Know before you go: fun facts and behind the scenes interview at ‘Cirque du Soleil: OVO’

Insects can be elegant and extraordinary…and it all starts with an egg.

The Foreigner (Blue Fly) with a mysterious OVO (Egg). Photo credit Vlad Lorenzo courtesy of Cirque Du Soleil: OVO

Cirque du Soleil: OVO continues live and in person at the Agganis Arena in Boston, Massachusetts through Sunday, July 28 before continuing in at the Amica Mutual Pavilion in Providence, Rhode Island August 1 through 4 and then at the SNHU Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire August 8 through 11.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Going behind the scenes at Cirque du Soleil: OVO, some intriguing facts were unveiled about how this tremendous production comes together.  From the preparation to the performers which includes two Olympians to Liz Vandal’s kaleidoscopic costumes from Montreal, this unique production is brought to life in distinctive venues all over the world.  The following are some amazing facts from Senior Publicist Janie Mallet of OVO:

  • Cirque du Soleil is celebrating its 40th anniversary!  OVO’s cast and crew is a multi-cultural group that has been traveling around the world since 2009.  A quick paced touring production, OVO has spent fifteen years on the road changing city or country every single week.  The show did break during the pandemic before returning in 2022 with a revamped production featuring new acts and new music.
  • ‘Ovo’ is Portuguese for ‘egg’.  The production starts when The Foreigner arrives at this new colony of insects with an egg on his back.  The show explores how we interact with one another and learn to accept and celebrate our differences.  There is a love story, curiosities, and a bit of a confrontation in a world likened to a Brazilian rainforest.
  • Not only does the production travel with a full gym backstage, but with a full time coach, access to nutritionists, two performance therapists, doctors and an artistic team of 100 people with 52 performing onstage.
  • The artists and athletes do their own cardio, strength training, and flexibility before attending meetings and trainings for the show.  The performers expend so much energy and do not follow a diet.  They eat what is best for them at their own discretion, but if they want to work on a specialized thing, they have three chefs and a catering team on hand.
  • The production has a lot of moving parts and the size and how the trucks are packed for the tours are different, especially if they fly across the ocean.  Everything is meticulously labeled and the teams need to be ready to adapt to any last minute changes.
  • The production has over 1000 costumes.  These costumes are built for the function of each performer and there are four full time technicians on tour to take care of the costumes.  All the costumes require some training in order to wear them comfortably.  The clowns have larger costumes while the crickets’ costumes are light and contain a lot of stretch for performing flips and jumps.  The aerial acts also have lighter costumes as they fly from one platform to the next.   
  • The production has six washers and three dryers that travel with them all over the world.  Delicate costumes and wardrobes are dried with the fans and 60 loads of laundry are completed prior to each performance.
The shoes
Washers and Dryers

Gary portrays Master Flipo, the chief of the insect colony.  Alongside Canadian poles artist acrobat David, they deliver some insight into their history in the circus, their favorite insects, and anticipating OVO’s opening night in Boston.  In real life, Gary is from Austria and lives in Spain. 

From L to R: David and Gary of OVO

Gary:  When I was 12, I decided I wanted to be a clown.  I told my mom and never lost this dream.  I ended up in a mime and circus school and then started to work in the circus before I joined Cirque de Soleil.  They said, ‘We like your stupid face’ in 1992.  I moved and did a show in Las Vegas and then back to Europe and then I’ve been here almost 7 years. 

David:  I started in the circus quite late at the age of 20.  Usually acrobats start at a much younger age with gymnastics but at 20, I started from nothing.  I saw a circus show and said that I want to do that and found out there were circus schools.  I didn’t know they existed in Quebec City so I trained really hard for two years to get in because I found out that there are people all over the world who are trying to enter these professional schools.  You need to already be good at something to get in and then somehow I got in.  I did my three years of circus school for like 40 hours a week of training.  Ever since, I’ve been in the circus and working with different circuses.  I’ve been with OVO since the re-launch in 2022 with new artists and music.  I’m part of the new acts. 

