Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,573,962 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

‘Zumanity’ sates the senses


Maybe “Zumanity” isn’t Cirque du Soleil Cirque du Soleil (French for "Circus of the Sun") is an entertainment empire based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada and founded in Baie-Saint-Paul in 1984 by two former street performers, Guy Laliberté and Daniel Gauthier. ’s best-selling resident show on the Vegas Strip.

But it certainly is the best-smelling.

Near the opening of the show, a performer sweeps through the center aisle, trailing an enormous billowing bil·low  
n.
1. A large wave or swell of water.

2. A great swell, surge, or undulating mass, as of smoke or sound.

v. bil·lowed, bil·low·ing, bil·lows

v.intr.
1.
 cape — and a captivating fragrance. “Zumanity” is an arousing, amusing appeal to each of the senses.

A contemporary burlesque, the 18-and-over revue at New York-New York is Cirque du Softcore, a risque, frisque kinky-winky at the multiracial, pansexual pan·sex·u·al  
adj.
Relating to, having, or open to sexual activity of many kinds.

n.
A pansexual person.



pan
 human menagerie and our assorted desires.

Americans can be so serious and squeamish about sex — it sometimes seems we’re partisan about our pleasures, puritans versus libertines. Other parts of the world (I’m looking at you, Brazil and Western Europe) know that sex can be fun. And funny. And friendly.

Subtitled “The Sensual Side of Cirque du Soleil,” the anatomically correct “Zumanity” is not a sex show — it’s a variety show inspired by sex in all its variety. It’s not nearly as nekked as some might fear (or hope). Yes, there’s lots of toplessness, female and male, but no nudity in the genital sense. The costumers work ingenious variations on pasties past·ies  
pl.n.
A pair of adhesive patches used to conceal a woman's nipples and worn principally by exotic dancers or striptease performers.



[From paste1.]
 and thongs and codpieces (oh my!) and one very comical dangly prosthetic.

Humans have bodies, some of them extraordinary, and luckily, many of these end up employed in Cirque shows. “Zumanity” playfully parades a panoply of body types — tiny, towering, big, small. Bulges and curves are exaggerated and emphasized — everybody in this ensemble is stacked, jacked and packin’.

Performers interact occasionally with willing audience members (you can discreetly decline), and if you’re the sort that’s inclined to play along, here’s a word to the wise: Wear nice shoes (and clean undies, of course).

Ideally, you want to arrive at New York-New York about an hour before curtain, allowing time to explore the nooks and crannies Noun 1. nooks and crannies - something remote; "he explored every nook and cranny of science"
nook and cranny

detail, item, point - an isolated fact that is considered separately from the whole; "several of the details are similar"; "a point of information"
 (and peepholes) of the remarkable theater. Styled as a Viennese cabaret, with art nouveau flourishes and metalwork, it invites touch: The walls are soft, curvy and plushy plush·y  
adj. plush·i·er, plush·i·est
1. Resembling plush in texture.

2. Informal Ostentatiously luxurious: a plushy office.
, and one of the bars is situated in a boudoir. The ticket-takers and ushers wear sheer-backed dresses revealing black lingerie, and the gift shop is stocked with amusing stuff such as “Spank Me” coupons, panties pant·ie or pant·y  
n. pl. pant·ies
Short underpants for women or children. Often used in the plural.



[Diminutive of pant2.
, thongs and masks.

Along with aerialists and acrobats, clowning with the audience is a Cirque standard, and the preshow for “Zumanity” (let’s call it what it is: foreplay foreplay /fore·play/ (for´pla) the sexually stimulating play preceding intercourse.

fore·play
n.
The sexual stimulation that precedes intercourse.
) is not to be missed, as it warms and loosens up the crowd until the place feels like a particularly sophisticated bachelor/ette party. The racy fun is presided over by an unctuous unc·tu·ous
adj.
Containing or composed of oil or fat.



unctuous

greasy or oily.
 gigolo who flirts with anything that moves, and two sister clowns, rounded like women painted by Botero, who squeeze through the aisles proffering strawberries and more than a little body contact.

Other than the abundance of flesh, “Zumanity” differs from other, nearly wordless Cirque shows in that it is spoken and sung in English (with a liberal sprinkling of polyglot naughty phrases).

A series of 14 acts appears on the tongue-shaped thrust stage (that’s the technical term for it), each introduced by a ringmistress, the statuesque hostess Edie, in a black bouffant bouf·fant  
adj.
Puffed-out; full: a bouffant hair style.



[French, from present participle of bouffer, to puff up, from Old French.
, spangled span·gle  
n.
1. A small, often circular piece of sparkling metal or plastic sewn especially on garments for decoration.

