Amaluna
Guy Laliberté (Creative Guide): Gilles Ste-Croix (Artistic
Guide); Fernand Rainville (Director of Creation)
The Uneven Bars Performers |
With seventy per cent of the forty-eight-member cast and all
of the musicians and singers being women, Cirque du Soleil’s nineteenth and
latest show touring the world – Amaluna –
is a tour de force of female power and prowess. In an evening where the reverberating voices,
the gasp-producing athleticism, and the eye-popping pageantry of women reign
supreme, no better segment demonstrates the awesome displays of female circus
and performance skills than the finale of Act One when eight women representing
six nationalities wow the audience as their bodies take off in synchronized
flight using uneven bars as their launch pads.
Their Amazon warrior depictions match the sheer strength displayed as
their bodies swing, flip, and fly – often barely missing each other in mid-air
before landing with grace and surety.
And that is just one of the eleven, main acts during the
two-hour, ten-minute show (plus a twenty-five-minute intermission) that
together tell a story of mystical romance where two lovers discover each other
and must endure many tests and trials before their union is assured. With a storyline that loosely resembles
Shakespeare’s The Tempest, the
setting is a mysterious, magic-infused island named Amaluna (translated “Moon
Mother”) where goddesses both earthly and of the moon govern life of the mostly
female inhabitants.
The Sakaino Sisters |
In the story’s beginning, Queen Prospera announces her
daughter Miranda’s coming of age, followed by a grand celebration of circling
dancers and two, eye-popping peacocks.
Two unicyclists arrive wearing golden-wired skirts as Japanese sisters,
Satomi and Yuka Sakaino, perform a daring dance on their single-wheeled
chariots. Racing to the circular stage’s
very edge before converging at speeds seemingly disastrous for a twirling
meeting in the middle, the two set the pace for an audience-impressing evening.
The Trio of Aerialists |
Prospera stirs the heavens to create a thunder-and-lightening
storm that engulfs the massive, big-top arena.
The storm’s fury is highlighted by three women (Russian Kristina
Ivanova, American Mei-Mei Bouchard, and Brazilian Lais Gomes da Silva) as they
take flight on aerial straps than send them bulleting across the dark-blue sky
at high velocities that astound. Each
woman is the epitome of precise timing and physical power as she shoots in all
dimensions up, down, and around the vast arena, often missing mid-air
collisions with the other two by just a hair.
The storm delivers a netted group of shipwrecked men onto
the isle’s shore. Emerging is one named
(what else?) Romeo, who of course immediately meets Miranda, with their locked
eyes announcing their love to us all.
But a slinking reptile – a half-man, half-lizard named Cali whom we have
already seen scamper both high and low – arrives to whisk away Miranda in both
protection and because of his own secret love for her. Now begins the journey of tests and trials
before the two lovers are in each others’ arms again.
Sabrina Againer |
As he roams the island now lost, Romeo meets the Peacock
Goddess (Eira Glover) who mesmerizes him with a dance where her limber body
appears to have no restrictions in its abilities to enfold upon itself. Even more impressive is the appearance from
the heavens of the Moon Goddess as Sabrina Againer bestows her blessings on the
prospective, earthly couple through an aerial display of artistry and skill on
a cerceau (a wire hoop), with her body at times seemingly barely hanging on as
the hoop swings, twirls, and dives. She
is joined on the surface of a large water bowl by Miranda (Anna Ivaseva), who
hand-balances on poles attached to the pool’s sides in a fabulous array of
seemingly impossible moves before she dives into the water. Her erotic dips in and out of the pool of
course catch the attention of a certain Romeo who ventures close for a first
kiss.
The Teeterboard Boys |
But their union is not to be as of yet. The captured young men who floundered onto
Amaluna’s shores with Romeo first must assist the Amazonian athletes in their
uneven bar fetes before six of the buff guys (including Danny Vrijsen as Romeo)
uses a giant teeterboard to launch each other twenty or so feet into the
air. From those heights, they perform
twists, flips, and somersaults with three-to-four gyrations before landing back
on earth. The distances covered, the
landings on another’s awaiting body, and the sheer beauty of their half-naked
bodies in flight is yet one more memorable highlight of the evening.
