Josephine Baker

Double room Josephine Baker
Wild and Pleasant
Located on the first floor. Air-conditioned room with two beds, a desk and free Wi-Fi.

Free Wi-Fi

For your moments of sharing photos.
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Airport Transfer

Do not worry about arriving at our Riad: 
- Transfer / way (1-3 p.): €25 
- Transfer / way (4-6 p.): €35 
- Transfer / way (7-10 p.): €55

High Quality Amenities

Les Sens de Marrakech 100% natural ingredients.

Air conditioner

Cold or hot.

Bar

Take something and enjoy.

Public Parking

200 meters in the Riad Laarouss Square.
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Splash Pool

Relax after a long day of sightseeing.

Room Prices

Riad Rental

Rent the complete Riad, and enjoy privacy and exclusivity. Prices include breakfast and VAT. Does not include Local Taxes € 2.50 per person and night.

from € 700 / night TA: € 800 / night

Normal Rate

UP TO 15% DISCOUNT BOOKING ONLINE.

Prices include breakfast and VAT. Does not include Local Taxes € 2.50 per person and night.

from € 90 / night

High season


Christmas
Holy Week
Long weekends / Holiday weekends


from € 115 / night

Extras

Cava


20€

Flowers


18€

Launch


18€/per person

Dinner


22€/per person

Joséphine Baker (Freda Josephine McDonald), June 3, 1906 in Saint Louis, Missouri - April 12, 1975 in Paris, was a famous dancer and singer of variety and cabaret shows, and also a French film actress. No other artist of his time dared with the top-less, who even then had that name or any other. If it was not in petit committee, intimate evenings for close friends, large vedettes always covered their breasts with rhinestones, embroidery, sequins, etc. Anything but reveal that superior nudity that Josephine Carson McDonald, after Baker, showed the world with the best of her smiles.
They said of his blinding laugh that overshadowed the light of the reflectors; an innocent mulatto laugh, wildly young and sensual, fresh out of the black suburb that saw her grow. He was born in St. Louis, Missouri, but immediately moved to New York, where he even performed at the legendary Cotton Club. He lived comfortably and loved his work but it was still another piece in the cheerful vaudeville that filled Broadway. And then Paris arrived. People went crazy with "La Revue Negre" and especially with her, absolute protagonist. His exotic way of dancing, his uninhibited sexuality and his minimal dress - a skirt made with bananas - drove the French public crazy, much more in love with pleasure than the American.
It could be a snake, a panther, a peacock hypnotizing the world with its beautiful feathers ... The same thing that jumped like cats or twisted with furious agitation. It was a real erupting volcano. A phenomenon of nature always willing to please its audience. "The Black Venus", or "The Creole Goddess" as they also called her, triumphed in Paris and by extension throughout Europe, but was a bad prophet in her own land, less tolerant of provocation and strong emotions. Only in 1973, and thanks to his honorable democratic curriculum (he was a collaborator in the French resistance and the Allied forces during World War II and committed activist against racism in the fifties and sixties) received a very long standing ovation from the American public standing . It was at Carnegie Hall in New York, two years before his death.
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