2. A small sparkling object, drop, or spot: spangles of sunlight.
 minidress, fishnets and strappy heels. She’s a classically sassy glamour gal, in the mode of Rosalind Russell, with perhaps a few extra inches. Let’s just say that’s Edie’s a far better illusionist than the other one more famously in Cirque’s employ — even Edie was amused when some audience members clearly didn’t get what makes her so special.

There are multiple variations on the classic striptease, of course, but there are plenty of Cirque-ular specialties. Two sleek women splash and slip around each other in a transparent goblet. Wearing a schoolgirl outfit that has obviously shrunk in the wash, another minx shimmies silvery Hula-Hoops up and down her torso like an armload of bangles. A very fit gent clad only in boxer shorts and gartered socks elastically twists himself into impossible shapes.

The aerialists bring new twists to the word swingers, in particular, a fiery redhead who entwines herself in a web of bondage ropes, accompanied by a soundtrack of moist whispers.

“Zumanity” makes a point of offering multiple combinations of genders and colors. A man-on-man duet in black and white is played out in a cage (or playpen), a battle/ballet which, among other things, makes explicit the subtext of mixed martial arts For the fighting styles that combine different arts, see .
Mixed martial arts (MMA) is a combat sport in which a wide variety of fighting techniques are used, including striking and grappling.
. It’s all about voyeurism Voyeurism
See also Eavesdropping.

Actaeon

turned into stag for watching Artemis bathe. [Gk. Myth.: Leach, 8]

elders of Babylon

watch Susanna bathe.
: While we’re watching the performers, they in turn are watching each other — and us — from balconies and sinuously spiral staircases. It’s all very “Eyes Wide Shut,” but in a good way.

There’s a lot of laughs in “Zumanity,” where the clowns resemble such vintage Vegas bawdy “blue” comics as Rusty Warren. Playing on a movable bridge above the stage, the musicians create a surround-soundscape that throbs and pulses with techno rhythms and occasionally gets a bit over-saxed, like the soundtrack to a “Skinemax” late-night movie.

“Zumanity” received mixed reactions when it opened in 2003, but in the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
 Cirque seems to have fixed whatever wasn’t working. Or perhaps, and this is more likely, some critics weren’t open to the idea of a sexed-up Cirque on the Strip.

So caveat emptor: If you know yourself to be rigid or frigid about sex, do yourself a favor and pick another Cirque show (or Donny & Marie — that’s what they’re here for) — and spare the people seated near you your flinching and grunts of disgust and huffy walkouts. We get it: You would never do that. Not that anyone’s asking you to.

Or you could unclench un·clench  
v. un·clenched, un·clench·ing, un·clench·es

v.tr.
To loosen from a clenched position; relax: unclench one's fists.

v.intr.
 or unbunch, maybe learn a new trick or two and enjoy yourself — and others. That’s what “Zumanity” means.

IF YOU GO

What: “Zumanity” by Cirque du Soleil

When: 7:30 and 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday through Sunday (dark Monday and Thursday)

Where: The Zumanity Theatre, New York-New York

Admission: $69-$99, duo sofas for two: $129 per person; 740-6815,

www.nynyhotelcasino.com

Running time: 90 minutes

Audience advisory: 18 and over; fog and strobe effects, near nudity

REVIEWS

Sun critic Joe Brown is visiting and revisiting every Cirque du Soleil show on the Strip. His reviews will appear on Mondays in the Las Vegas Sun The Las Vegas Sun is one of Las Vegas, Nevada's two daily newspapers. It is owned by the Greenspun family and is affiliated with Greenspun Media Group.

The paper was published in the afternoons on weekdays from 1990-2005.
 and at www.lasvegassun.com.

Up next: “The Beatles: Love” at the Mirage, on Jan. 5

Joe Brown can be reached at 259-8801 or at joe.brown@lasvegassun.com.
Copyright 2008 Las Vegas Sun
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright (c) Mochila, Inc.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Joe Brown
Publication:Las Vegas Sun
Date:Dec 22, 2008
Words:1051
Previous Article:In Iraq, need a check?
Next Article:A weekly snapshot of creative people living in the Las Vegas Valley



Related Articles
Cirque du so gay: in Cirque du Soleil's erotic Las Vegas spectacle Zumanity, two outrageously beautiful men proclaim their real-life love for each...
Oh, the Zumanity.
Sales of new single-family homes top 1 million, set record.
Too feminine? Bash gays.
Cabinet sales slide continues in January.
Sex detox; recharge desire, revitalize intimacy, rejuvenate your love life.
Food fights

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles