Orlando Sentinel

Cirque du Soleil, Disney announce details of new ‘Drawn to Life’ show

- By Matthew J. Palm mpalm@orlandosen­tinel.com

The new Cirque du Soleil show coming to Walt Disney World this spring finally has a name: “Drawn to Life.” The title cleverly has two meanings: The show is about animation, the art of bringing characters to life through drawings. But Cirque and Disney officials have also described the show’s story as a celebratio­n of life and the power imaginatio­n plays in it.

“What fascinates us is that moment when life appears in drawings,” said show director and writer Michael Laprise in the joint Cirque-Disney announceme­nt. “Just like in an acrobat’s body, the visceral physicalit­y of animation. The way they perform, the way they create the illusion of life.”

“Drawn to Life” will likely be a name Central Floridians will hear for a long time. Its predecesso­r at Disney World, Cirque’s “La Nouba” ran for nearly 20 years.

The announceme­nt also offered a few more facts about the show, the first co-created by Montreal-based

Cirque du Soleil and the Walt Disney Co.

“Drawn to Life” will be the 50th original production by Cirque du Soleil, known for its stylish and imaginativ­e use of not only circus arts but costuming, lighting and staging.

The show, which will be presented in the Disney Springs building that formerly hosted “La Nouba,” will feature a cast of more than 65 performers from around the world. The theater, a distinctiv­e white tentlike structure, can accommodat­e up to 1,580 spectators per show.

Josh D’Amaro, president of Walt Disney World, promised the show will offer surprises in the announceme­nt: “It blends all the heart, humor and joy of Disney storytelli­ng with dazzling new acrobatic performanc­es and effects never before seen in a Cirque du Soleil production,” he said.

The Cirque du Soleil team collaborat­ed with Disney animators to create the show. Their research also included visits to Disney theme parks, the Walt Disney archives, animation studios, the Walt Disney Family Museum and the company’s famed Imagineeri­ng department.

The show will focus on Julie, the daughter of an animator, who discovers her late father left her a gift: a piece of unfinished animation. Her quest to find this legacy is “sprinkled with her Disney childhood memories,” Cirque says, and through her journey, she learns to imagine new possibilit­ies for her own future.

One other clue in the latest announceme­nt: What the pencil costume, seen in photos released earlier by the companies, will be used for. Julie will be guided on her quest by a “surprising pencil.”

“Drawn to Life” begins preview performanc­es on March 20. For more informatio­n or tickets, go to cirqueduso­leil.com.

 ?? CIRQUE DU SOLEIL/COURTESY PHOTO ?? The set of the new Cirque du Soleil show coming to Disney Springs will depict an animator’s drafting table.
CIRQUE DU SOLEIL/COURTESY PHOTO The set of the new Cirque du Soleil show coming to Disney Springs will depict an animator’s drafting table.

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