Romeo himself solos on a Chinese pole where he literally
comes within inches of hitting the ground as he plunges upside down on the pole
from high above, using his legs to grab the pole at the last possible
split-second to avoid a sure broken neck.
Lili CIao |
But prior to his trial of courage and strength, Lili Ciao of
Switzerland creates a work of art in what might very well be the evening’s feat
most remembered by the hushed audience who watch her in stunned silence. Using only her toes, the Balance Goddess
picks up with movements incredibly slow and deliberate increasingly longer and
heavier palm leaf ribs, adding each to the last to form a giant swirling mobile
– one held together merely by its balance.
The thunderous applause is deafening as the completed work of art swings
on the tip of one last, giant rib that stands erect only because of the overall
balance with the mobile itself.
In one last desperate move to keep Miranda from her Romeo,
the reptilian Cali (Vladimir Pestov) takes center stage in an act of juggling
as he imprisons below him Romeo in the water bowl. There is no part of Cali’s body that does not
participate in the catching and bouncing of the balls; but as the numbers of
balls continues to increase up to an amazing seven, the heights and patterns
their flights take on are even more phenomenal.
The Banquine |
As the inevitable victory of the lovers is reached, the
entire island arrives to celebrate, with ten men and two women performing
acrobatics in a banquine, using only locked hands and arms as launching and
landing platforms for bodies flying in all directions. The aerial tricks include trapeze-like feats
where the swings are human-formed and towers of bodies serve as diving and
landing boards.
Thiago Andreuccetti & Kelsey Custard |
Throughout the evening, a parallel story of love-seeking
occurs as the evening’s clowns, American Kelsey Custard and Brazilian Thiago
Andreuccetti meet, flirt, and delight each other and the audience while both
wandering around the aisles of the arena and performing center stage. Their comic antics are many; their charm,
bursting at the seams.
As is true for most Cirque du Soleil shows, there is a much
more going on than just on the center stage.
Broadway, West End, and opera-stage experienced Diane Paulus directs Amaluna’s central story with a clarity
and cohesiveness that is not lost amidst all the circus performances while also
populating a number of platforms and stages with fabulously costumed actors,
dancers, and singers who provide their own mystic wonder. Original music by musical directors Bob and
Bill is performed by the all-female band under direction of Anne Charbonneau
and sung by lead singer Jennifer Aubry of Canada. The music helps establish the mood of
tropical and mythic mystery but is somewhat monotonous and non-memorable over
time, even though always performed well.
Scott Pask’s set design creates a feeling of tropical magic
and beauty with swirling, bamboo-like branches that sparkle and swing in the
skies above, coming to life in all sorts of glitter and color as just a small
portion of Mattheiu Larivée’s lighting design.
Of course much of the eye-popping, breath-taking aspects of the evening
are due to the costumes designed by Mérédith Caron who creates wispy gowns for
goddesses, fierce-looking wear for Amazon warriors, and a ever-moving tail for
a man-lizard.
For anyone who has now seen a number of Cirque du Soleil
shows, certainly Amaluna looks and
feels like many of the others, even with its own unique storyline and its
female-focused cast. The acts are in
many ways familiar; the massive staging effects, similar; and the music, pretty
much like we have heard in the past. Yet
that does not mean that an annual visit to the latest Cirque du Soleil is not a
must for anyone who enjoys the artistry of a circus that in many ways is not
unlike an evening at the theatre or opera.
There is an opulence of sensual stimulation that cannot help but bring
big smiles as well as physical feats that cannot help but once again send
chills down one’s spine and looks of awed wonder into one’s eyes. Yes, it is time to buy that annual ticket,
this time to an island in a parking lot in San Francisco that will amaze anyone
from toddlers to centenarians.
Rating: 4 E
Amaluna continues
through January 22, 2020 under the Big Top at Oracle Park, San Francisco before
moving to Sacramento to perform at Raley Field January 22 - February 23. Tickets are available at www.cirquedusoleil.com/amaluna
or by calling 1-877-924-7783.
Photo Credits: Cirque du Soleil
No comments:
Post a Comment