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The Mystère theater at Treasure Island is one of a kind, built entirely
for the purpose of the show. Designed by Cirque's own Michel Crête and that
of Montreal based team of Scéno Plus, the Cirque du Soleil theater provides
us with an awe inspiring world -- a beautiful 1541-seat theater that sits within the $430
million expansion of the Mirage Casino-Hotel in Las Vegas (aka, Treasure Island).
Rumored to cost approximately $20
million, the theater comes complete with comfortable seats, a
wonderful view for all, and an interesting story of compromise with
its design. You'll find the theater in the back of Treasure Island
through a couple of sets of white and red wooden doors, but you won't
mistake their purpose; for beyond the ornamented doors lies Mystère, a
mega-production by our favorite circus.
The theater has several interesting points about it, many of which are
too technical to discuss here. However, one of the first things people
notice upon entering is its openness. The Treasure Island theater
lacks a divider, or curtain, between stage and audience that is
usually found in most theaters. Thus the stage is completely open to
the audience, allowing the action to be thrust upon them. This was the
goal from the initial meetings between the Mirage staff and
Cirque/Scéno. The idea was to make the environment feel as if you were
in the intimate setting of a Big Top. Did they do a good job, or what?

In fact, upon further study you'll find that there's also no
Proscenium Arch, the technical name for that division. The lack of
this arch is what gives Mystère its life, but it almost wasn't to be.
The Mirage staff feared that without this arch (i.e. a more "standard"
design) they would have to shut the entire space down for costly
modifications if the show had failed. Because of this, the theater
almost didn't get built. Thankfully, quick thinking came up with a
series of catwalks built into the ceiling of the theater that allow
for quick (and relatively cheap) modification to a normal theater.
Without the arch, however, there also would be no "fire curtain," a
fire-retardant cloth made to help contain smoke, heat and flame in
case of a fire. This absence meant that the theater would not adhere
to the fire code, which the Fire Marshals could not understand.
Cirque/Scéno had to haul in a scale model of the theater to the fire
marshal's office just to get approval!

There were other problems to overcome as well. In the original plans,
Cirque/Scéno envisioned a series of lifts that would raise and lower
the performers at will. In order to incorporate the lifts, they would
have to be buried in the ground. But Las Vegas sits on a crust of what
is called "caliche," soil particles that have been fused with lime.
This fusion created a substance that is as hard as (if not harder
than) cement, which made burrowing into it quite difficult and costly.
Since they couldn't dig down in the bedrock without elevating the
costs of the theater prohibitively, the solution is actually one of
the most ingenious and visible parts of the Mystère experience - the
Deux Machina.
The stage floor sits on specially designed spiral-shaped lifts called
"Spiralifts". The Spiralifts were designed by Gala, a division of
Montreal's Paco Corp., and employ a "coiled, flexible, flat steel
spring that expands with the insertion of a thin, vertically-oriented
spiral steel band." This allows for big savings in space while
providing a rock-solid system for lifting and lowering stages. The use
of the Spiralifts also meant that they wouldn't have to spend a lot of
money digging through the tough, solid ground, which greatly pleased
the Mirage developers.
I find once I'm in the theater I can't help but look at the set and
ceiling. A simple thing the ceiling is, but here too Cirque/Scéno
provided something beautiful and interesting. The ceiling is a cloth
mural specially crafted by Sky Art out of Colorado. The print on the
cloth is just as fanciful as the production below it - a fantasy map
of the world with ships at sea! And hidden up in that sea of ships is
the O-Daiko drum, the heartbeat of Mystère! The set is also an
interesting piece of mechanics, consisting of a hunk of metal as a
backdrop that can be rotated by a simple flip of a switch.
The 10 musicians are housed on either side of the stage, with drums
and percussion on the left and everyone else on the right. A
sophisticated communications computer allows the musical director to
speak with all the musicians and a monotone "click track" keeps
everyone in sync. Underneath the stage is a round turntable that can
revolve at 10rpm, and of course those slinky-lifts. Believe it or not,
the Mystère set still retains some of the elements that were part of
the theme first presented to Caesar's Palace back in 1991 (Caesar's
turned them down, but Mirage called soon afterward). For example,
Crête says that the set "suggests Ulysses, and the mythical obstacles
he had to overcome on his own journey. The two towers represent Scylla
and Charybdis, two of the perils Ulysses faced". All the trappings of
Rome.
Many challenges faced the design team for Cirque du Soleil's first
theater, but one by one everyone worked to resolve these issues no
matter how heated the debates became. The addition to The Mirage,
Treasure Island, opened on October 26, 1993. Though the public had to
wait another two months to have a seat in the theater, patrons were
lined up on Christmas Eve to bear witness to a unique event in Cirque
du Soleil's history. In 1994, Scéno Plus was awarded the Las Vegas
Best Theater of the Year award for their ingenuity. Not bad for their
first Cirque outing, wouldn't you say?
Text written by Ricky Russo, as published in the
"Fascination! Newsletter".

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