions resulted in a rise of business opportunities in the entertainment sector for gay and lesbian business owners at the end of the nineteenth century. Patrons of bars and entertainment venues could not be arrested for homosexual behavior, but they could and were targeted for public obscenity, corruption, solicitation, or failing to register as a prostitute with the state. Some
brasseries (a type of restaurant that served simple food and alcoholic beverages, especially beer) also were involved in prostitution; in the Montmartre neighborhood, some were targeted at lesbian clients. One such establishment was (The Mouse), located at 29 Rue Bréda (later Rue Henri Monnier) in
Pigalle. As early as 1890, it was known as a lesbian meeting place. Jules Davray and other writers noted that the clientele treated the establishment like it was their home and expressed themselves freely while there. The brasserie repeatedly had new management during the 1890s. In January 1897, a man named Floquet together with Dumont (named as "Dame Dumont") as his manager rented when it was vacated by a man named Liot and his manager, Dame Delbès. The lease included the three-by-thirteen meter dining room, a kitchen, and an upstairs bedroom with a fireplace. Dumont, who was known by the name "Palmyre" or "Madame Palmyre", was rumored to be both a lesbian and the former mistress of Moïse Zekri, who would later become the proprietor of Maurice's Bar. Unlike other lesbian establishments of the era like , Dumont did not rely on advertising and was unmarked by any
signage. Nevertheless, it became one of the preferred clubs for lesbians and wealthy patrons. She hosted meetings at for the French Bulldog-Owners Club, which included writers like
Natalie Clifford Barney,
Colette, and
Renée Vivien, among others. By the turn of the century, the business was included in what was known as the Grand Dukes' Tour, a type of
tourism that allowed affluent members of society to
voyeuristically experience urban social spaces, observe and participate in sexual transgressions, and temporarily avoid
social conventions that usually separated upper-class people from the poor. Guidebooks were issued by various publishing houses, giving the locations of establishments that catered to lesbians.
Gerstle Mack, who wrote the first English-language biography of Toulouse-Lautrec, called "the most famous lesbian restaurant of the period".
Toulouse-Lautrec, Dumont, and Bouboule The painter Toulouse-Lautrec began visiting about the same time as Dumont became the manager. His drawings and sketches of Dumont, her bulldog Bouboule, and other clientele of the establishment, as well as his introduction of friends to the brasserie, propelled it into a gathering place for
avant-garde artists and intellectuals. It was also frequented by prostitutes,
kept women, performers, and patrons who wished to smoke, partake of morphine or ether, gamble, or watch the entertainment provided. From May 1897, Toulouse-Lautrec lived close by, in . He held a dinner party for his friends at La Souris on 31 July 1897. For the party, he created a lithograph of Bouboule (from a previous sketch) and some mice for the menu card. The lithograph was printed by Henri Stern and the menu added in handwriting. The dinner featured
rainbow trout in lobster sauce, Portuguese beef fillet,
chaudfroid of poultry,
jellied York ham, hare
terrine, and Neapolitan salad followed by
bombe glacée and dessert. Bulldogs like Bouboule had first become fashionable among lesbians and gender non-conforming women in Paris, before the breed's popularity had grown among the upper classes. Bouboule was often described as undisciplined and unfriendly, biting or urinating on the feet of anyone who tried to pet him. Although Dumont tried to train the dog to behave better, Bouboule did not like her women clientele, but he was curious and was often depicted by Toulouse-Lautrec as a prying observer of their actions. As a regular customer at La Souris (which he pronounced "La Touris"), Toulouse-Lautrec made various sketches there. In the holdings of the
Musée Toulouse-Lautrec, in
Albi, are numerous sketches and paintings of Bouboule. Among his works that feature Bouboule are (1897,
The Roast Chestnut Merchant), (1897,
Madame Palmyre and Her Dog), and likely (1898,
The Horse and the Dog with a Pipe), in the collection of
Otto Gerstenberg. (1897,
Madame Palmyre at ) featured Bouboule watching his owner playing cards, while seated at a table between a blond patron and Dumont's assistant, Émile Brunswick. The image is used again in
Conversation (1899). Another work by Toulouse-Lautrec featuring Dumont is (1897,
Full-face Portrait of Madame Palmyre at ).
Assault incident and new management In June 1897, women in the bar were attacked by several men—described in official records as pimps—who were upset that the bar was off-limits to them. After a brawl ensued, Dumont called in the police, who arrested Manuel Louise and Auguste Robbe, charging them with assault. The police and courts sided with the women. For the most part, police left lesbians alone unless they were performing publicly; Colette was once arrested for a kiss onstage with her lover
Mathilde de Morny, the Marquise de Belbeuf, known as Missy. Choquette acknowledged the possibility that Palmyre paid the police protection money. Although the brasserie was successful, Dumont left in 1900, and she had two run-ins with the law shortly thereafter. She was arrested in February for interfering with a policeman and fined. She was also arrested in May for assault on another woman, but the charges were dismissed because of insufficient evidence. The business was continued by Louise Jost, who formerly had worked at Le Hanneton, and who managed until 1916. ==Palmyr's Bar==