Cirque du Soleil
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  • Guy Laliberté

    Founder

    Guy Laliberté was born in Québec City in 1959. An accordionist, stilt-walker and fire-eater, he founded Quebec's first internationally-renowned circus with the support of a small group of accomplices. A bold visionary, Guy Laliberté recognized and cultivated the talents of the street performers from the Fête foraine de Baie-Saint-Paul and created Cirque du Soleilin 1984.

    Guy Laliberté was the first to orchestrate the marriage of cultures and artistic and acrobatic disciplines that is the hallmark of Cirque du Soleil. Since 1984, he has guided the creative team through the creation of every show and contributed to elevating the circus arts to the level of the great artistic disciplines.

    Cirque du Soleil has become an international organization, as much in terms of its makeup as in the scope of its activities and influence. Guy Laliberté now heads an organization with activities on five continents.

    In October 2007, Guy Laliberté entered into a second lifetime commitment by creating the ONE DROP Foundation to fight poverty around the world by providing sustainable access to safe water.  This new dream stems from the knowledge that the right to water is key to the survival of individuals and communities all over the world and from the values which have been at the heart of Cirque du Soleil since its inception:  the belief that life gives back what you have given and even the smallest gesture will make a difference.

    In September 2009, Guy Laliberté became the first Canadian private space explorer.  His mission was dedicated to raising awareness on water issues facing humankind on planet earth. Under the theme Moving Stars and Earth for Water, this first Poetic Social Mission in space aimed at touching people through an artistic approach: a special 120-minute webcast program featuring various artistic performances unfolding in 14 cities on five continents, including the International Space Station.

    Main Awards and Distinctions
    In 2011, Guy Laliberté was inducted into the Order of the Canadian Business Hall of Fame. In 2010, Guy was awarded his very own star on the legendary Hollywood Walk of Fame. In the same year, the Quebec government honoured Guy by promoting him from Chevalier (a distinction granted six years earlier) to Officier as a member of the Ordre de la Pléiade. Université Laval (Québec) awarded an honorary doctorate to Guy Laliberté in 2008. The year before, Guy Laliberté took the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year award for all three levels: Quebec, Canada and international. In 2004, he received the Order of Canada, the highest distinction in the country, from the Governor General of Canada.  The same year, he was recognized by Time Magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world. In 2003, he was honoured by the Condé Nast group as part of the Never Follow Program, a tribute to creators and innovators. In 2001, he was named a Great Montrealer by the Académie des Grands Montréalais. In 1997, Guy Laliberté received the Ordre National du Québec, the highest distinction awarded by the Government of Quebec.


    Other awards and distinctions

    2009
    Lifetime Achievement Award granted by the Canadian Marketing Association

    2002
    Induction to Canada’s Walk of Fame

    1998
    Visionary Award granted by the American Craft Museum (now the Museum of Arts and Design in New York)

    1996
    Vision nouvelle award received at the 43rd Gala du Commerce (Quebec)

    1988
    Personality of the Year, Gala Excellence La Presse (Quebec)

    1988
    Entrepreneur of the Year, Les Affaires magazine (Quebec)

     

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  • Gilles Ste-Croix

    Artistic Guide

    When Gilles Ste-Croix first told his parents he wanted to go into show business they said “Anything but that!” Ste-Croix grew up in rural Quebec, but he was determined not to stay there. He became a hippie and a nomad, living in communes and making the obligatory ‘60s pilgrimage to the West Coast where he lived in communes and audited some drama classes.

    Ste-Croix did try to conform, even working in an architect’s office for a while, but he knew in his heart that he wasn’t cut out for a conventional business career. At the same time, his search for a vocation was not in any way aimless or vague. He says that from his teens he always had a strong drive to succeed and an equally strong desire to entertain. However his entrée into show business came about in a most unusual and unpredictable way.

    In the late 1970s Gilles Ste-Croix was living in a commune in Victoriaville, Quebec, picking apples to make money. One day he mused that the job would be a whole lot easier if he could attach the ladder to his legs—and devised his first set of stilts.

    A friend happened to mention the Bread and Puppet Theater in nearby Vermont, which used stilt-walking as the basis of many of its performances. Ste-Croix went to see the company and realized that his apple-picking skills might actually be in demand in the wider world of entertainment.

    In 1980, Gilles Ste-Croix and a band of street artists founded the Échassiers de Baie-Saint-Paul and organized a street performance festival called the Fête foraine de Baie-Saint-Paul, which would eventually lead to the founding of Cirque du Soleil with Guy Laliberté in 1984.

