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Park board approves cirque cabaret at QE Park

A new, high-flying entertainment experience is heading to Vancouver. Park board commissioners Tuesday night approved a special event permit for a gourmet cirque cabaret show that will run over five months between Nov.
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Gourmet cirque cabaret Teatro ZinZanni has been running in Seattle since 1998. 麻豆传媒映画park board this week approved bringing a similar show to Queen Elizabeth Park for a five-month run starting in November 2018. Photo Michael Craft

A new, high-flying entertainment experience is heading to Vancouver.

Park board commissioners Tuesday night approved a special event permit for a gourmet cirque cabaret show that will run over five months between Nov. 1, 2018 and March 31, 2019 at Queen Elizabeth Park.

The event is described as 鈥渁 fully immersive entertainment experience featuring international circus artists, comedy, singers, magicians and a four-piece musical ensemble, complemented by an all-inclusive four-course gourmet meal.鈥

The three-hour event is staged inside an antique magic mirror tent, called a Spiegeltent, that seats approximately 300 people. Shows would take place from 7 p.m. until 10 p.m. four to six nights a week in the park鈥檚 south parking lot.

Gourmet cirque cabaret was first introduced to North America by German company Pomp Duck and Circumstance in New York in 1995. The following year it expanded to Atlanta. A permanent show, Teatro ZinZanni, has been running in Seattle since 1998.

Similar shows are also offered in several major European cities including Berlin, Vienna, Amsterdam, Nuremberg, Stuttgart, Basel and Munich by Palazzo Produktionen.

Event producer Scott Malcolm, principal with Bacio Rosso Entertainment Inc., proposed bringing the experience, Bacio Rosso 鈥 A Feast for the Senses, to Vancouver. It will be the first gourmet cirque cabaret hosted in Canada.

Malcolm is the past artistic director of both Teatro ZinZanni and Palazzo.

Green Party commissioner Stuart Mackinnon voted against granting the permit, saying he has long had concerns about the commercialization of public spaces. He also voiced concerns over the length of the show鈥檚 run, and the potential impacts of noise and traffic on the surrounding neighbourhood.

鈥淥ur park space is meant for people,鈥 he said.

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