Love was a 2006 theatrical production by Cirque du Soleil which combined the re-produced and re-imagined music of the Beatles with an interpretive, circus-based artistic and athletic stage performance. The show played at a specially built theatre at the Mirage in Las Vegas.
A joint venture between Cirque and the Beatles' Apple Corps Ltd, it was the first theatrical production with which Apple Corps Ltd. partnered. Love was written and directed by Dominic Champagne. George Martin, producer of nearly all of the Beatles' records, and his son, record producer Giles Martin, were credited as music directors. A soundtrack album of the show was released in November 2006.
On April 10, 2024, Cirque du Soleil announced that the show was ending with a final performance on July 7, Ringo Starr’s 84th birthday. The Mirage will be redeveloped as a Hard Rock Cafe hotel and casino reopening in 2027. The Love Theatre will not be rebuilt in the new hotel, and no plans have been announced to reboot Love elsewhere.[1]
History
The project arose from discussions in 2000[2] between George Harrison and his friend Guy Laliberté, one of Cirque's founders. Three years of negotiations between surviving band members Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, Beatles widows Olivia Harrison (representing George Harrison) and Yoko Ono (representing John Lennon), as well as Beatles' holding company Apple Corps Ltd. and the Mirage culminated in an agreement.
The first executive producer was Neil Aspinall, then-manager of Apple Corps Ltd. Dominic Champagne shared show concept creator credit with Gilles Ste-Croix (a founder of Cirque). The creation director was Chantal Tremblay.
Tickets went on sale April 19, 2006. Preview performances ran from June 2 to June 29. In attendance at the gala opening on June 30 were McCartney, Starr, Ono, Cynthia Lennon, Julian Lennon, Olivia and Dhani Harrison, and George Martin. It was the biggest reunion of the Beatles' 'family' since the band's breakup. At the end of the show, McCartney, Starr, Olivia, Ono, and Martin went onstage.[citation needed]
On June 26, 2007, key parties met for the first anniversary of the show at the Mirage. McCartney, Starr, Olivia and Ono were interviewed by CNN's Larry King shortly before the show began. The group unveiled a plaque at the Mirage Hotel in Las Vegas in memory of John Lennon and George Harrison.
Starting in late October 2010, Cirque du Soleil offered backstage tours of the Love Theatre. The experience allowed visitors to see the backstage wings, training rooms, costume workshop, and break area and go up to a catwalk into the sound and lighting booths. Not every experience was the same; the tour was conducted around a "regular day", so performers may have been training, rehearsing, or working out.[3][4]
Leading up to the show's 10th anniversary in July 2016, producers updated the production, making changes to imagery, costumes, and acts, as well as adding and removing some music.[5]
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the show was shut down from March 2020 until August 2021.[6][7]
Set and technical information
Created by French designer Jean Rabasse, the Love Theatre at the Mirage housed 6,351 speakers and 2,013 seats set around a central stage. Each seat was fitted with three speakers,[8] including a pair in the headrest. The sound system was designed by Jonathan Deans. The stage included 11 lifts, 4 traps, and 13 automated tracks and trolleys. Each lift was capable of lifting 20,000 pounds.
The Love Theatre featured 32 digital projectors. Video was digital from source-to-screen with high-definition 100’-wide panoramic images. Digital displays on two walls above the audience emphasized elements of the show and provided transitions. High-definition projectors also created enormous images (designed by Francis Laporte) on four translucent screens that could be unfurled to divide the auditorium.
The Love Theatre, which replaced the Siegfried & Roy theater at the Mirage, was said to have cost more than $100 million. The venue was set up as a circular theatre in the round with seats 360 degrees around the stage. There were four balconies, and the furthest seat was only 98 feet from the center of the stage.[citation needed] The closest seat was 23 feet, 4 inches from the center of the stage and 2 feet, 9 inches from the edge of the stage.[citation needed]
Storyline
The loose story of the production traced the Beatles' biography in broad strokes from the Blitz through the band's founding and climb into superstardom, their psychedelic and spiritual works, and their break-up in 1970. The finale was a joyous celebration of The Beatles' "reunion" that the show itself represented.
Love traced this path without relying on literal or historical representations of individual people. Its landscape was inhabited by fictional characters plucked from the Beatles' lyrics. Sgt. Pepper, a central figure, encountered such characters as Lucy in the Sky, Eleanor Rigby, Lady Madonna, and Mr. Kite. In exceptions to this stylistic choice, the "Here Comes the Sun" scene featured a character resembling Krishna, and several scenes included mop-topped, dark-haired figures in black suits who resembled the early Beatles. The international cast totaled 65 performers.
Characters
Love had a plethora of characters inspired by the music of the Beatles.[9]
Philippe Guilottel, Love's costume designer, wanted to infuse the same spirit of the Beatles into the costumes for Love. Many garbs included juxtaposed elements such as traditional and Victorian fashions combined with colorful, imaginative designs. Many of the costumes were highly sophisticated and voluminous, almost as if taken from a cartoon. For example, Savile Row tailoring traditions were utilized for the Sgt. Pepper Parade, turning the outfits inside out.[11]
Unlike most other Cirque productions, which feature live music, Love used prerecorded material from the Beatles' catalog. Many of the original Abbey Road Studios recording session tapes were re-orchestrated and inspired the show's dance, acrobatics, visual and theatrical effects. George Martin, the Beatles' original producer, and his son Giles Martin worked with the entire archive of Beatles recordings to create the musical component for Love. The result was an unprecedented approach to the music for a stage production. Love sampled 120 songs to create 27 musical pieces. The songs were mixed so that the lyrics and instrumentation from one song blended into the next.
One musical highlight of the show was a new version of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", which matched the first studio demo of the song with a string arrangement written for Love by George Martin; it was the only new piece of music in the show.[12] A commercial soundtrack of the show was released in November 2006.
Filmography
A documentary on the making of Love titled All Together Now was released on October 20, 2008.[13]
^"LOVE: Acts". Cirque du Soleil. Retrieved 2014-04-21.
^Clément, Ronald (2009). Cirque du Soleil 25 Years of Costumes (in Chinese, English, French, and Japanese). Canada: Dépôt légal, Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. pp. 96–101. ISBN978-2-9803493-4-8.