    In 1984 and 1985, Gilles Ste-Croix designed and performed many stilt acts for Cirque du Soleil. In 1988, he became Cirque's Artistic Director, as well as coordinating a talent search that extended to the four corners of the globe.  He was Director of Creation for all of Cirque du Soleil's productions from 1990 to 2000: Nouvelle Expérience, Saltimbanco, Alegría, Mystère, Quidam, La Nouba, "O", and Dralion.  In 1992, he directed Fascination, the first Cirque du Soleil show presented in arenas in Japan. He also directed the groundbreaking 1997 dinner/cabaret show Pomp Duck and Circumstance in Germany.

    In 2000, while continuing to act as a consultant for Cirque du Soleil, Gilles Ste-Croix decided to realize one of his greatest dreams: Driven by his passionate interest in horses, he founded his own company to produce the 2003 show Cheval-Théâtre, which featured 30 horses and as many artist-acrobats under canvas and toured ten cities in North America.

    Since December 2002, Gilles St-Croix returned to Cirque du Soleil as Vice-President of Creation, New Project Development. In July 2006 he was nominated Senior Vice-President of Creative Content.

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  • Vincent Paterson

    Writer and Director

    Vincent Paterson is a world-renowned director and choreographer whose career spans just about every genre of the entertainment industry including film, theatre, Broadway, concert tours, opera, music videos, television and commercials.

    “What I try to do with my work is fill the audience with an energy that alters them in a positive way. The work is the stone thrown into the pond. The ripples emanate from the audience. If the audience is affected even infinitesimally in a positive way, they might make something positive happen in the next five minutes, or tomorrow, or next week. That action will vibrate into the ether and the better the world will be.”

    Vincent directed the critically acclaimed opera Manon with soprano Anna Netrebko and conducted by Plácido Domingo. His direction of Anna Netrebko: The Woman, The Voice received a nomination for Best Television Arts Program at the Montreux Film Festival. The DVD is the top selling classical DVD in European history. Vincent directed and choreographed Berlin’s first original production of the musical Cabaret at Bar Jeder-Vernunft, a mirror-tent from 1914. Vincent's direction of the play Gangsta Love, set in a boxing club, earned him a Los Angeles Drama-Logue award for Outstanding Director. He directed Prague’s Black Light Theatre in Gulliver’s Travels. The TNT television film In Search of Dr. Seuss, which Vincent directed, received seven Emmy nominations.

    Vincent created for Madonna and Michael Jackson, including directing and choreographing Madonna's Blond Ambition Tour and her legendary Marie Antoinette/Vogue performance for MTV. He directed and choreographed the Bad World Tour for Jackson as well as the videos Smooth Criminal and Blood on the Dance Floor, and many other music videos and live performances for both artists.

    Vincent directed and choreographed the musical sequences in Lars Von Trier's film Dancer In The Dark. Among the many other films he choreographed are The Birdcage and Closer for director Mike Nichols, and Evita for director Alan Parker. He choreographed London's West End production of Lenny for director Sir Peter Hall and LA Opera’s Grand Duchess for director Garry Marshall. Vincent received a Tony nomination for choreographing Hal Prince’s Kiss of the Spiderwoman. He choreographed over 250 commercials, many winning awards in collaboration with director Joe Pytka.

    Vincent is featured in the best-selling Smithsonian publication Masters of Movement: Portrait’s of America’s Greatest Choreographers.
     
    “My first step with Viva ELVIS was to understand Elvis the man and his music. Michael Jackson once told me, ‘Listen to the music. It will speak to you.’ It did. The power of Elvis was in his voice. With his originality and complexity of influences, he created a revolution. When Elvis was in Las Vegas, his shows weren’t as big as Viva ELVIS because no shows were this big at that time. What I'm trying to paint, with all humility, is the show he might do today. I would be ecstatic if a new generation became Elvis fans.”

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  • Armand Thomas

    Creation Director

    Armand Thomas has had an eclectic and nomadic life, emigrating from Egypt at the age of six to settle in Montreal. A natural storyteller, he never stopped traveling, picking up freelance work as a journalist, film technician, writer, photographer, actor and researcher along the way.

    From 1978 to 2001, Armand juggled jobs in the movie industry with work as a reporter/editor.  He balanced his wage-earning jobs with stints of intense meandering, hitting the road to offbeat locations with his camera and notebook.

