Viva Elvis | |
Company: | Cirque du Soleil |
Genre: | Contemporary circus |
Type: | Resident show |
Premiere: | February 19, 2010 |
Finalshow: | August 31, 2012 |
Location: | Aria Resort & Casino, Las Vegas |
Creatortitle1: | Writer and director |
Creatorname1: | Vincent Paterson |
Creatortitle2: | Creation director |
Creatorname2: | Armand Thomas |
Creatortitle3: | Musical director and arranger |
Creatorname3: | Erich van Tourneau |
Creatortitle4: | Set designer |
Creatorname4: | Mark Fisher |
Creatortitle5: | Costume designer |
Creatorname5: | Stefano Canulli |
Creatortitle6: | Acrobatic performance designer |
Creatorname6: | Daniel Cola |
Creatortitle7: | Acrobatic equipment and rigging designer |
Creatorname7: | Guy St-Amour |
Creatortitle8: | Original lighting designer |
Creatorname8: | Marc Brickman |
Creatortitle9: | Additional lighting design and programming |
Creatorname9: | Martin Labrecque |
Creatortitle10: | Image content designer |
Creatorname10: | Ivan Dudynsky |
Creatortitle11: | Sound designer |
Creatorname11: | Jonathan Deans |
Creatortitle12: | Props designer |
Creatorname12: | Patricia Ruel |
Creatortitle13: | Makeup designer |
Creatorname13: | Nathalie Gagné |
Creatortitle14: | Choreographers |
Creatorname14: | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo, Mark Swanhart, Catherine Archambault |
Creatortitle15: | Artistic guide |
Creatorname15: | Guy Laliberté, Gilles Ste-Croix |
Creatorname16: | Walter Schulz |
Creatortitle16: | 3D Artist/Designer |
Otherlabel1: | Preceded by |
Otherdata1: | Banana Shpeel (2009) |
Otherlabel2: | Succeeded by |
Otherdata2: | Totem (2010) |
Website: | http://www.cirquedusoleil.com/en/help/previous-shows/previous-shows.aspx |
Viva Elvis was the seventh resident Cirque du Soleil show on the Las Vegas Strip. It resided at the Aria Resort & Casino and premiered on February 19, 2010. The show closed on August 31, 2012.[1] Cirque du Soleil partnered with Elvis Presley Enterprises to produce this show, similar to how they partnered with The Beatles' Apple Corps Ltd to produce the resident show Love at the Mirage.[2]
CKX, Inc., the company that owns the rights to Elvis Presley's name, likeness, and music publishing, signed an agreement to have Cirque du Soleil create the Elvis-themed residency show. The gala premiere was originally scheduled for January 2010[1] on what would have been Elvis' 75th birthday, but was postponed until February 19, 2010.[3] [4] CKX and Cirque du Soleil eventually intended to develop additional touring shows and multimedia interactive "Elvis Experiences" throughout the world.[5]
Due to low attendance records for Viva Elvis, MGM Resorts asked Cirque du Soleil to replace the show. The show had its final performance on August 31, 2012.[6] [7] On March 7, 2012, Cirque du Soleil announced that following its second Radio City Music Hall engagement, the show Zarkana would be its replacement.
The Elvis Theater was designed with a conventional proscenium layout reminiscent of an opera house. The stage had 16 platforms, divided into 12 sections which could rise ; the widest section was 18x and was controlled by four large motors located below the stage.[8] [9]
The show's opening scene contained a jukebox made of chrome and gloss black which is wide by high. It also incorporated a 50-foot-tall (15 m) video screen. Also seen during the opening, a 29-foot-long (8.8 m), blue suede shoe weighed and was made of steel and fiberglass.
During "Got a Lot of Livin' to Do", seven trampolines were utilized. The entire structure took up the entire width of the stage,, and weighed .
The set for the "Jailhouse Rock" scene was based on the technical requirements for a circus art called marche inversée. It had ten tracks that allowed acrobats to walk upside down, attached by their feet, while dancers performed right side up on other levels; the whole structure weighed .
The acts for Viva Elvis were staged to the music of Elvis Presley.[10] [11]
Viva Elvis costume designer, Stefano Canulli, drew inspiration from the iconic Elvis fashion of the 1950s and 1960s and added Technicolor lines to highlight the human body. The wardrobe collection as a whole contained nearly 400 costumes and around 1,500 costume components. Part of this total came from more than 450 pairs of shoes and 150 custom wigs. Cirque du Soleil, for the first time, used flocking to create some of the accessories, thus giving them a velvet appearance. Some of the several wigs used for the show were created using urethane foam, which gave them the appearance of Japanese manga.[12] [13]
The music for Viva Elvis was created in partnership with Elvis Presley Enterprises. The soundtrack album, which was released on November 5, 2010, was released under Sony Legacy Recordings and was produced by Erich van Tourneau.[14]
List of music included in the show (In alphabetical order):