We are very excited about the show and don’t know how the public is going to react yet, but we’re all feeling super rested because we just came back from three weeks of tour break from home.  We’re very happy to be in Boston with the beautiful summer weather.  We’ve met Bostonians on the street and they seem very nice.

Gary:  Especially for us clowns it is very interesting in Boston to find out where they laugh and where they don’t laugh.  We have to adjust the timing and are already having butterflies. 

David:  We toured with the show everywhere in the world.  Depending on the different cultures, finding out how the audience will react is always our biggest concern.

Gary:  What I anticipate sharing with the audience the most is always taking people onstage.  Sometimes I have to improvise which I love and it challenges me.  Generally, the whole show is a big festival of happiness.  I don’t have favorites.

David:  I am excited about my act just because in the living arts and in the circus there is always a bit of modification.  It is never one stable show.  It is thousands of versions of the show, even though it’s the same show for the public.  For us, it has little changes and our act has new music, so we work on it frequently and make little changes in the choreography.  It’s going to be fresh, new and exciting. 

Gary:  I love the jeweled beetle so I love my colors. 

Gary as Jeweled Beetle Master Flipo Photo credit Vlad Lorenzo courtesy of Cirque du Soleil: OVO

David:  It’s a very beautiful insect.

Gary:  But at the same time, I love the ladybug. 

The Foreigner and The Ladybug Photo credit Pat Beaudry and courtesy of Cirque Du Soleil: OVO

David:  I really like the laced fly.  The lace fly is the hair extension act and I think her costume is just brilliant and so colorful.  It’s a beautiful act.

Gary:  I like the crickets for the costumes.  How they have an engineered costume where I always think, ‘How is it possible to move in that?’

The Crickets Wall Act Photo credit Vlad Lorenzo and courtesy of Cirque Du Soleil: OVO

David:  Shout out to the Red Queen.

The Red Queen with cast of ‘Cirque Du Soleil: OVO’ Photo courtesy of Cirque Du Soleil: OVO

Gary:  …and the clowns and the musicians. 

David:  OVO is really about inclusion.  It’s about accepting our differences and celebrating the whole of the colony, even the cockroaches.  They are all our friends.  It’s sort of hard to choose one specific insect because they are all amazing.

David:  The show takes years to train, but for this particular show, usually the creation of a Cirque de Soleil show is a few months.  Like six months maybe and because the acrobats have been thinking about the show for a year or two, the physical preparation to get to this level takes years and years of training.  Then we adapt the skills we have to the specific number and choreography that we need for the show, but it’s not like I train physically for years to be an insect.  I train physically to be a circus acrobat and artist and then transfer the skills in a few months. 

Gary:  It’s the same thing with us…the clowns.  We are being cast for that because our profile fits in it.  The clown has his own profile for performing and stupidity.  So I was cast because I am stupid and smart. 

David:  (laughs) Maybe that is also why I was cast.

Gary:  (laughs) Bingo!

The insects of ‘Cirque du Soleil: OVO’ Photo courtesy of Cirque du Soleil OVO

Cirque de Soleil: OVO continues live and in person at the Agganis Arena in Boston, Massachusetts through Sunday, July 28 before continuing in at the Amica Mutual Pavilion in Providence, Rhode Island August 1 through 4 and then at the SNHU Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire August 8 through 11.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  ‘Music from the Sole’ made an uplifting Boston debut with Celebrity Series of Boston

With upbeat rhythms and sweeping and intricate grace, Music from the Sole:  I Didn’t Come to Stay is such a lively and fervent celebration, one can only wish this group would extend their visit to Boston.  Cheerful and exuberant lighting brighten the stage as the onstage band creates an eclectic blend of house, jazz, samba, Afro-Brazilian and funk in an inviting journey of smooth and invigorating rhythms capable of uplifting any mood.

Music from the Sole Photo credit to Robert Torres

With captivating choreography by Leonardo Sandoval combined with the dancers’ skillful improvisation, Celebrity Series of Boston presented Music From the Sole:  I Didn’t Come to Stay from Thursday, January 11 through Saturday, January 13 live and in person at New England Conservatory’s Plimpton Shattuck Black Box Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts.  Music from the Sole is currently on tour.  This semi-immersive dance celebration is approximately one hour with no intermission.  Click here for more information, click here for Music from the Sole’s upcoming events, and here for what is next for Celebrity Series of Boston.

