From what we say, it was highly entertaining the crowd was pretty massive. Make sure you catch it. Here are some pictures we took.








A Toronto local blog about living, playing and working on Queens Quay, Toronto's waterfront
Saturday is a day of adjustment, starting in the afternoon, with the two groups venturing cautiously outside of their habitations to the world of Queens Quay. The street itself has been colourfully transformed, and during the weekend, the eastbound lanes will be pedestrian-only.
Past experience has shown that this will be an extremely popular destination for weekend visitors. No outdoor performances are scheduled to go past 11 pm and concert sound levels will be kept within city-approved site limits. To enhance the weekend experience there will be some road closures in effect to accommodate planned activities and pedestrian traffic:
Queens Quay W (eastbound lanes): from Lower Spadina Ave to Lower Simcoe St:
Saturday June 13, 6am to Monday, June 15, 3am
Luminato organizers will manage these road closures to ensure as little disruption as
possible. Access to 401 Queen’s Quay West will be managed by a Paid Duty Police
Officer.
The latest creation from Cirque, which also marks the company's 25th anniversary, is a departure from the tightly controlled big-top and Las Vegas spectacles it's known for - representing a throwback of sorts to the company's street-performer roots, albeit one shaped by the massive creative resources Cirque now has at its disposal.
The Cirque show begins the evening of Friday, June 13, and stretches throughout the final weekend of Luminato. Two tribes of performers will start the weekend at two antithetical locations, one locale dressed up as a fantastical urban environment, the other decorated as a rural setting (at two of Toronto's main lakefront attractions: Harbourfront Centre, at the base of Simcoe Street; and the Music Garden, just west of the foot of Spadina Avenue). The tribes will each act out a series of street performances as they gradually converge along Queen's Quay for a final blowout show on Sunday evening.
But Cirque organizers are hesitant to offer more details about the storylines and concepts behind the show. The idea, says Yasmine Khalil, director of Cirque's events division, is not to offer the audience a chapter-by-chapter storyline, or to promise a series of distinct events, but rather to have them arrive and form their own impressions of what is unfolding before them. "If people come and try to understand too literally what is going on, it takes away from the magic and the enjoyment," Khalil says. Her advice: "Go and see what's going to happen that weekend with an open mind."
The National Post says it'll take place at the "Harbourfront Centre, the Toronto Music Garden, and HtO Park, Cirque du Soleil's waterfront visit is experiential with encounters happening"
For our closing weekend, Canada’s international entertainment company Cirque du Soleil® presents a special event created especially for Luminato. This event is an inquiry into the very essence of human civilization.
Beginning Friday night, two “communities” will form on the Toronto waterfront: one representing the natural world in which we have our instinctual roots and the urban community, the world we have constructed around ourselves. They’ll make their homes at opposite ends of the site, each in an environment antithetical to their respective world-view.
What will happen as the weekend unfolds and the two communities encounter and interact with each other? You’ll have to join in the festivities to find out – but expect to be amazed. Be sure to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to experience Luminato and Cirque du Soleil as never before!