Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cirque’s ‘Mad Apple’ set for premiere

- KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

CIRQUE du Soleil has been running “Mad Apple” for about two weeks. Kind of. The show has been in previews since May 12.

For those uninitiate­d in how production­s are, um, produced, previews are actually a series of ticketed dress rehearsals. Shows that are in previews are not ready for published reviews — but are ready to take your money. Finally, “Mad Apple” celebrates its grand opening Thursday night. The new Cirque original show runs from 7 to 9:30 p.m. (dark Wednesdays and Thursdays).

Having not seen a proper run of this show, we’ll reserve judgment on the quality of it all until Thursday closes out. But Cirque does deserve applause for delivering a new show during a pandemic, even if it is at about half the scale of “Zumanity,” which closed at New York-new York in November 2020, and the most recent Cirque show to open on the Strip, the ill-fated $62 million “R.U.N” at Luxor.

“Budget was certainly important, particular­ly after the ‘R.U.N’ experience,” Cirque President Eric Grilly says, owing to understate­ment. “We really designed the show for today’s audience. We live in a 140-character society. You see how people consume informatio­n in bits and pieces. So we designed a show to do that.”

Grilly says the show will speak to Cirque’s fans and followers but allows, “It will also offer something new with headlining comics, mainstream music and a hospitalit­y element that we haven’t had in any of our Cirque shows.”

Aside from “Mad Apple,” Cirque has successful­ly relaunched all of its existing production­s on the Strip since the company halted all 44 of its shows internatio­nally — including six on the Strip — in March 2020.

“We’ve had the opportunit­y to open five shows here, five very successful shows, and this is the first new show,” Grilly says. “We made a difficult decision to close ‘Zumanity’ after 17 successful years, a profitable, successful show, and figure out what was going to happen in this theater. MGM came back to us and asked if we had any other ideas.”

“Mad Apple” is that idea, the product of Cirque acquisitio­n company The Works and its founder, Simon Painter, with director Neil Dorward, known for his work in “The Illusionis­ts,” among other shows.

“Mad Apple” is a prefab night on the town if that town is New York City. If you have seen the acrobatic troupe that works the crowd (and works for tips) in Times Square, there is a version in “Mad Apple.” The two-man team is called

TT Boys.

And, if you remember the Bud Light Daredevils dunking acrobatic troupe, which decades ago performed during breaks at NBA games (including those at Madison Square Garden), there is a version of that in “Mad Apple.” That team is called Mad Apple Acro Dunkers.

Comedians Harrison Greenbaum, Brad Williams and Chris Turner authentica­te the NYC vibe, as all have headlined The Comedy Cellar in New York. Greenbaum is an expert at working the crowd. Williams plays off his size, saying, “As a dwarf, I’ve never cared about the height of ceilings.” Turner is the rare freestyle rap artist from the U.K. Throw suggestion­s at him, such as “The Johnny Depp-amber Heard trial,” and he’ll conjure, “Captain Jack Sparrow, keep your marriage on the straight and narrow!”

The show incorporat­es original and familiar music, with pianist/vocalist Xharlie Black as music director. His legal name is Eddie Cole, and he’s the great-grand nephew of music legend Nat King Cole and the son of Natalie Cole’s longtime music director. To our undying appreciati­on, the show is backed by live musicians and vocalists.

The venue overhaul is crucial for “Mad Apple.” The stage has been overhauled with a bar at the front, two near the back, open for business as the crowd wades into the the venue. The show is supposed to run a little more than an hour.

There is no formal script, no storyline to follow. The comics’ segments are blocked so they do their own sets.

“We want this to be the greatest night out in New

York,” says Painter, a virtuoso violinist who was cast in “Spirit of the Dance” at the Golden Nugget some 20 years ago. “You go to a crazy bar with beautiful people, get drunk. There is a mad band playing on the sidewalk outside; maybe it’s the greatest band you’ve ever heard. You hear some incredible jazz singer. You go to a comedy club and laugh until you can’t breathe. Then you see someone swinging from the Brooklyn Bridge. That, to me, is like a crazy night out in New York.”

And you might walk out of this Cirque show and into a dueling piano bar where the singer is actually ventriloqu­ial headliner Terry Fator. That can happen, on occasion, at New York-new York, where a slice of “Mad Apple” fits the resort’s Big Apple theme.

“It won’t overwhelm you,” Grilly says of the new show. “The pre-show is pretty special, and a lot of secret things are going on that you don’t know about until you get here. There is some magic in certain areas, you will find. Once we get this dialed in, we will have lots of opportunit­ies with this show.”

Cool Hang Alert

Get to column fave Amy Saunders’ “Mavericks” adult variety show at Cheapshot on Fremont East on Saturday night. There shall be a legend in the house.

John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section.

His “Podkats!” podcast can be found at reviewjour­nal. com/podcasts. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @Johnnykats­1 on Instagram.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Musicians and acrobats perform Wednesday during a media preview for Cirque du Soleil’s “Mad Apple” at New York-new York.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Musicians and acrobats perform Wednesday during a media preview for Cirque du Soleil’s “Mad Apple” at New York-new York.
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