Music from the Sole Photo credit to Robert Torres

NEC’s Plimpton Shattuck Black Box Theatre has an attractive set up with a raised stage without a bad seat in the house.  In an array of pulsating rhythms, Music from the Sole made a refreshing and breezy entrance from the wings of the intimate theatre and moving through the crowd, the group encouraged the audience to respond to what they saw in any way that moved them.  Music from the Sole’s compelling performance made moving in some way to the beat irresistible.  The show’s mesmerizing and skittering tap dancing resembled a rollicking train as their soles hit the floor and also featured the graceful pitter patter of bare feet that slid and glided in an array of intricate maneuvers.  One notable performance featured Ana Tomioshi’s swift footwork enhanced by a radiant smile as her shadow lit up against what resembled a glowing orange sun before the other dancers joined in a drum-laden beat.   

Music from the Sole Photo credit to Robert Torres

When the dancers composed of dance captain Ana Tomioshi, Naomi Funaki, Orlando Hernandez, Roxy King, Gerson Lanza, Leonardo Sandoval, Lucas Santana, and Gisele Silva collectively took the stage, it was an effervescent and energetic excursion.  Their collective enthusiasm was contagious and a joy to watch.  If only every job could be met with such zeal.

Music from the Sole Photo credit to Robert Torres

Kathy Kaufmann’s integral lighting set the excitement and warmth of each performance in a varying array of purples, pinks, greens, oranges, blues and reds while Dede Ayite’s bright and multicolored costume design lent to the festive nature and depicted the culture in lime green pants, pastels, bright island-inspired patterns, feathers, and stripes.  The crackling and smooth sounds of the five piece band composed of Josh Davis, Magela Herrera, Noe Kains, Gregory Richardson, and Jennifer Vincent melded together seamlessly as the dancers moved in harp, guitar, and bass-infused rhythms creating their own unique expressions as they clapped, leapt and stomped to the beat.  Some members of Music from the Sole are both instrumentalists and dancers and it was exciting to see what combination of dancers and musicians would take the stage next.

Music from the Sole Photo credit to Robert Torres

With captivating choreography by Leonardo Sandoval combined with the dancers’ skillful improvisation, Celebrity Series of Boston presented Music From the Sole:  I Didn’t Come to Stay from Thursday, January 11 through Saturday, January 13 live and in person at New England Conservatory’s Plimpton Shattuck Black Box Theatre.  Music from the Sole is currently on tour.  This semi-immersive dance celebration is approximately an hour with no intermission.  Click here for more information, click here for Music from the Sole’s upcoming events, and here for what is next for Celebrity Series of Boston.

REVIEW: Seeped in silvery, eclectic rhythms, Celebrity Series of Boston presented a joyous, sold out Sergio Mendes and Bebel Gilberto concert for Bossa Nova’s 60th anniversary

Catchy, invigorating rhythms have never had a better reception than at Grammy award-winning Brazilian great Sergio Mendes and popular Brazilian singer Bebel Gilberto’s sold out concert to celebrate 60 years of Bossa Nova on Friday, October 18 at the Berklee Performance Center in Boston.  Presented by Celebrity Series of Boston, an enthusiastic crowd rejoiced in the exhilarating, eclectic rhythms that surely left them humming a tune or two long after the show was over.

Click here to find out where Sergio Mendes and Bebel Gilberto will perform next on their tour.  Click here for more about Celebrity Series of Boston and all of their upcoming events.

Dressed in a floral, black trimmed dress that delivered a certain sparkle with silver, sky high heels, Bebel Gilberto, who descends from a long line of Brazilian and jazz greats including her late father, Joao Gilberto, who wrote the Grammy award-winning tune, The Girl from Ipanena, kicked off the celebration.  Accompanied by renowned guitarist Guilherme Monteiro and drummer Leo Costa, Bebel swept onto the stage with catchy, low key rhythms.   Her smooth, slinky vocals opened with Wave written by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Frank Sinatra recorded this popular song in English in 1969.

