“IDEAS” PERSON: “Cirque
du Soleil”, with horses.
FRANCHISE
ADMINISTRATOR: “Sold!”
“Wait. French-Canadian horses?”
“Do they have
those?”
“Mais, Whoa! Never mind.
We’ll teach them the dismissive attitude. ‘Sold’, anyway.”
Cirque du Soleil, with horses is the premising concept of
Cavalia, a performance of which we
recently attended with our grandchildren and their parents. A more precise
description would be Cirque du Soleil with
horses, interspersed with human acrobats because there is only so much you can
do with horses.
I am not certain this hybrid confection assuaged either of its
participants.
CAVALIA HORSE: “Why do we need acrobats? Aren’t ‘synchronized horses’ enough?”
HUMAN ACROBAT: “We auditioned for the main company. They said,
‘We have good news and bad news.
The good news is: Welcome to Cirque du Soleil. The bad news:
You’re in the show the show with the horses.”
CAVALIA HORSE: “We heard
that.”
HUMAN ACROBAT: “Like we care.”
Did our grandchildren enjoy it, which is the central purpose
of such undertakings? Ever since Ida
Bloom who was not “family” but had no children of her own and felt the
compulsion to take other people’s
children to the circus, I have been aware of the age-old tradition of adults taking
children places, the children with no expressed enthusiasm for what those thoughtful
adults are transporting them to see.
“It’s an excavation site.
They’ll love it.”
“A public hanging.
You have to introduce kids to novel experiences.”
Five year-old Milo was into the show at an age-appropriate
level of involvement, though his attention rose nowhere close to his Star Wars-and-its-endless-prequels-
and-sequels concentration.
Two-and-a-half year-old Jack, whom I occasionally calls “Bob” just to
mess with his mind and he shows no interest whatsoever in playing along, spent
the two-hour duration of the performance raising and lowering his seat.
Up-Down.
Up-Down. Up-Down. Up-Down.
Up-Down.
This leaves the adults, who are on hand primarily because
the children can’t drive, evaluating the presentation from their personal
perspectives, a limited one for me since, having missed the RCMP’s celebrated “Musical Ride”, this
was my first production involving synchronized stallions. (Which, we were informed earlier, most of the
equine participants we were witnessing were. Stallions, we were additionally informed, are
harder to train because, unlike geldings, they are still thinking about mares.)
I have to tell you, for a least half of Cavalia and possibly longer, I was thoroughly enchanted. (I only wish those horses could know that
from this attendee’s standpoint, the
acrobats, although skillful, were indisputably in “Second Position.” I hope they sensed that when I clapped harder
for them.)
The imaginative set design morphs ingeniously
through various “tableaus” (actually, “tableaux”)– Arabian desert, Monument
Valley, African wastelands, one sequence included a rippling pool of water
water which, I was, like, “Where did that rippling pool of water come from?”
The stage begins empty.
Suddenly, a string of the perfectly-groomed horses drift hypnotically into
view, simulating an ethereal “horse mirage” – without trainers – it’s like
these horses just show up and go spontaneously through their paces. They hit their “marks”, they move in perfectly
ordered formations – nobody’s dawdling, nobody’s forging ahead. It’s like “wind-up” horses, but with no key.
It’s amazing to see horse do that. The horses I’m familiar with eat hay at a trough and shoo away insects with
their tails. One of them bit me.
These horses weren’t like that. They were impeccably trained, executing
maneuvers that – again, we were
informed earlier in an ersatz “Quiz” – took them two to six years to perfect. Depending on the maneuver, not the intelligence of the individual
horse. I just wanted to clarify that;
show horses are notoriously sensitive.
Their consummate artistry went way past Gene Autry’s
“Champion” counting with his foot. If
that was “Addition”, Cavalia’s feats
of wonder were “Advanced Trigonometry.” It was definitely the “high rent” district of “horse
sense.”
But there was a weird contradiction, it seemed to me – years
of practice, making masterfully trained horses look “free.”
CAVALIA HORSE: “We used to do that before.”
ANOTHER CAVALIA
HORSE: “Yeah, but we probably
wouldn’t have shown up for work.”
Though there were slow parts, at its best, Cavalia’s effect was hallucinogenically
dreamlike.
On top of which, and maybe most surprisingly…
Nobody pooped.
How do they ensure that?
Kaopectate? A giant “stopper”? A programmed signal for “holding it in”? I’m not saying that was the most amazing
trick they pulled off, but I’ve been around horses. They “let go” all the time!
CAVALIA HORSE: “What! We ‘went’ before the show. And by the way, do you ever say that about actors?
‘Virtuoso performance. And she held it in’.”
Sorry.
CAVALIA HORSE: “That’s ‘Horseism!’”
Lemme wrap this up.
CAVALIA HORSE: “Fine.
But watch your step.”
I always do around
horses – just messin’ with ya. Anyway, as
you would expect for Cirque du Soleil, Cavalia
displayed startling flashes of imaginative brilliance. For me, at least, there were not quite enough
of them.
CAVALIA HORSE: “Don’t say, ‘Because of the limitations of
the animals.’ We’re horses. You should be surprised we do anything!”
You guys were sensational.
The movements and “visuals” are embedded forever in my
consciousness. There was a tumbler who
did about twenty back flips in a row…
CAVALIA HORSE: “I warned you, don’t go there.”
That was nothing
compared to that incomparable company of horses.
CAVALIA HORSE: “Sorry.
I did not see where that was going.”
No problem. And great
show, by the way.
CAVALIA HORSE: “Did you notice my mane?”
We were talking about how long and beautiful it was on the
way home.
CAVALIA HORSE: “Really?”
2 comments:
Earl Pomerantz, who has won 2 Prime Time Emmy Awards, a Writers Guild of America Award and a Humanitas Prize as well as writing numerous scripts for some of television's greatest situation comedies, missed a joke in his blog. Now because it's Mr. Pomerantz and his cred as one of the most talented writers in television, not just Canadian writers, has been firmly established for years, I'm going to defer to his legacy and assume he just passed on the joke.
He saw it, paused, thought "No, that joke stinks" and carried on writing another excellent post. So what's the joke, okay here it is:
In writing about horses Mr. Pomerantz referred to Gene Autry's horse "Champion" then right after used the term "Advanced Trigonometry". He could have referred to Roy Rogers' horse and written "Advanced Trigger-nometry" but didn't.
Like I said, he saw it, thought "it stinks" and carried on writing. All this leads me to my Friday Question, oh wait that's the other guy, Levine is it? Anyway, Earl can you blog about what makes you leave jokes in or out, what makes you decide to discard a joke or keep it in and do you get your wife's opinion on a post before hitting that publish button.
"Up-Down. Up-Down. Up-Down. Up-Down. Up-Down."
Perfect.
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