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Crystal by Cirque du Soleil
SAP Center, Mar. 31, 2018
written by Tina
Ever since a video surfaced
in late 2016 showing Kurt Browning at a Cirque du Soleil workshop,
experimenting with skating with an aerialist, I've been very curious
about what he was doing with Cirque. Then, in 2017, Cirque du Soleil
announced their very first show involving the ice, called
Crystal. They began releasing intriguing
behind-the-scenes
videos and eventually did a live interview with Kurt, Ben
Agosto, and Marilyn Langlois, the skating performance directors of the
show. I even got the opportunity to interview
Kurt about the creation of the show in November 2017. In the
meantime, the show has been touring various cities in North America.
But it wasn't until the afternoon of March 31, 2018, that I finally
got the chance to watch the show myself, in person, at the SAP Center
in San Jose.
So, what did I think? In short, Crystal was an
entertaining visual and auditory feast with some truly awe-inspiring
acts that was much stronger in the second act than the first, and that
didn't really utilize skating to its fullest potential. Everyone I
went to the show with enjoyed it. The set design, and particularly the
lighting design, was amazing. They really used lighting to paint the
ice and create stunning visual landscapes. The music was dynamic and
dramatic, blending obviously pre-recorded orchestrations and vocals
with live musicians who often wore skates on their feet as they
played. There was a basic story providing a throughline connecting the
disparate parts of the show, which worked, more or less, in drawing
together elements that otherwise wouldn't make sense together.
Essentially, the show follows the dream journey of a girl,
Crystal. The show opens with a montage of shadow images and voices, of
her parents, teachers, and peers constantly wondering why she's always
off in her own world, always dreaming, never focusing or paying
attention. She finally runs out to the pond to skate to escape, but
falls through the ice. The rest of the show is basically her moving
through her dream world, encountering her shadow self(s) and her fears
of an ordinary life, from distracted family to taunts on the
playground to the conformity of corporate life to the prospect of
courtship and romance. She eventually learns to embrace herself and be
ok with who she is, and is finally ready to break through the ice to
return to her life. Not every number wove seamlessly into this
underlying progression, but knowing it was a dream world helped tie in
pieces that otherwise would have seemed incongruous. Dream worlds are
all about incongruity! My friends and I could have done without the
actual voiceover, though.
As a Cirque du Soleil show, though I admittedly haven't seen that
many, Crystal is a success. It's beautiful, it's thrilling,
it has elements of circus traditions such as clowning and juggling and
trapeze as well as amazing aerial and acrobatic acts involving
incredible feats of balance, flexibility, and strength. As a figure
skating show, I thought it was weaker and, more importantly, for the
most part didn't live up to the potential that the ice offered. A lot
of the time, the majority of the performers on the ice didn't even
have skates on. The skating often felt a little too traditional and
not quite thrilling enough for a Cirque show, though that might be
because I'm used to seeing headbangers and backflips so they offer me
less of a wow factor than they might a general audience. The cool
experimentation and tricks shown in the behind the scenes videos and
talked about in my interview with Kurt largely seemed to have not been
utilized in the final product. With a few exceptions I'll talk about
shortly, it would have been cool to see a deeper integration of ice
and circus. I still recall Violetta Afanasieva
and Pete Dack and their integration of circus and pairs skating,
particularly hula hoops. Something like that would have fit in
well. For the most part, when skating and circus coexisted on the ice,
the skating seemed mostly there to offer more speed and flow than
would be available to regular dancers, and to maybe add a bit more
interesting texture to a number so we weren't just sitting and waiting
for an acrobat to set up the next part of the act. Otherwise, the ice
did offer an additional thrill simply because it is so hard that any
fall would be that much more devastating should it occur.
This isn't to suggest that there weren't any good skating-specific
sections, or that there wasn't any interesting integration of
worlds. The first act ended with a thrilling "hockey" number that
utilized a collection of ramps to send its "hockey players" flying
through the air in Cirque's version of the X-Games. This number also
oddly included the clown character that kept recurring throughout the
show (though particularly the first act) and a fairly gratuitous shout
out to the San Jose Sharks hockey team. It was one of the most
exciting parts of the night. The second act had a lot more interesting
figure skating numbers. One number utilized more synchronized style
skating to evoke the uniformity/conformity of office worker drones,
before transitioning into a thrilling bit with acrobats on poles which
was exciting, even if I missed its thematic relevance. Perhaps the
poles were meant to smash the walls of conformity since this number
led into the only part of the show that let four of the charismatic
skaters actually show some individual personality outside of embodying
one of Crystal's shadow selves. I have to admit that I only recognized
Shawn Sawyer (I was told Scott Smith is another one, as is Zabato
Bebe. I don't know who the female skater was). The four skaters for
the most part humorously try to one-up each other, so there were
backflips over people and handstands and flips and other singles
skating tricks. The four skaters inevitably were sucked back into the
conformity of the group, though, and became part of the faceless
ensemble in cubicle land. This ensemble also provided the texture
around a pretty impressive chair-stacking segment, skating around as
he set up the next several chairs.
