The cycle of Cirque du Soleil
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TONY DODERO
All is forgiven.
At least, that would seem to be the case judging from the
reception Friday night at the opening night of the Cirque du Soleil
performance of “Varekai” at the Orange County Fairgrounds.
But first a little history.
Hark back to January 1997. Cirque du Soleil had come to town and
set up shop at the fairgrounds in its characteristic multicolored
tents. Sitting in the parking lot near the corner of Fair Drive and
Fairview Road, the location proved disastrous for fair and Cirque
officials, even though the performance itself, “Quidam,” was so
successful that it was extended deep into March of that year.
The nearby College Park neighborhood, itself the source of bad
blood from years of Pacific Amphitheatre noise, came unglued. The
loud noise from Cirque, topped off by the crashing sound of a loud,
large drum, was driving residents to distraction each night.
Fair officials launched a committee to study the problem, and nary
a week went by that we didn’t have page after page of letters to the
editor or call after call to the Readers Hotline debating the merits
of Cirque du Soleil. And by the time it was all over, it seemed the
Cirque would say good riddance to Costa Mesa forever.
And by January 2000, it looked like that was going to happen.
Cirque du Soleil returned to Orange County, and instead of going
to the fairgrounds, it landed at the Irvine Spectrum, with a
production of “Dralion,” to the delight of Larry Agran and the Irvine
gang.
After the production ended, we wrote an editorial that finished
like this: “It’s too bad that a city that likes to call itself the
City of the Arts, that boasts a world-class performing arts center
and a cutting-edge repertory theater, can lose such a prestigious and
enjoyable event as the Cirque du Soleil. It’s too bad that fairground
officials were so short-sighted in their planning and were unable to
foresee the debacle they had planned.
“It’s too bad that residents were so quick to run the troupe out
of town and were unable instead to see it as, yes, maybe a boisterous
visitor, but a visitor who brought culture and notoriety to our fair
city.
“But maybe there’s still time to make amends and bring the Cirque
back to Costa Mesa. Chantal Blanchard, the circus’ spokeswoman, told
the press that despite the good run at the Spectrum, there’s no
guarantee they’ll make the spot a permanent home.
“Costa Mesa officials, here’s your chance to pull off the best
high-wire act yet. Let’s work to bring the Cirque back home to the
City of the Arts.”
Now, I’d never be so bold as to suggest that anyone took our
editorial advice. But the Cirque is back, though now it’s at the east
end of the fair parking lot, closer to the freeway than homes.
And aside from a small, front entrance protest over the Cirque’s
firing of a man who is HIV-positive, Friday night was a good night
for Costa Mesa indeed.
“Leave the past where it’s at,” City Manager Allan Roeder said
after the show finished.
Roeder, who attended with his wife, was very impressed with the
evening’s performance of high-wire acts, gymnastics, contortions and
flat-out hilarious clowns.
“It brings spirit and vitality to the community,” Roeder said of
the Cirque’s return. “That’s why it belongs in Costa Mesa.”
Spotted in the crowd opening night were a number of luminaries.
The few whom I remember seeing included: Orange County Sheriff Mike
Carona; Marketplace owner Bob Teller; Newport Film Festival chief
Greg Schwenk; Costa Mesa Councilman Mike Scheafer; Costa Mesa Chamber
of Commerce honcho Ed Fawcett; Fair General Manager Becky Bailey
Findley; Newport Beach Sgt. Steve Shulman; South Coast Plaza
marketing whiz Werner Escher and Orange Coast Magazine Editor (and
former Pilot colleague) Tina Borgatta.
If this performance and reception is a harbinger of the future,
I’d bet on a long Cirque run this year and an unquestionable return
down the road.
*
It looks like the Cub Scout tours have resumed in the Daily Pilot
newsroom. Here’s a shout out to the Carden School Cub Scout Den 2,
who came to see how the paper is produced. Accompanied by mom Leslie
Fuchs were Cub Scouts William Fuchs, Matthew Kernan, Charlie Gels and
Marty Taylor.
I trust we now have four solid new readers to add to the Pilot
family.
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