Iris | |
---|---|
Company | Cirque du Soleil |
Genre | Contemporary circus |
Show type | Resident show |
Date of premiere | September 25, 2011 |
Final show | January 19, 2013 |
Location | Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles |
Creative team | |
Writer and director | Philippe Decouflé |
Director of creation | Jean-François Bouchard |
Set designer | Jean Rabasse |
Costume designer | Philippe Guillotel |
Composer | Danny Elfman |
Choreographer | Daphné Mauger |
Lighting designer | Patrice Besombes |
Props designer | Anne-Séguin Poirier |
Projections designers | Olivier Simola Christophe Waksmann |
Sound designer | François Bergeron |
Acrobatic performance designers | Boris Verkhovsky Shana Carroll |
Acrobatic rigging and equipment designer | Pierre Masse |
Artistic guide | Guy Laliberté |
Make-up designer | Nathalie Gagné |
Other information | |
Preceded by | Zarkana (2011) |
Succeeded by | Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour (2011) |
Official website |
Iris was a resident Cirque du Soleil show based in Los Angeles, California. It premiered on September 25, 2011, after preview performances which began on July 21, 2011.[1][2] The cost for production of the show was nearly $100 million, which included the cost of renovating the Dolby Theatre in which the show was housed.[3] Iris was written and directed by French director-choreographer Philippe Decouflé.[4] The show explored images from the history of cinema and featured elaborate choreography, acrobatics, and a variety of contemporary circus acts.[5] The name of the show, Iris, comes from the camera diaphragm as well as from the colored iris of the human eye.[6]
In November 2012 it was reported that Iris would end its run at the Dolby Theatre on January 19, 2013 due to disappointing ticket sales.[3] It was later reported that Cirque du Soleil looked into the possibility of taking Iris to other cities in the United States.[7]
Scenes from Iris would later be incorporated into Cirque du Soleil’s first musical Paramour which debuted on Broadway in New York City on May 25, 2016.[8]