"It's a very feminine, classy place," said 21-year-old dancer Rosie, who was picked to be one of the first 35 girls to come to the new Paris club from London.
"You feel pretty working here. Special. It's different from the glitz of London. This is softer glamour, with more panache."
The petite, dark-haired girl from Birmingham in the English midlands is thrilled to be in Paris.
As she enthuses about the charming men she has met and explains the strict rules Stringfellow dancers adhere to, girls are called to dance silhouetted on a back-lit podium.
At the end of a song they are left wearing only a G-string and high heels.
"We don't dance quite so energetically here, it is more sensual than in London. The girls are more relaxed," she said.
Stringfellow is proud of his reputation for employing beautiful, "soft" girls and says their happiness is a priority.
"I'm in love with every one of them, I just am," he said.
"Now, of course you can't be on close first name terms with all 150 girls but I take a very close, paternal view of my girls. I look after their interests in terms of safety."
Where next for stringfellow?
Stringfellow's expansion across the Channel is just the beginning of his plans to put striptease back on the map of acceptable nightlife entertainment.
He is toying with plans to open similar clubs in Dublin and Berlin as well as a scattering of other major European towns, perhaps list his company on the stock market and branch off into lines of toiletries, perfume and lingerie.
"Eventually I would like the idea of putting London, Paris and any other clubs together into a publicly-listed company, maybe in a couple of years' time," he said.
But, all this hinges on getting Paris off the ground and ridding striptease of its sleazy image. To win over the French authorities, Stringfellow invited three senior police to his London club to show them what his girls do.
"They had a good time. And if Paris police enjoy it then the Parisiens certainly can."



