Crystal | |
---|---|
Company | Cirque du Soleil |
Genre | Contemporary circus |
Show type | Touring show |
Date of premiere | December 13, 2017 (Quebec) |
Creative team | |
Creative Director | Stefan Miljevic[1] |
Show Director | Shana Carroll & Sébastien Soldevila |
Acrobatic Equipment | Fred Gérard |
Set Designer | Stéphane Roy |
Video Content Designer | Johnny Ranger |
Music Composer | Maxim Lepage |
Lighting Designer | Éric Champoux |
Props Designer | Anne-Séguin Poirier |
Costume Designer | Marie Chantale Vaillancourt |
Makeup Designer | Véronique St-Germain |
Choreographer | Geneviève Dorion-Coupal |
Skating Performances Senior Designer | Kurt Browning |
Skating Performances Designer | Benjamin Agosto |
Synchronized Skating Designer | Marilyn Langlois |
Performance Designer | Raphael Cruz |
Other information | |
Preceded by | Volta (2017) |
Succeeded by | Bazzar (2018) |
Official website |
Crystal is an arena touring show by Cirque du Soleil that started previewing to the public in October 2017, with an official premiere in December 2017. It is Cirque du Soleil's 42nd original show since 1984, and the first one done on an ice rink, where most of the performers are ice skating throughout the show, and blends several circus acts with high-level ice skating. It is described as a woman shattering reality to discover herself in the world of possibility.[2][3]
Kurt Browning, a four-time world champion Canadian figure skater, joined the creative team as the Skating Performances Senior Designer,[4] along with Benjamin Agosto, four-time world medalist American ice dancer, as the Skating Performances Designer.[5][6]
Crystal had its first preview public performances in some second-tier US markets, before officially premiering in Quebec in December 2017.[9] In one of the first reviews of the show, YQG Rocks entertainment critic Dan Savoie said of the Windsor, Ontario show at the WFCU Centre on January 3, 2018: "Crystal was an astonishing demonstration and is gorgeous in every way. The ice seemed to enhance the movements and made the performers appear to move faster."[10]