    Armand joined Cirque du Soleil in 1996 as props master on the North American tour of Quidam before becoming the show’s General Stage Manager a year later. He followed that with stints on Alegría and for the creation of Varekai. In 2002 he became Production Stage Manager and Assistant to the Directors of Zumanity, staying on as the show’s first Artistic Director following the premiere.

    In 2004, Armand was appointed General Stage Manager in the creation of KÀ, and ran the technically complex show during its first year. He left KÀ to become the Production Stage Manager and Assistant to the Director of The Beatles LOVE. His appointment as Creation Director of Viva ELVIS in 2007 marked the synthesis of his talents and his considerable experience.

    "Vincent Paterson, the director of Viva ELVIS, and I have an artistic affinity," says Armand. “We work in symbiosis. When Vincent comes up with a creative idea, my role is to ensure we do everything we can as a team to make it happen.”

    For Armand, Viva ELVIS pays tribute to Elvis’ unique style and influence on popular culture. “Everything about the show is enormous,” says Armand Thomas, “The size of the stage at CityCenter, the legacy of Elvis, the meaning of what we’re doing. Everything in Viva ELVIS – costumes, scenic elements, acrobatic numbers – is in the image of the King, often larger than life yet still intimate, and supports the narrative of the show."

    Armand Thomas was born in Cairo in 1959 and grew up mainly in Montreal, with many points in between.

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  • Erich van Tourneau

    Musical Director and Arranger

    When Erich first heard Great Balls of Fire by Jerry Lee Lewis at the age of 15 he was blown away by the rock legend’s fiery piano playing and got interested in the roots of rock and roll. He later studied with renowned Canadian pianists to broaden his musical horizons and deepen his knowledge of music history.

    Erich was soon working as a freelance musician on stage, studio and television projects for many of the top award-winning artists in Quebec pop music. He found himself on stage in European and Japanese festivals as well as big events closer to home such as the Festival International de Jazz de Montreal and the Quebec Summer Festival. His performances with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra at Place des Arts in Montreal are a highlight of his career.

    Over the years Erich accumulated an impressive track record of original music and began to record. He took on a dozen writing and production projects, each very different from the next, and his expertise led him to create advertising jingles in the United States and the theme song for Canadian Football League team. He has been nominated for and won awards from the Association québécoise de l'industrie du disque (ADISQ) and the Indie Awards held in Toronto.

    Erich loves the myriad undertones of soul and always comes back to gospel music, funk and rhythm and blues – the roots of Presley’s own music. Viva ELVIS is his first association with Cirque du Soleil.

    “The leitmotif that guided me throughout the entire creative process was to ask myself, ‘what would the songs of Elvis be like if he were doing them for the first time today?’” he says. “I set out to evoke the soul and the spirit of Elvis Presley, while building a bridge between his music and future generations of fans."

    Erich Van Tourneau was born in Montreal in 1973.

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  • Mark Fisher

    Set Designer (Viva ELVIS)

    Trained in the late 1960s, British architect Mark Fisher’s interest in building temporary structures and inflatables caught the attention of Roger Waters and led to his first rock ’n’ roll commission for Pink Floyd’s Animals tour in1977, a time when rock touring was in its infancy and sets for rock concerts were non-existent.

    Mark has since earned an international reputation for his spectacular concert designs. His best-known work includes The Wall and Division Bell for Pink Floyd, Steel Wheels, Bridges to Babylon and Bigger Bang for the Rolling Stones, as well as Popmart for U2. Most recently he was Chief Designer for the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics and U2’s 2009-10 360° tour.

    KÀ was the first Cirque du Soleil show Mark worked on, designing both the permanent theatre and the technically complex sets. He says the biggest difference between designing a rock show and a Cirque show is that in the former, the scenery is more of a background while in the latter, it’s part of the landscape in which the performers live and move to create their show.

    “In Viva Elvis, the line between the scenery elements and the acrobatic equipment is sometimes blurred,” explains Mark Fisher. “And that was a deliberate choice. Elvis has transcended reality and become a mythic figure, so his reappearance in Las Vegas must be done with a scale and opulence that reflects his status.”

    Mark Fisher was born in Kenilworth, England in 1947.

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  • Stefano Canulli

    Costume Designer

    Italian designer Stefano Canulli’s spectacular and classic creations have been seen throughout Europe. After completing his art studies in high school and Fine Arts in Rome, he studied art history at the Academy of Costume and Fashion in Rome and also took courses in photography and film. At the age of 19 he designed his first costumes for Italian cinema, working with the set and costume designer Piero Tosi, who had worked extensively with famed director Luchino Visconti.

