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Zaia

Zaia
Zaia-Cirque du Soleil-poster.jpg
Company Cirque du Soleil
Genre Contemporary circus
Show type Resident show
Date of premiere August 28, 2008
Final show February 19, 2012
Location The Venetian Macao, Cotai Strip, Macau
Creative team
Artistic guide Guy Laliberté
Gilles Ste-Croix
Creation director Neilson Vignola
Writer and director Gilles Maheu
Set and props designer, theater concept Guillaume Lord
Costume designer Dominique Lemieux
Composer and musical director Violaine Corradi
Choreographer Martino Müller
Acrobatic choreographer Jeff Hall
Acrobatic performance designer Rob Bollinger
Artistic equipment and rigging designer Guy Lemire
Lighting designer Alex Morgenthaler
Projection designer Jimmy Lakatos
Raymond Saint-Jean
Sound designer Steven Dubuc
Makeup designer Nathalie Gagné
Clown acts designer Leonid Leykin
Other information
Preceded by Wintuk (2007)
Succeeded by Zed (2008)
Official website

Zaia was a Cirque du Soleil stage production based at The Venetian Macao on the Cotai Strip in Macau. The 90-minute show opened in August 2008, bringing together 75 high-calibre artists from around the world. Zaia was Cirque du Soleil's first resident show in Asia and is directed by Neilson Vignola and Gilles Maheu. The custom-built theater housing the performance was capable of seating 1,800 spectators at a time.

Zaia presented a young girl's dream of journeying into space, discovering worlds populated by a panoply of otherworldly creatures. The title, Zaia, came from a Greek name meaning "life".

Due to multiple factors including very low audience turnouts, the show closed on 19 February 2012. Despite its closing, Venetian Macao resort owner Las Vegas Sands Corp. claimed, "Using Las Vegas as a benchmark, Zaia’s 3 1/2-year run should be deemed successful and provide strong support for the argument that the future of entertainment in Macau is on the right track."

Zaia opened in 2008 and had a rough start due to low audience numbers. With the addition of new Chinese-style elements such as a lion dance performance and a flying dragon, increased ticket sales were reported. Despite the improved box office sales, the show was still recording losses in 2011, Sands China president Edward Tracy revealed on 18 November 2011. The Venetian Macau show remained "the only business sector that doesn’t make a profit," he added. Criticism from Sands China chairman Sheldon Adelson led to rumours that the 10-year contract of Zaia would be terminated earlier. But Edward Tracy rejected this possibility. "We are prepared to take a loss to provide that kind of entertainment," he stressed. On 7 February 2012, Sands China and Cirque du Soleil announced that Zaia would close on 19 February 2012.

Some of Zaia's creatures and characters are listed below.

Circus and dance elements comprised Zaia's acts, listed below.

Costume designer Dominique Lemieux took inspiration from the inventive dress styles younger generations create for themselves; thus the costumes for Zaia were an eclectic merging of genres. The different styles of outfits represented the differences among the groups of performers. As one of the urban characters, Zaia was seen wearing primarily red, one of the warmer colors. To complement her, Romeo wore warm earth tones with copper and gold highlights. In contrast to the style of the wardrobe of the acrobats and dancers, the clowns wore patches of fabric with patina; their costumes drew inspiration from 18th-century explorers.


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Wikipedia

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