Cirque du Soleil's Zarkana: The Summer's Great Stage Show
By Richard Corliss Saturday, July 02, 2011
Don Emmert / AFP / Getty Images
The Art Deco cavern-cathedral, designed by Edward Durrell Stone and decorated by Donald Deskey for its opening in 1932, is a wonder even when it's empty. But fill its 144-foot-wide stage with 70 elastic performers and a panoply of oversize theatrical and video effects — and pack the Music Hall's 6,000 seats with gaping visitors — and you have the perfect union of site and spectacle. (See Cirque's Kooza show at Randall's Island in New York.)
On either side of the stage, two Pierrots pound plangent chords at the Mighty Wurlitzer organs, out of which sprouts metal piping, fancifully twisted like a Ted Geisel Seussaphone. Then the show begins, and behind the radiated arches of the Hall's proscenium we see the two interior arches that Cirque's Stéphane Roy has designed to frame this episodic fairy tale. The frames' ornamentation suggests winding tree rots at one moment, writhing snakes at another. And soon the stage is peopled with dozens of brightly plumed figures (costumes by Alan Hranitelj) in a teeming rainforest, a Noah's Zarkana of exotic creatures. Later, five men holding umbrellas will ascend at a stately pace, but upside down, from the floor to the flies, like a Magritte painting in seductive slow motion. The message to the audience: Abandon all laws of physics and probability, and surrender to the gorgeously alien planet of Cirque.
Written and directed by François Girard, whose movie work includes Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould and The Red Violin, the new show purports to have a plot. I quote from the Zarkana website: "The story follows Zark [Garou], a magician who has lost his powers, and the love of his life, in an abandoned theatre populated by a motley collection of off-the-wall characters and incomparable acrobats. He runs into the Mutants, four sirens as sinister as they are fabulous, who are determined to divert him from his quest." It's not essential to know what Girard thinks is going on — which is just as well, since anyone not a mind-reader or a member of the crew won't get the narrative drift — because this, like virtually all Cirque spectacles, is a series of acrobatic feats encased in heavy Euro-pop music and elevated by sumptuous theatrical mystification. (See Corliss's review of Cirque's Elvis spectacle in 2010.)
In that sense, Zarkana is a more sprightly sibling to the Broadway musical Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. In the early stages of that show's elephantine birth agonies, director Julie Taymor was trying to duplicate the surreal grandeur and technical legerdemain of a Cirque Vegas event. (She briefly consulted a few Cirque wizards on the mechanics of flying.) Zarkana boasts a spider woman, in its lead chanteuse Cassiopee, plus mammoth web designs and lots of flying. Nick Littlemore, an Australian protégé of Elton John, provides some sonorously lugubrious pop-operatic songs that Garou declaims in a rich rock-star baritone, and which have a smidge more melodic heft than the ones Bono and The Edge composed for Taymor. And whereas her show had the insect goddess Arachne hover over Peter Parker's travails, Zarkana one-ups Taymor in the creepy-crawly sweepstakes by summoning a legion of snakes to complement its spiders.
Ellen Chen, finger-painting in sand on a light table whose images are shown on a large screen above her, opens Act Two with artful portraits of a spider in its web and a mermaid with a snake's tail. During one number, Cassiopee, who throughout the evening sports costumes that Lady Gaga might deem a tad outré, rises slowly above the stage while undulating in a 30-foot-long snake torso. Animated snakes appear to hiss their approval at the climax of one acrobatic display. Back in the arachnophilia department, Zarkana recalls Spider-Man's aerial trickery, and then tops it, by sending one of its clowns soaring on invisible wires 20 rows into and above the Music Hall audience — just to show how it can be done with grace, humor and no medical bills.
The customers may be sitting in a theater two blocks from Broadway, but they aren't here to see an improved riff on Spider-Man; they've come for the death- and gravity-defying exploits of performers who turn bodily movement into works of kinetic art. Cirque du Soleil is, au fond, a circus, and that includes a clown act — an apparently essential vestige of Cirque's street-performer days that, in this incarnation, lacks the magical wit of the rest of the show. (See why Kà was bigger than Vegas.)
The other routines in Zarkana fall in the medium-high range of the company's rich history — and a dazzling trapeze act that may be Cirque's all-time finest. Di Wu and Jun Guo perform an intense rope duet, she appending glamorously from the thick strand, he swinging the low end of the rope and eventually joining her to form an intimate airborne pas de deux. The trio of Ray, Rony and Rudy Navas Velez prove that a high wire is just the place on which to balance a man, on a chair, on a board on the shoulders of two other men. Ray and Rudy return in Act Two to clamber over the Wheel of Death, a pair of humongous wheels held by an outside steel belt and spinning deliriously as the men execute leaps and somersaults like daredevil hamsters. Familiar from Cirque's Kà and Kooza, the act never fails to thrill. On opening night, the Navas Velezes performed flawlessly, as did the rest of the eccentrically, supremely gifted Cirqueans.
On earlier forays into New York theater venues, the company stubbed its artistic toe: with the kids' show Wintuk and the vaudeville-style Banana Shpeel. This time, they're back to glorious basics. Zarkana will play eight times a week through Oct. 3, after which it heads for Madrid and Moscow. In its New York City home it will offer families a grand seasonal treat: the show of the summer in the Showplace of the Nation.
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,2081266,00.html#ixzz1RFkHuolR
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