The Standard Journal

Beatles Cirque du Soleil show officially closing this summer

- By John Katsilomet­es

The Hard Rock Las Vegas will rock without the Beatles.

“The Beatles Love” by Cirque du Soleil is closing at the Mirage/Hard Rock Las Vegas on July 7. Producers announced the decision last week.

Thus ends the only live production anywhere in the world licensed by Apple Corp, The Beatles’ parent company.

Cirque du Soleil CEO Stéphane Lefebvre said Mirage/ Hard Rock Las Vegas officials pulled the plug on the show.

“This wasn’t our decision,” Lefebvre said in a virtual interview Tuesday afternoon, after being asked why the show is closing. “As you know, Hard Rock needs to take control of the entire venue and do some major renovation­s. So they need to get the show closed by July 7.”

Lefebvre, based in Montreal and Cirque’s top-ranking official, said he found out “late last week” the show would be shut down. He also confirmed there are no plans to tour “Love,” a show that would seem to have strong demand internatio­nally.

“If it has a life beyond this venue, it will need to change the format a little bit. The theater is so unique, it’s a 360-degree stage and very deep,” Lefebvre said “If we want to move it elsewhere, if we look at somewhere in Europe, we need to make some significan­t changes.”

A total of 230 members of the “Love” cast and crew are to lose their jobs as the result of the shutdown.

The future of “Love” had been in question as the Mirage turns over to Hard Rock Las Vegas. The show was reportedly running between 40% and 60% capacity, the lowest boxoffice

performanc­e of Cirque’s six production­s on the Strip.

The loss of “Love” creates a void among Cirque shows in Las Vegas.

Lefebvre addressed possible Cirque production­s, saying, MGM Resorts Internatio­nal remains the company’s primary Las Vegas partner, though Cirque is in partnershi­p with Phil Ruffin with its longest-running show, “Mystere” at Treasure Island and is closing out its business relationsh­ip with Hard Rock.

“MGM is by far is our strongest and most important partner,” Lefebvre said. “I think first and foremost, before we start looking around at other potential partners, we really want to do something with MGM. Absolutely.”

The MGM portfolio now includes Cosmopolit­an, where Spiegelwor­ld’s “OPM” closed earlier this year. Lefebvre said investigat­ing that space, among other smaller-scale opportunit­ies “could be interestin­g for us, clearly.”

When “Love” bows out, Cirque will have closed three

shows in a little more than four years. “R.U.N” at Luxor came and went in five months ending in March 2020. “Zumanity” at New York-New York did not return after the pandemic shutdown, closing permanentl­y in November 2020. “Mad Apple” replaced “Zumanity” in the same theater in May 2022.

The decision ends a wondrous production that opened in June 2006, with Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono and Olivia Harrison, widow of George Harrison, in attendance. McCartney and Harrison scouted “O” at Bellagio together in 2001 to gauge how the Beatles’ music and images could blend with Cirque artistry.

Harrison was a close friend of Cirque co-founder Guy Laliberte, with the idea from the show hatched between the two at the F1 Montreal Grand Prix in 2000. With Harrison leading the initial vision for the show, Laliberte steered the production to creation at the Mirage.

The Love Theatre took over the former Siegfried

& Roy Theater at the resort.

Stéphane Lefebvre said the show has been seen by more than 11.5 million ticket-holders in its 18-year run. A total of 44 nationalit­ies are represente­d. The show required 11,600 costume pieces, 250 pairs of shoes, and 225 wigs each night. A total of 750,000 lumens in projection­s, 500 props and scenic pieces were required to put on the show.

The closing of “Love” is not the only shift in the entertainm­ent landscape at The Mirage. Current theater headliner Shin Lim is also the focus of speculatio­n he will be leaving the resort this summer, with several interested parties attempting to lure the headlining magician.

The theater’s former Aces of Comedy program, developed under MGM Resorts, ended with the hotel’s sale to Hard Rock. Several familiar headliners (including David Spade, Ron White and Ray Romano) moving to other venues on the Strip. The Center Stage series is holding down the comedy programmin­g in the short term.

 ?? K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal/TNS ?? The cast of “The Beatles Love” entertain during a celebrator­y pop-up performanc­e to commemorat­e the grand reopening of the Cirque du Soleil show at the Mirage in Las Vegas in August 2021.
K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal/TNS The cast of “The Beatles Love” entertain during a celebrator­y pop-up performanc­e to commemorat­e the grand reopening of the Cirque du Soleil show at the Mirage in Las Vegas in August 2021.

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