    Stefano was soon working for fashion houses in Rome and with the theatre and opera costume designer Mauro Pagano. While working as an illustrator for Vanity Fair magazine during the 1980s he designed beautiful evening dresses for the couture house of Roberto Capucci and created advertising campaigns for many well known designers including Valentino and Bruno Piatelli.

    Before actually moving to Paris in 1992, Stefano began a fruitful collaboration with French designer Thierry Mugler in 1989, creating fashion shows and the advertising campaigns for his perfumes A-Men and Angel.

    Stefano presented a large exhibition of his work in 1994 and his drawings were shown at the Museum of Modern Art in New York as part of an Italian footwear exhibition. The following year he published Précis d’extravagance, a lavishly illustrated work summarizing the history of fashion at its most extravagant.

    In 2003, Stefano worked with Thierry Mugler to design costumes for the Cirque du Soleil show ZUMANITY, and in 2006 he made drawings for Philippe Guillotel’s costumes for The Beatles LOVE. Viva ELVIS is his first Cirque show as Costume Designer.

    "At Cirque du Soleil, the movement, wear and comfort of the artist are the main constraints,” he says. “It's a fascinating world. These technical limitations have profoundly changed the way I work."

    The style and approach of Stefano Canulli, for whom "drawing is the basis of everything,” are easily recognized in his designs for Viva ELVIS. "The costumes I've created for this show are a fantasy revolving around the 1950s, inspired by the image of Elvis. But the end result has nothing to do with a retro aesthetic,” he says. “Taking my usual classic and graphic approach, I flirted with the look of the Elvis era while bringing a contemporary touch to it."

    Stefano Canulli was born in Rome in 1959.
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  • Daniel Cola

    Acrobatic Performance Designer

    Virtuoso acrobat Daniel Cola comes from the world of trampoline, a discipline that was perceived as more of a sport than a circus art at the start of his career. A member of the French national trampoline team from 1978 to 1984, he became World Champion in 1982. His career took him to Sea World in Florida where he tried circus arts for the first time.

    On his return to France he heard that Cirque du Soleil was looking for a trampoline act for the show Mystère – and he was selected. His experience with Cirque allowed him to discover other circus disciplines, including the Teeterboard and the Chinese poles.

    When Daniel Cola joined Cirque du Soleil in 1993 it brought to fruition an early ambition of his to combine his two first loves: acrobatics and performance. “Even at the age of 16 my goal was to create shows based on the trampoline,” he recalls.

    Daniel left Mystère to take a more theatrical and less acrobatic role in Alegría, and toured Europe and Asia with that show for two years. In 1998 he created a trampoline act and became a coach for the Cirque production La Nouba in Florida. He stayed with the show as the Artistic Coordinator until 2004.

    In 2005 Daniel was appointed Acrobatics Performance Designer for The Beatles LOVE, at the Mirage. He followed that in 2007 by coaching the performers for the Super Bowl pre-game show. And later the same year he designed the acrobatic performances for Cirque's seasonal show Wintuk at Madison Square Garden.

    "Larger than life: those are the watchwords that inspired our acrobatic approach to Viva ELVIS," says Daniel Cola. “You could define some of the pieces of acrobatic equipment as part of the set, given their size.”

    Daniel Cola was born in 1962 in Asnières, France.

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  • Guy St-Amour

    Acrobatic Equipment and Rigging Designer

    Guy St-Amour has been involved in the performing arts for more than 30 years. He began his career in 1975 as a technician and has participated in an impressive number of projects in theatre, cinema, television and circus. In 2002, he was selected to contribute his talents to Queen Elizabeth II’s Golden Jubilee Royal Visit to Canada and in 2005 he worked on the Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan’s Centennial Celebration of the Arts.

    Guy is one of the Cirque du Soleil pioneers, working in a number of technical direction capacities between 1984 and 1995. He participated in the creation of rigging systems for aerial numbers, special effects, acrobatic equipment and set design elements. He has been interested in audio since 1984, and created the sound design for Nouvelle Expérience in 1989. He also designed, created and supervised the installation of the big tops for Cirque’s European and North American tours between 1989 and 1995. Viva ELVIS is his third Cirque production as a designer. In the early 2000s, he designed the tent and bleachers for Cheval Théâtre, the equestrian show created by Gilles Ste-Croix.

