
Blues Brothers
Blue Man Group brings its electrifying brand of magic to Monte Carlo
When it moves to Monte Carlo Resort and Casino on Oct. 10, the ever-evolving multimedia entertainment phenomenon that is Blue Man Group will offer audiences a dramatically enhanced version of its already jaw-dropping Las Vegas production.
‘We’ve always wanted to create a mind-blowing experience.’
Chris Wink Co-founder of Blue Man Group
This page: Just like in this scene from the North American Tour, audience members can expect an interactive experience at Monte Carlo. Facing page: The new show will feature “biomorphic percussion creatures” and other visual and auditory eccentricities.
For visitors who’ve never
witnessed Blue Man in Vegas, this latest and most elaborate incarnation
is all the more reason to take the plunge. For those who caught the
production at the Venetian (or at the Luxor before that), the updated
show merits another look.
“We’ve
come up with a lot of new material and we think that Monte Carlo is the
right place to put it,” said Chris Wink, who co-founded Blue Man Group
with Phil Stanton and Matt Goldman in New York City in 1987. “We feel
like we can really have fun in this venue.”
Blue
Man made its Vegas theatrical debut at the Luxor in 2000, moving on to
the Venetian Resort Hotel Casino in 2005. Its revamped Vegas production
will be unveiled at the 1,294-seat Monte Carlo Theater seven years to
the day after its Venetian debut.
“We
just knew that [Monte Carlo] would be really willing to take risks and
be cooperative with us and collaborate,” Stanton said.
The new show will, as ever,
star a trio of silent performers in blue makeup and bald caps, equal
parts mystical heroes and wide-eyed clowns. Accompanied by an
electrifying live band, the Blue Men explore art, technology and
percussion with a trademark blend of comedy and wonderment.
“We
started doing this originally to try to take all of our interests and
see if we could put them in one basket,” Stanton explained.
At
the core of the show are the enigmatic Blue Men, who come into our
world and explore facets of everyday life. The show has been modified
over the years to reflect developments in society and technology. At
Monte Carlo, it will make a huge leap forward.
“One
of the things that we really tried to do with this incarnation … is to
dive into technology,” Wink explained. “We’ve been learning a lot in the
last decade about different elements, [like] ways to use LEDs, and
we’re really going to put them to use here.”
On
stage, the Monte Carlo production will combine signature Blue Man
pieces (including ultra-vivid “paint drumming” and marshmallow
mouth-catching) with new characters and dynamic instruments. Robotics
will feature prominently, as will plays on contemporary mobile computing
technologies. But Blue Man Group’s fascination with industrial imagery
and percussion will remain.
“There
are elements that are truly kind of timeless and tribal and really
visceral, and they serve to be a nice juxtaposition to all of the
technology,” Stanton said.
Perhaps
the most intriguing element of the Monte Carlo production is a segment
during which the entire theater is transformed in order to mimic the
inside of a human brain, with Blue Men “playing” this neuro landscape
like a giant drum.
“We’ve
always wanted to create a mind-blowing experience,” Wink said. “So we
decided to take the metaphor kind of literally and blow a mind with the
percussive power of the Blue Man.”