The second act also had the "courtship" number that included three
or four couples skating, and the best integration of skating and
circus within the show. The parts with the pairs skating together were
lovely and featured some exciting pairs tricks, often in unison. Some
of them were tricks that the general audience may not have seen
before, and were thrilling in their own right. However, the number for
me fell short for me in terms of being able to connect with me
emotionally or from a storytelling perspective. But I may have been
spoiled by years of seeing group numbers like "Try" from
Stars on Ice. There was also an odd bit where the musicians were
pushed in on a piano and they lifted Crystal up to stand on the piano
as it moved. This would have been a cool image had Crystal not wobbled
noticeably every time the piano shifted direction. On the other hand,
once the aerialist entered the picture as Crystal's lover, the
potential for bringing ice to the world of Cirque was finally
realized. Aerial straps have been done in figure skating before,
admittedly, but Cirque's version was interesting choreographically,
and I think was more effective for not forcing the aerialist to
skate. Instead, just as he lifted her into his world, she used her
skates to propel him and interact with him. This resulted in some very
cool imagery and very impressive tricks.
There were some attempts that integrated skating (or at least
skates) with performers that were less successful, or at least less
interesting. The juggler wore skates on his feet, but spent parts of
his number being lifted on the shoulders of non-skating performances,
and actually lost balls more than you'd expect from a number like
that. He did skate around a bit while juggling, but it just wasn't
that amazing to watch. There was a "Crystal" on a "swing" (from the
playground scene) that became a trapeze who wore skates on her feet
the whole time. I was impressed since I would imagine that the added
few inches would throw her off quite a bit, not to mention how
different it would be for the trapeze artist just swinging around and
doing tricks with ice skates on her feet. But a lot of that number
also just felt like all she was doing was swinging really hard, and
doing it to a version of Sia's "Chandelier" just seemed a bit to on
the nose for me. There also was a clown number which thematically
strongly reminded me of Kurt Browning's Slippery Side
Up number, with the clown falling "in love"/obsession with a light
that moved around the ice. It obviously wasn't as intricately put
together a number, but it was charming and amusing. I give props to
the clown because I actually wasn't sure if he was a skater who
learned to clown or a clown who learned to skate.
The last two acts before the finale were, respectively, the
strongest pure skating number of the show, and the coolest, most
impressive acrobatic act. The number featuring the four Crystals had
some of the most interesting skating choreography, weaving the four
women together in both different ways and in unison, kind of playing
with the notion of these shadow selves and their similarities and
differences. I just wish it had been lit a little brighter, though I
understand that the dark lighting fit with the theme. The artist
playing Crystal in the last act was astonishing; strong, flexible, and
fearless. The transitions between her being carried and tossed around
by members of the ensemble on the ice to flying into the air (and then
dropping back down) with a trapeze artist were thrilling and
incredible. I can't even do justice with words, it needs to be seen to
be believed.
The show ended with Crystal breaking back through the ice, having
learned to accept herself, and rejoining the brightly lit aboveground
world. She is welcomed back by her loving and newly attentive family,
and one of her shadow selves paints the words "The End" on the ice
with her skates. But of course, it's not quite the end yet, as the
entire cast comes back out on the ice to joyfully show off their
skills in a frenetic, busy, but exciting finale.
Although it started a little slowly, Crystal ended up
being a wonderful way to spend a couple hours absorbed in another
world. I can't believe that what I saw was the second of three
performances in the same day. I don't know how they do it, but
those performers and artists really gave it their all and put on an
amazing show for the audience. I hope this show inspires more skaters
to widen their acrobatic skillsets and more acrobats to learn to skate
so that future iterations or future Cirque shows that involve skating
can go to even more amazing places that really blend the two
worlds.
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