    In 1987 Guy founded his own consulting company which has worked for scores of clients including Expo ‘98 in Portugal (for which he created a teleport simulator), the Montreal Casino, the National Film Board of Canada, the Just For Laughs comedy festival, Opéra de Montréal’s Carmen Sous les Étoiles and the Montreal International Jazz Festival. At the same time he is intensely involved in training the next generation of technicians in Quebec, teaching at the National Theatre School, the École Nationale de Cirque and the Montreal-based circus arts national network En Piste.

    In 2006 Guy created the motorized equipment and special effects for the show Joe Dassin in Montreal and the acrobatic equipment and rigging for the Cirque du Soleil show LOVE in Las Vegas. He followed that with the set and production design for a concert by the singer Chantal Chamandy, staged in Egypt in 2007. He then worked as a safety consultant on a production of The Ring of the Nibelung directed by Robert Lepage at the Metropolitan Opera.

    "The scale of the theatre and the sheer number of set changes calls for more and bigger acrobatic equipment than any other show we’ve done,” says Guy St-Amour. “Whether it’s the giant guitar, a 14-meter aluminum bridge that supports two acrobats, or the Jungle Gym, a parallel bar structure used in the GI Blues number, everything is like Elvis himself: It’s all larger than life."

    Guy St-Amour was born in Montreal in 1959.

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  • marc brickman

    Original Lighting Designer

    marc brickman is a world renowned lighting and production designer. His credits include concert tours for such diverse artists as Pink Floyd, Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Blue Man Group, Blackeyed Peas, Keith Urban, Chris Botti with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and John Mayer .

    Recognized as an innovator in the industry, his awards and accolades include Emmy Award and Cable Ace Award nominations for production design and Best Director, and Lighting Designer of the Year.

    marc created the lighting for the 1998 Winter Olympics Closing Ceremonies in Nagano, and the 1992 Summer Olympics Opening and Closing Ceremonies in Barcelona. His numerous works for film and television include Steven Spielberg’s AI and Minority Report, and Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man.

    Among his recent assignments are the Special EFX for the Mel Brooks show Young Frankenstein on Broadway, The Chromozone Project – a touring dome venue that employs 360° projection – and FeeFiFoFun , an indoor playground and interactive online program for preschoolers and their parents.

    marc’s work outside the realm of entertainment includes working with architects such as Craig Hodgetts and Sir Norman Foster to light structures as diverse as the Al-Faisalah building in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and the Stratosphere in Las Vegas. His work on large-scale public art installations includes the Festpiel in Salzburg, Austria .

    “I would equate Viva ELVIS with Wagner’s Ring Cycle,” says marc brickman. “The production is epic in scale and the show is an unpredictable hybrid. It’s opera , it’s theatre, it’s dance, it’s circus. Lighting serves to help tell the story and translate the energy of music and bodies moving in space. It’s a balance between light and dark, truth and myth, and the magic of what we think we can see.”

    marc brickman was born in Philadelphia in 1953.

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  • Martin Labrecque

    Additional Lighting Design and Reprogramming (Viva ELVIS)

    Martin Labrecque’s professional credits include more than a hundred theatrical productions. Viva ELVIS is the third Cirque du Soleil show for which he has created the lighting, following his debut on Corteo and his subsequent designs for KOOZA.

    Martin contributed to the critical success of several Quebec shows including L’Homme en Lambeaux in 2001, for which he won an award for his lighting design. In 2003 he co-wrote a show with Patrice Dubois about the life of Orson Welles: Everybody’s Welles Pour Tous, for which he received the Masque de la Meilleure Production Montréal. He has won two other Masque awards – in 2005 for his work on Le Peintre des Madonnes and in 2007 for Hosanna, both of which were directed by Serge Denoncourt. His other lighting designs have garnered a dozen award nominations.

    Before coming to Cirque du Soleil, Martin Labrecque created the lighting for two acclaimed circus shows produced by Cirque Eloize, Rain and Nomade, which was directed by Daniele Finzi Pasca, who went on to write and direct Cirque du Soleil’s Corteo.

    In 2009, Martin won a Félix Award (Québec) for the lighting design of singer Pierre Lapointe’s show MUTANTES. The same year, he designed the lighting for an eleven-hour show by the Canadian author, director and actor Wajdi Mouawad, which was presented in the courtyard of the Palais des Papes in Avignon, France. He also worked on the show Paradis Perdu, directed by Dominic Champagne and presented in Montreal.