BebelGilberto-credit Vicente de Paulo(3)

Bebel Gilberto Photo credit: Vicente de Paulo/Celebrity Series of Boston

Most of Bebel’s songs were in Portuguese, but as she engaged the crowd through song and personal reflections, she said she is Brazilian-American.  She dedicated a few songs to family members, stating family is everything.  Her set was a mix of jazz and serene rhythms as she whistled and scatted onstage.

Even if Portuguese is not a familiar language, the beats and rhythms linger in Bebel’s crisp, clear, and captivating vocals.  She invited the crowd to sing and clap along as she covered some of her father’s hit songs such as the humorous O Pato (The Duck), the upbeat rhythms of Saudade vem Correndo, and Udiu, a song that Bebel said mirrors how her father played guitar.

Warm and charismatic, Bebel delivered a lighthearted, invigorating version of her own hit, So Nice (Summer Samba) and performed a lighter, more upbeat version of Just One of those Things, dedicating the classic Cole Porter hit to her parents.  After playfully applying lipstick onstage, she ended her set with Samba Da Bencao, dedicating the mystical, romantic rhythms to Boston.

The celebration heated up as Grammy award-winning Sergio Mendes appeared onstage, greeted with a rousing applause.  Along with his vocalist wife Gracinha Leporace and Katie Hampton, Sergio promised the crowd a musical journey through 60 years of Bossa Nova music and he certainly delivered.

Referring to the renowned musicians onstage as “the best band he ever had” while simultaneously playing piano and conducting the band, Sergio was accompanied by drummer Leo Costa, guitarist Kleber Jorge Pimenta, bassist Andre De Santanna, keyboardist Scott Mayo, and percussionist Gibi.

Dressed in his signature white Cuban Hat and suit, Sergio delved into the history of Bossa Nova, opening with a rousing rendition of Magalenha as the crowd clapped wildly.  He followed it with the lighthearted and colorful tune, Waters of March, composed by Antonio Carlos Jobim as Katie Hampton and Gracinha Leporace swayed and effervescently sang, “It’s the end of the strain/It’s the joy in your heart.”

Sergio-Mendes_V0A0520_V_Final

Sergio Mendes Photo credit: Vincente De Paulo/Celebrity Series of Boston

Sergio kept the evening lively, sharing songs that ranged from romantic and stirring to breezy and joyous with drum-infused rhythms.  In a flowing sea green dress and charcoal leggings, Gracinha passionately sang O Que Sera by Chico Buarque.  Hip hop veteran and vocalist Harrell Harris (H2O) sang a lovely duet with Katie Hampton for Sergio’s 80s hit, Never Gonna Let You Go as guitarist Kleber Jorge Pimenta performed an amazing guitar solo.

One of the most thrilling parts of the evening was a freestyle jam session which included a berimbau and percussionist solo seeped in the rhythms of Rio de Janeiro. Many of the musicians are multi-instrumentalists and it was fascinating to watch the instruments seemingly “speak” to each other.

The concert featured unique spins on popular songs such as Gracinha and Katie’s spirited, piano-infused duet of the Beatles classic, Fool on the Hill.  Gracinha also lends her powerful vocals to an eclectic version of Dusty Springfield’s James Bond theme song, The Look of Love.

Sergio Mendes capped off the evening on a high note with two of his most popular songs.  H2O returned to the stage as the band performed Mas Que Nada, a 1966 hit song that became popular again when Sergio collaborated on the song with Will.i.am and The Black Eyed Peas.  H2O is an incredible talent, adding a boost to an already electric lineup.  Saving the best for last, Bebel returned to the stage with the entire ensemble for a sensational version of Sergio’s most popular song, Pais Tropical, enhanced with bright rhythms and Scott Mayo’s thrilling saxophone.  After 60 years, Bossa Nova still puts joy in the heart.

Click here to find out where Sergio Mendes and Bebel Gilberto are performing next.  Click here for Celebrity Series of Boston’s wonderful 2019-20 season and upcoming events.  For updates and more, follow Celebrity Series of Boston on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram.