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La Nouba is a Cirque du Soleil show, which, like most Cirque du Soleil shows, is a circus-like performance featuring acrobats, gymnasts, and other skilled performers. Its title derives from the French phrase faire la nouba, meaning "to party" or "to live it up". La Nouba is in permanent residence in a specially-made arena at Downtown Disney's West Side at the Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

The Show


La Nouba is a spectacle filled with visuals one cannot possibly observe in entirety during just one seating. While the primary action unfolds onstage, characters observe, participate and do seemingly unrelated things. The show is one part party, one part dream and one part mystery.

The Characters


As in every Cirque show, in addition to the performances, there are several distinctive characters that participate in the show sometimes as performers and sometimes as spectators. In La Nouba, these include:

  • The Green Bird: She's a flightless bird, out of her cage, watching the show from every angle desperate to fly as she sees so many aerial acts, but unable, often mimicking what she sees.

  • Les Cons: The "nuts" or "silly people" dressed in all white are the ever present fools of the show. They find themselves in the middle of everything and often participating in different ways. Neither true performers nor merely spectators, they bumble their way through with naive innocence somewhat of a liaison between the audience world and the world of La Nouba.

  • Le Titan: A mysterious "muscle man" who confronts everyone on stage while contorting his body in unusual poses. We find his true talent at the end of the show.

  • The Walker: Dressed in grey pinstripes, with a small bowler hat atop, he strolls around stage ala Charlie Chaplin. He's everywhere, all the time. He also has a hidden talent that is revealed mid-show.

  • The Pierrot Rouge: He appears as a red acrobat. He's the adversary of the Titan, but joins him in mutual admiration at the end of the show.

  • The Pierrot Clown and Lost Ballerina: The Romeo and Juliet of the show. They dance and share their love, passion and fears on stage.

  • The Clowns: Balto and the deaf Serguei provide comic relief in a world of comedy. They interact with one another as children would whether they are fighting as cowboy and Indian, scaling a mountain on the moon, or simply trying to arrange a pair of chairs.

  • The Cleaning Woman: Shocked to be in this world and astonished by what goes on around her, she sweeps and dusts nonetheless until her dream becomes a reality.

The Performances


Prior to the beginning of the show, clowns "Balto" and "Serguei" enter the arena and set the stage by interacting with guests and pulling a stunt on a few unexpecting audience members.

The show begins with the "Parade" as select characters and performers make their way across the aisle that separates the lower and upper seating sections of the house. Following the Parade, the cleaning woman appears, sweeping away at the stage until one-by-one the characters appear. First, the Green Bird, then Le Pierrot Rouge, an upside down biker crosses the stage followed by a model train, until she's seen more than she can believe. In a sudden fanfare of activity on the stage, nearly every character and performer makes his or her appearance, marching in unison, with sounds of howling wolves, cracks of bullwhips filling the air until the acts begin in earnest.

  • German Wheels.

  • High Wire.

  • Diabolos.

  • Cycles.

  • Aerial Cradle.

  • Aerial Ballet in Silk.

  • Balancing on Chairs.

  • Flying Trapeze.

  • Power Track and Trampouline.

Music and Musicians


All music is performed live at La Nouba by six musicians and two singers. Composed by Benoit Jutras and Directed by also-performer Benoit Glazer (incidentally, there is a third "Benoit", violinist Benoit Lajeunesse) the music is at times sorriful, others upbeat and often mysterious. Jazz, hip-hop, Klezmer, opera, and other styles come together in an amazing way. The performers are somewhat hidden in towers on either side of the stage. Their play is perfectly coordinated to the action on stage.

There are two distinctively different voices in the show. First, a male countertenor (currently, Ralph Daniel Rawe) singing primarily in French at female alto registers creating a spooky opera at times. The second is a female gospel vocalist (currently, Sisaundra Lewis) whose magnificently rich tones and vibrant brightness punctuate many acts. The two combine beautifully during Aerial Ballet in Silk.

Soundtrack


The soundtrack features most of the music played during the show. There are several interludes and music played during the clown acts that does not appear on the soundtrack. Several tracks differ from the music heard in the show, as additional vocals and remixing have been added. Most significantly altered are: "Once Upon a Time" and "A Tale", the first two tracks appearing on the CD. Additionally, the soundtrack does not follow the order of the show.

Below are the tracks, in order as they appear on the CD. Listed after each track title is the performance associated with the track.

  1. Once Upon A Time (Prelude and German Wheels)
  2. A Tale (Aerial Ballet in Silk)
  3. Porte (Aerial Cradle)
  4. La Nouba (Parade)
  5. Distorted (Cycles)
  6. Liama (High Wire)
  7. Queens (Flying Trapeze)
  8. À La Lune (Balancing on Chairs)
  9. Rêve Rouge (Aerial Ballet in Silk)
  10. Urban (Trampoline and Powertrack)
  11. Propel (Interlude between High Wire and Diabolos)
  12. Jardin Chinois (Diabolos)

Some of the titles in French relate specifically to the performance associated with them. For example, during Aerial Cradle, the performance takes place in a door, hence the French name "porte". Jardin Chinoise (Chinese Garden) plays during the Diabolos performance featuring four young Chinese girls. Rêve Rouge (Red Dream) plays during the Aerial Ballet with is performed on long red "silks".

External links


Disney parks and attractions | Walt Disney World Resort | Cirque du Soleil

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "La Nouba".

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