    "For Viva Elvis, I wanted to bring some theatricality to a world that is more rock ‘n’ roll than Cirque is used to,” says Martin. “Particularly in the acrobatic numbers. I was looking to create a balance between the rhythms of the music and the visual poetry of the scenes.”

    Martin Labrecque was born in 1972 in Montreal.

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  • Ivan Dudynsky

    Image Content Designer

    Ivan Dudynsky began his professional life as a dancer for Michael Jackson, a choreographer for 'N Sync and an actor in over 50 national commercials. He appeared in the feature film Newsies and was the lead in the award-winning Nickelodeon series, Roundhouse. However, when he became a producer/editor for MTV's Peabody Award-winning series, BIOrhythm, his production career took off.

    Ivan studied cinematography at UCLA and photography at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena but left school early to shoot and edit music videos. He met Viva ELVIS director Vincent Paterson soon after he arrived in LA and they worked together first in dance and eventually in film. Vincent brought Ivan in to edit a major dance sequence for the Lars von Trier film Dancer In The Dark.

    He could have continued as an editor, but directing was Ivan’s goal, and he pursued it through TV series and commercials. He moved into multi-camera directing for concerts, award shows and DVDs.

    2008 marked a turning point in Ivan's directing career when he branched out into large format reality production series. He started the year directing Can You Duet for CMT and After Hours with master chef Daniel Boulud for the MOJO HD channel. He directed multiple episodes of the CMT music series Crossroads, Invitation Only, Cross Country and Studio 330 Sessions, as well as the season finales for Gone Country and GAC's Next Star. He also directed P. Diddy's StarMaker, a music competition series for MTV that premiered in 2008.

    Ivan spent most of 2009 working on a series of promos and online tutorials for MTV International. He travelled to Japan, France, Italy and the UK to shoot artists such as will.i.am, Katy Perry, Lars Ulrich, Marilyn Manson, Pete Wenz, Lady Gaga, Adam Levine and Pharrell Williams for the MTV series Talk@thePlayground. In 2010 he will direct the new TBS late night talk show starring George Lopez.

    “For Viva ELVIS I started by looking at 60,000 Elvis photographs, 30 films, 15 documentaries, ten concerts and a lot of home movies, as well as shooting new footage and creating a lot of graphic design elements for the show,” says Ivan Dudynsky. “The biggest challenge for me has been how to support the action on stage without drawing too much attention to the screen while making sure there’s genuine interaction between the two.”

    Ivan Dudynsky was born in Minneapolis in 1970.

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  • Jonathan Deans

    Sound Designer

    Jonathan Deans, one of the most sought-after sound designers in the musical theatre world, is the man behind the sound environments of Viva ELVIS. Having created the soundscapes of Saltimbanco, Mystère, “O”, La Nouba, ZUMANITY, KÀ, Corteo, The Beatles LOVE, KOOZA, Wintuk, CRISS ANGEL Believe and, most recently, OVO, Jonathan finds Cirque’s work-in-progress and team-oriented creative approach highly stimulating.

    Jonathan was fascinated by electronics at an early age. At 15, he joined the Royal Shakespeare Company as an actor where his keen interest in sound began to blend with a theatrical context. Several years later, after a spell as a sound engineer in the music industry, notably at Morgan Studios where he brushed shoulders with artists such as Cat Stevens, Paul Simon and Rick Wakeman, he made his way back to the theatre via the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden and later went on to mix the sound for the musical A Chorus Line. One success soon followed another and he became the sound mixing engineer for over a dozen productions including Evita, Cats, Bugsy Malone and The Sound of Music.

    Jonathan’s success as a mixing sound engineer led to him being hired as sound designer on the musical Marilyn. This was followed by work on other West End shows including Time, Les Misérables, Mutiny, Jean Seberg and then on Broadway, Ragtime, Fosse, King David, Damn Yankees, Taboo, Brooklyn, Lestat, Pirate Queen and Young Frankenstein.

    For Jonathan Deans, Cirque’s permanent theatres and its big top are two quite different worlds when it comes to sound design. “There are different technical demands, but as far as the texture and the layering of the music and sound are concerned, it’s the same,” he says. “My work is to create a unique environment for every production. And whatever the environment is, I need to make sure that sonically the audience members know they are entering a different world.”

    “We don’t have Elvis in the show, but everything we do is connected to him, so it’s very important that the sound system creates something that has the same sonic impact as the visuals, and it all has to be worthy of Elvis,” says Jonathan Deans. “The Viva ELVIS theatre has been built on a vast scale, one that matches his legend. To create a sound that meets that challenge we’ve buried subwoofers in the floor so we can use the low frequency resonance of the concrete structure itself to add subsonic sound vibrations that will literally move the auditorium in response to the live music performances, as well as creating sound effects.”

    Jonathan Deans was born in England and lives in the New York Area.

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  • Napoleon & Tabitha Dumo

    Choreographers

    Napoleon and Tabitha’s career began in Las Vegas when they directed and choreographed numerous shows and industrials for companies such as Macy’s, Nike, Redken and Matrix. A subsequent move to Los Angeles opened many doors for them in the entertainment business.

    This husband and wife team has contributed their choreography and directing talents to every genre of the entertainment industry.  You can see them as featured choreographers on FOX’s hit TV show So You Think You Can Dance, for which they received an Emmy nomination.  They are the Supervising Choreographers of Randy Jackson’s America’s Best Dance Crew on MTV and directed the America’s Best Dance Crew Live US Tour.  The dynamic duo has contributed to other tours such as Ricky Martin’s Black and White, Christina Aguilera’s Back to Basics, and Celine Dion’s Taking Chances.  In addition, they hosted TLC’s Rock The Reception, where they created wild and wacky first wedding dances to surprise each couple’s guests.

    Recently, Napoleon and Tabitha choreographed for the 2009 Emmy Awards (working closely with Neil Patrick Harris), the season premiere of Ellen, Carrie Underwood’s Christmas Special.  Next up is Jennifer Lopez’s American Music Awards performance, on which they serve as creative directors and choreographers.  In addition to choreographing, they served as creative directors of Sean Kingston’s performance at the 2009 Kids’ Choice Awards.  They’ve also choreographed commercial campaigns for Old Navy, Chevy, Mastercard, and Bacardi.

    For years, Napoleon and Tabitha have been some of the most requested and popular teachers both in the United States and internationally.  They travel the globe with the dance conventions Monsters of Hip Hop, Shock, and Coastal Dance Rage, teaching and inspiring the next generation of dancers. Viva ELVIS is their first engagement with Cirque du Soleil as Choreographers.

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  • Mark Swanhart

    Choreographer

    Mark Swanhart began his dance studies at 7 years old in his hometown of Vinco, Pennsylvania and furthered those studies at Point Park College of Pittsburgh. After college, Mark made his professional debut with the James Kelley Choreography project and remained in Chicago to perform with Deeply Rooted Dance Chicago, River North Dance Company, and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. Mark then turned his focus to theater and joined the first national tour of Fosse.

    Knowing his true calling was choreography, Mark headed for Los Angeles where he found his first choreography job on Baz Luhrman’s La Boheme on Broadway. He spent the next year maintaining the Broadway cast and then remounting the production in Los Angeles. Since then, Mark has choreographed music videos, stage productions, and national commercials.  Credits include the water fountains for Steve Wynn’s new casino in Macau, China; choreography for Celine Dion’s Taking Chances Tour, and her CBS Television Special.  Viva ELVIS is his first engagement with Cirque du Soleil as Choreographer.

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  • Catherine Archambault

    Choreographer

    Catherine Archambault comes from a family of artists and was immersed in culture from an early age. She took up classical dance and the violin when she was seven years old before turning to modern dance, jazz and artistic gymnastics.

    Having obtained a Bachelor’s degree in contemporary dance at Montreal’s Concordia University and danced with a number of choreographers, including Montreal-based contact dance pioneer Andrew Harwood, Catherine made a discovery that marked a major turning point in her career. She choreographed a Spanish web act for a student of Montreal’s National Circus School. It was nothing short of a revelation for Catherine who had just discovered the circus world.

    Jumping into this new creative space, Catherine Archambault kept on choreographing circus acts, paving the way to assignments with Cirque Archaos (France), Cirque du Tonnerre (Quebec) and Cirque Éloize (Quebec), for which she choreographed the very first show in 1992. Her work has led to a dozen prestigious prizes, including Silver (hand-to-hand trio) and Gold (duo trapeze) Medals at the Festival mondial du Cirque de demain in Paris, the Silver Cup (aerial cradle) at the International Acrobatic Art Festival in China, Gold (hand-to-hand trio) at the 1992 International Circus Festival in Mexico City, the Press and “Festival Favourite” Awards (aerial straps) at the Tournai International Circus Festival in Belgium, as well as the “2002 People’s Choice Award” (diving) at Paramount Canada’s Wonderland in Toronto.

