A Night at Davé: Inside Paris’s Most Storied, Cult-Favorite Restaurant
There are rooms in Paris where the air feels gilded, and for more than three decades, one such room was Davé. Situated on Rue de Richelieu, the Chinese restaurant became the city’s unofficial salon of the night and a favored celebrity haunt, where the spare ribs were sticky and the gossip was hot.
Opened in 1982 by Tai “Davé” Cheung, the menuless, velvet curtained restaurant, split in half by a tropical fish tank, attracted a constellation of artists, designers, and other fabulous people—though the door was always affixed with a “COMPLET” sign. Helmut and June Newton, Grace Coddington, Francis Ford Coppola, Allen Ginsberg, Yves Saint Laurent, Alexander McQueen, and Kate Moss all found their way to tables at Davé, as did Sofia Coppola and Kirsten Dunst (with ciggies in hand), the Olsen twins, and Linda Evangelista and Kyle MacLachlan.
Guests would dine on Vietnamese spring rolls and nước chấm, spare ribs, Peking duck, salt and pepper shrimp, and sliced up mango. “The Americans and Anglo-Saxons loved the ribs,” Cheung says. He was also happy to accommodate less conventional tastes—like when the legendary producer Jean-Pierre Rassam came with his cook and his own food. “They were supposed to have dinner at home but changed their mind at the last minute. They didn’t want to waste it…it made me laugh,” Cheung recalls. “I brought out some plates and offered to reheat everything. I played along.”
Davé and his cat Momo.Photo: Davé, courtesy of IDEA