Zaia | |
---|---|
Company | Cirque du Soleil |
Genre | Contemporary circus |
Show type | Resident show |
Date of premiere | August 28, 2008 |
Final show | February 19, 2012 |
Location | The Venetian Macao, Cotai Strip, Macau |
Creative team | |
Artistic guide | Guy Laliberté Gilles Ste-Croix |
Creation director | Neilson Vignola |
Writer and director | Gilles Maheu |
Set and props designer, theater concept | Guillaume Lord |
Costume designer | Dominique Lemieux |
Composer and musical director | Violaine Corradi |
Choreographer | Martino Müller |
Acrobatic choreographer | Jeff Hall |
Acrobatic performance designer | Rob Bollinger |
Artistic equipment and rigging designer | Guy Lemire |
Lighting designer | Alex Morgenthaler |
Projection designer | Jimmy Lakatos Raymond Saint-Jean |
Sound designer | Steven Dubuc |
Makeup designer | Nathalie Gagné |
Clown acts designer | Leonid Leykin |
Other information | |
Preceded by | Wintuk (2007) |
Succeeded by | Zed (2008) |
Official website |
Zaia was a Cirque du Soleil stage production based at The Venetian Macao on the Cotai Strip in Macau. The 90-minute show opened in August 2008, bringing together 75 high-calibre artists from around the world. Zaia was Cirque du Soleil's first resident show in Asia[1] and was directed by Neilson Vignola and Gilles Maheu. The custom-built theater housing the performance was capable of seating 1,800 spectators at a time.[2]
Zaia presented a young girl's dream of journeying into space, discovering worlds populated by a panoply of otherworldly creatures. The title, Zaia, came from a Greek name meaning "life".[1]
Due in part to a drop in attendance during the Great Recession, the show closed on 19 February 2012. Despite its closing, Venetian Macao resort owner Las Vegas Sands Corp. claimed, "Using Las Vegas as a benchmark, Zaia’s 3 1/2-year run should be deemed successful and provide strong support for the argument that the future of entertainment in Macau is on the right track."[3]