    The year 1991 marks Catherine’s first assignment with Cirque du Soleil, when she choreographed a trapeze act performed by twins Karyne and Sarah Steben. The following year she acted as co-choreographer on the show Fascination, which ran in Japan.

    After working on grass-roots projects in the United States and Europe, Catherine Archambault returned to Cirque du Soleil to take part in the choreography of the show presented to the heads of state gathered at the G7 1995 Summit in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

    Catherine was drawn back to Cirque du Soleil in 1999 and became Artistic Coordinator on La Nouba, a job she held until 2001. She acted as artistic consultant and acrobatic coordinator on the television series Solstrom in 2003 and on the show Soleil de Minuit (Midnight Sun) in 2004.

    Catherine applied her talents as a teacher to support the Dralion cast in 2005 and became Artistic Coordinator on DELIRIUM the following year, all the while choreographing the show’s acrobatic acts. Wintuk represents Catherine Archambault’s greatest challenge as a Cirque du Soleil choreographer. Viva ELVIS is her second show as choreographer for Cirque du Soleil.

    Catherine Archambault was born in Sainte-Catherine-de-la-Jacques-Cartier, Quebec.

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  • Patricia Ruel

    Props Designer (KÀ, LOVE, Viva Elvis, Amaluna)

    Patricia Ruel has contributed to the success of a myriad of plays, television shows and special events, both in Quebec and abroad. Her track record includes over 50 productions as Props Designer and a dozen as Set Designer. Patricia has received two Théâtre Denise-Pelletier awards for her sets for Révizor, directed by Reynald Robinson, in 2003, and Edmond Dantès, directed by Robert Bellefeuille, in 2004. In 2011, she received a Gémeau award in the “Best Set Design: all variety categories, magazines, public affairs, sports” category for the end-of-year special Bye Bye 2010, aired on SRC. She has worked with various theatre directors, including Robert Lepage, Dominic Champagne and Fernand Rainville. She has also worked on several projects for Cirque du Soleil, including KÀ, The Beatles LOVE and Viva ELVIS as Props Designer and Wintuk and Banana Shpeel as Set Designer.

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  • Nathalie Gagné

    Makeup Designer

    Makeup Designer Nathalie Gagné has been fascinated by makeup and its influence on the actor’s craft since her teens. “It’s a reflection of the character’s soul,” she says. “It’s also a magic wand that sweeps away inhibitions.”

    Nathalie studied theatre production at Cégep de Saint-Hyacinthe, a community college in Quebec, then went on to become one of the first graduates of the Montreal branch of the famed Paris-based makeup school École Christian Chauveau.

    Before joining Cirque du Soleil, Nathalie worked in theatre, film and television. She has twice been nominated for a Gémeau award for best makeup, all categories combined. The honor is conferred by the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television.

    Since 1995 Nathalie has crafted more than 1,000 separate makeup designs for Cirque, culled from over 5,000 sketches. But since Cirque performers have to apply their own makeup, she also involves them in the creation of their onstage look. “Unlike actors, acrobats aren’t used to studying their own faces,” she says. “One of my goals is to get them to do just that, and help them find within themselves what I call ‘lines of force’ that will serve to build their characters.”

    Nathalie introduced new makeup concepts to the shows Mystère, Alegría and Saltimbanco, which led her to work with director Franco Dragone and costume designer Dominique Lemieux. Following her work on Quidam, “O”, La Nouba, Varekai, ZUMANITY, KÀ, Corteo, DELIRIUM, LOVE, ZAIA, CRISS ANGEL Believe and Viva ELVIS, IRIS is her 16th contribution to the creation of a Cirque du Soleil show.

    She is also responsible for ensuring the integrity of all makeup designs that bear her signature. Since the performers apply their own makeup, workshops in makeup techniques are now part of the general training provided to Cirque du Soleil artists. Nathalie first teaches performers how to do their own makeup, and then writes a step-by-step application guide for each of them.

    In 2010, Nathalie designed the makeup for the play Il Campiello by Carlo Goldoni, directed by Serge Denoncourt, and for the 3D movie about Cirque du Soleil produced by James Cameron and directed by Andrew Adamson.

    "In IRIS, the makeup harmonizes with the play of light and shadow that characterizes some of the scenes," she says. “For some of the characters, I wanted to create an effect that would be reminiscent of 19th century magicians’ posters. For others, I was inspired by the faces of the great stars of classic movies, and added a little touch of Cirque du Soleil. "

    Nathalie Gagné was born in Trois-Pistoles, Quebec.

     

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