Iris | |
---|---|
Company | Cirque du Soleil |
Genre | Contemporary circus |
Show type | Resident show |
Date of premiere | September 25, 2011 |
Final show | January 19, 2013 |
Location | Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles |
Creative team | |
Writer and director | Philippe Decouflé |
Director of creation | Jean-François Bouchard |
Set designer | Jean Rabasse |
Costume designer | Philippe Guillotel |
Composer | Danny Elfman |
Choreographer | Daphné Mauger |
Lighting designer | Patrice Besombes |
Props designer | Anne-Séguin Poirier |
Projections designers | Olivier Simola, Christophe Waksmann |
Sound designer | François Bergeron |
Acrobatic performance designers | Boris Verkhovsky, Shana Carroll |
Acrobatic rigging and equipment designer | Pierre Masse |
Artistic guide | Guy Laliberté |
Make-up designer | Nathalie Gagné |
Other information | |
Preceded by | Zarkana (2011) |
Succeeded by | Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour (2011) |
Official website |
Iris was a resident Cirque du Soleil show based in Los Angeles, California. It premiered on September 25, 2011, after preview performances which began on July 21, 2011. The cost for production of the show was nearly $ 100,000,000, which included the cost of renovating the Dolby Theatre in which the show was housed.Iris was written and directed by French director-choreographer Philippe Decouflé. The show explored images from the history of cinema and featured elaborate choreography, acrobatics, and a variety of contemporary circus acts. The name of the show, Iris, comes from the camera diaphragm as well as from the colored iris of the human eye.
In November 2012 it was reported that Iris would end its run at the Dolby Theatre on January 19, 2013 due to disappointing ticket sales. It was later reported that Cirque du Soleil looked into the possibility of taking Iris to other cities in the United States.
Scenes from Iris would later be incorporated into the Cirque du Soleil show Paramour which debuted on Broadway in New York City on May 25, 2016.
Although Iris was in development for some time, the artists and creation team started preparations in Spain. At the beginning of March 2009, production and operations personnel started working in Montréal. During this time, the productions and the acrobatics continued to refine the show and artists continued training until the end of April when they moved to Los Angeles as well to continue preparing for the show's premiere.
Cirque du Soleil employed 125 orchestral musicians to create the pre-recorded portions of the soundtrack.
Cirque du Soleil had to modify the 9,600-square-foot (890 m2) stage in the theatre at a cost of US$40,000,000 (equivalent to $42,585,799 in 2016), primarily to create stage lifts. To accommodate the lifts, 44-foot (13 m) deep pits were excavated. This changed the sets' space to measure 122 feet (37 m) from the high grid to the bottom of the pits. Cirque also removed seating from the theatre, reducing seat counts from 3400 to 2500, in order to give all spectators the same viewing experience. The creative team used 174 loudspeakers, 603 lighting features, 20 video projectors, and 166,000 watts of sound in the Iris production. The design of the "set suggests a fairground attraction inspired by Coney Island where movies were screened to an audience for the first time."