Cirque du Soleil’s CRYSTAL melds acrobatics and ice sports in its final tour, at the Pacific Coliseum to June 8
Multimedia rink show gets its glide on when it mixes surreal imagery with innovative skating and high-flying choreography
Images from Cirque du Soleil’s CRYSTAL.
Cirque du Soleil CRYSTAL is at the Pacific Coliseum to June 8
FULL DISCLOSURE: CIRQUE DU SOLEIL’S multimedia rink-based show CRYSTAL, here for a short stint on its final tour, really does feel a bit like Disney on Ice in its opening moments. With a more literal, earnest narrative than the company’s tent-based shows, it launches with a straight-ahead story of a girl—Crystal, of course—who skates to forget feeling like an outcast.
But when the ice “cracks”—thanks to some ingenious overhead projection that’s used inventively through the show—she falls into a surreal, upside-down world that feels much more like the dreamlike universes where Cirque has made its name. In one of the most striking sequences, we see the red-headed title character tumbling down from the upper rafters of the Coliseum, as if we’re watching her plunge to the depths of the icy waters. What follows are rhythmic escapades with neon-clad schoolchildren and armies of briefcase-toting businesspeople, as if the real world has been warped.
In other words, innovative touches and ambitious imagery end up setting the show well apart from other ice spectacles. A live band, including a top-notch fiddler and clarinetist, also differentiates it—though you’ll hear renditions of radio hits (say, Beyoncé’s “Halo”) amid Cirque’s usual original music.
One of CRYSTAL’s strengths is that it pushes its choreography into bold, physically charged territory that is a world away from what you might associate with traditional figure skating. Even when the production goes vertical—most spectacularly in its impressive second half, with hanging straps and stacked chair towers—characters are always floating solo or in formation around the surface of the ice below, creating a constant flow to the show. In fact, the swirling on the ice often echoes the flying in the air. Highlights include acrobats jumping between high-swinging poles, and an achingly beautiful pas de deux in which an acrobat on aerial straps sweeps in to lift Crystal’s skater high off her feet. For young viewers, a standout scene will be the team of hockey players whipping around on ramps and tumbling when they go airborne, at the end of the first act.
Front-row seats allow kids to take part in snowball fights with the clowns, but higher-ups will get a better view of the formations and ice-projection artistry. It lags in spots and may not feature the immersive design extravagance of Cirque’s tent shows, and its icy world feels just a touch off-season—but there’s a poetry to CRYSTAL you usually don’t see at a night at the rink (though Oilers fans might disagree). ![]()
Janet Smith is founding partner and editorial director of Stir. She is an award-winning arts journalist who has spent more than two decades immersed in Vancouver’s dance, screen, design, theatre, music, opera, and gallery scenes. She sits on the Vancouver Film Critics’ Circle.
Related Articles
At The Cultch, The Search Party play’s strong performances, dry wit, and inventive staging capture the disorientation of addiction and the stories we tell ourselves about it
Story follows the passionate affair between penniless playwright Will and beautiful young woman Viola de Lesseps
Cyborg teenagers struggle with the same fears about technology that their human counterparts do in this visually spare, idea-charged production by UBC Theatre
Based on an early Agatha Christie story, the play focuses on a woman’s impulsive marriage to a charming mystery man
Multifaceted theatremakers Munish Sharma and Gavan Cheema bring an eight-year-long project to completion by working beyond stage conventions
Actor Brian Markinson says Lloyd Suh’s script takes artistic liberties with the life of Benjamin Franklin
With warped sitcom rhythms, Caroline Bélisle’s new play brings together two old friends to contend with contemporary ambivalence about bringing children into the world
Eighty shows in all, as Italy’s Teatro Telaio sets up an ARCHIPELAGO installation, plus pow-wow, hip-hop, and massive puppets
Award-winning play by Susanna Fournier offers an unsettling, witty update of fairy-tale themes as old as Pinocchio and the Pied Piper
Provocative solo show follows a woman who’s focused on fixing the lack of diversity in the serial-killer space
In the Theatre Conspiracy production copresented by Touchstone Theatre, a South Asian man finds self-expression through dance
Director Mindy Parfitt finds inspiration with local implications in the darkness, wit, and honesty of Duncan Macmillan’s acclaimed play
In the endearing new Metro Theatre production, a five-sister team of performers creates an exceptionally strong and funny ensemble
Arts Club production centres a married couple that recounts the good, the bad, and the ugly of spending 50 years together
Care of Théâtre la Seizième, the work examines how female friendships must adapt to the pressure of raising a new life
Based on the true story that inspired Beauty and the Beast, play centres Catherine de Medici and the man who awakens her wild side
Next season includes high-camp spoof Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors, Tracey Power’s premiere The Elvis Christmas Comeback Special, and the newly named Lindsay Family Stage
On Our Feet staged reading captures the slow-burning suspense of the famed author’s psychological thriller
One-woman show draws on Marguerite Duras’s novel to tell the story of a French mother in 1930s Indochina
Tracey Power’s musical revue poses open-ended questions at the Firehall Arts Centre
In Hannah Moscovitch’s spare, blunt two-hander at The Cultch, tension lives not only in what is being said, but in how it is being said and who is saying it
The company has plans for a captivating array of shows, from high-profile hits like Stuart Little to the moving true-life tale of Jordan, A Hero’s Journey Home
Musical comedy by Dan Goggin stars five nuns on a money-making mission
Burlesque-infused biographical play tells of the legendary African-American performer’s wide-ranging accomplishments
Under director Jillian Keiley’s deft hands, the pacing stays airtight and the dry comedy never tips into full camp.
At The Cultch, removable limbs, retro TV shows, and absurd cabaret numbers about female madness frame a genuinely unsettling story of a grandmother’s institutionalization
The former head of Theatre, Music & Film at Arts Umbrella has worked across local stages and screens
At The Cultch’s Warrior Festival, award-winning two-hander presents a provocative scenario where a man tells a woman’s story
Production by Presentation House Theatre draws on Maurice Sendak’s beloved storybook
Dan Goggin’s popular production follows five nuns who must stage an emergency fundraiser after an unfortunate cooking accident
