Theatre in Review

Friday, 24 May 2019 11:23

Cirque du Soleil’s VOLTA delights and wows Featured

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Cirque du Soleil is back in Chicago with its latest touring production, Volta. Volta’s inspiration comes from the culture of street sports and just about any acrobatics that could have originated in an urban jungle.

Written and directed by Bastien Alexandre, the theme of Volta is finding freedom from the judgment of others while finding oneself. The main character, Waz, is a young game show contestant who feels different, but thinks that fame and fortune will make him feel good about himself. Over the course of the show he discovers that love and acceptance come from being true to himself, and that his difference is what makes him extraordinary. As always the case with Cirque du Soleil shows, music accompaniment is provided by a live band; tacked behind the blinds in an enclosure at the back of the stage, it adds a rock musical element to the show. A blend of new age electronic and rock music by Anthony Gonzalez, vocals by Eric DeShan. Costumes for the show have been designed by Emmy award winner Zaldy Goco, famous for his work with Lady Gaga, Michael Jackson, Britney Spears, Gwen Stefani and RuPaul’s Drag Race.

First Act starts out with a fun and engaging Mr. Wow Show. Rope skipping performers compete for “wows” from the audience, and wows they get. Next comes visually enticing “Meeting Ela”, with colorfully dressed performers doing Precision Walk, Roller Skating and a Unicycle numbers. “Acro Lamp” is a quietly beautiful aerial performance where a street lamp suspended high from the ceiling serves as a prop. For me, the most memorable number of the first part of the show is “Rise and Shine” – a high energy trampoline-based act. The stage becomes out quipped with a contraption reminiscent of a building construction site; a dozen or so performers jump out the windows and other surfaces, bounce off a trampoline, somersault, then jump back onto the building slowing down ever so slightly before landing with breathtaking precision. It‘s like watching a high quality video game where the characters are not limited by the nature of physics or human capacity.

Second Act opens with Acrobatic Ladders [that look like fire escapes]- a number called “Leaving the City” with performers defying gravity as they swing and fly around in horizontal planes. Following it is “Urban Jungle” - a flawlessly fabulous, albeit more traditional, act of Shape Diving. And then comes magnificent “Mirage” – a hair Suspension act with a Brazilian aerialist Danila Bim suspended only by her hair pulled into a tight bun. As she’s swept up high in the air, the only thought suspended in my head is: how’s this even possible?

Comedic relief is provided by the Russian performer Andrey Kislitsin; his pantomimes are fun and superbly executed, most notably, “La Plage”, that draws lots of laughs from the audience. Volta culminates in “Momentum” – Bicycle Motorcross act. Loud and exciting, it is the perfect ending to another great show that Cirque du Soleil is known and loved for.

Volta is being performed at Soldier Field’s South Parking Lot through July 6th.

 

 

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