
This week in PostMag: behind-the-scenes at Cirque du Soleil and HK cinema
Face paint and the stage were never my thing, so when I found myself with a face full of circus make-up (rosy red cheeks and all) on a brisk Seattle afternoon in early March, I was surprised how I felt. I was ready for my moment. I could feel myself morphing into someone different – less guarded, less self-conscious. More free. Maybe I should have been a theatre kid. That's the power of a mask for you.
Cat Nelson, editor of PostMag, with circus make-up at Cirque du Soleil Kooza in Seattle, US. Photo: Cat Nelson
In advance of its Hong Kong tour stop this month, Cirque du Soleil had invited PostMag photographer Jocelyn Tam and me behind the scenes of Kooza, the most classic 'circus' of their productions. I'd seen Cirque as a child in 1990s San Francisco, likely Alegria, and remembered it as an expressive, avant-garde performance – not so with Kooza, which is replete with clowning and high-energy antics.
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We spent a few days in Seattle watching what goes into putting on the show. With 121 people on tour and 100 containers of equipment, it's no small feat. We tried our hand at make-up, failed horribly at the low-wire and ate in the kitchen that feeds everyone in the circus' 'village'. We also got to know the cast when the masks come off – or rather, the paint's wiped away – and have told a few of their stories here.
In our cover feature, Chris Dobson meets Hong Kong filmmaker Peter Yung Wai-chuen. Recently restored in 4K by M+, Yung's 1979 police drama The System shows a Hong Kong from a different era – drugs, triads and corrupt cops – and was made possible only because of trust he had forged with the mob. The film came about at the start of Hong Kong cinema's New Wave movement, which I know distressingly little about but now my interest is piqued (as I hope is yours).
When I hit 10 years in China, it was hard to believe that I'd stayed in one place for so long but I'd never considered the opposite and how exhausting that might be. I felt tired just reading about Thor Pedersen's near-decade-long, globe-trotting journey to visit all 203 countries without flying. As he tells Graeme Green, what the Danish native imagined would take a few years ultimately ended up taking more than double that, in part due to an extended stay in Hong Kong thanks to the pandemic.
I imagine Cameron Dueck would be in full agreement with the premise of Pedersen's quest – it's not just if you get there, it's how you get there. How we move through the world colours how we experience it. Dueck puts this to the test in Thailand, where he explores Phang Nga Bay by air, sea and land, finding secluded corners of the gorgeous limestone-punctuated landscape. I'd always found cycling to be my preferred mode of transport but boating's sounding like it might come in a close second.
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South China Morning Post
30-05-2025
- South China Morning Post
Coming full circle for the artistic director of Cirque du Soleil's Kooza
I WAS BORN IN St Petersburg, Florida, in 1984. My mum called me Mr Sparkles or Mr Showman. I was always putting on a show. I was always entertaining whoever was around. I definitely had something. That's why I think they encouraged me to go into theatre. There was just something a little different. They recognised something special. Advertisement NO ONE KNEW I could sing until I was probably nine or 10. When they heard me sing in the school choir, that was when it turned into 'put him in lessons and let's help facilitate that as much as we can'. Jamieson Lindenberg in his youth. Photo: courtesy Jamieson Lindenberg I STUDIED AT A performing-arts high school for theatre and dance. My core education and training vocally as an artist was in this conservatory as a young adult. That is where A performing-arts high school for theatre and dance. My core education and training vocally as an artist was in this conservatory as a young adult. That is where Cirque du Soleil came to recruit ushers. We did an interview and they offered me a position as an usher for a show called Quidam that was playing at the Tropicana Field (in St Petersburg). That was my first job. I was 15. I'D NEVER HEARD OF Cirque du Soleil, but I was absolutely blown away by what I was seeing. I was studying theatre, so it was quite a contrast to Broadway, which is what I went on to do. Jamieson Lindenberg (right) at a singing competition in Florida when he was 14. Photo: courtesy Jamieson Lindenberg I BROKE SOME OF the rules – I was very late to work as a 15-year-old high-school student is – and I was let go. I was disappointed, but didn't even think about Cirque or that I could ever perform or be involved in that capacity because I finished school for theatre.


South China Morning Post
25-05-2025
- South China Morning Post
Why Cirque du Soleil circus show Kooza, back in Hong Kong, is ‘edge-of-your-seat stuff'
It has been seven years since Cirque du Soleil last graced Hong Kong with its stunning acrobatic acts, cheeky clowns and death-defying stunts. This month the global entertainment company is back with its circus production Kooza. Advertisement Running until July 13 – the family-friendly show has extended its stay in Hong Kong from its original end date of June 22 – Kooza will be presented at the Central Harbourfront Event Space, where the Cirque team has set up its signature big top. The show tells the story of the Innocent, a clown pulled into the zany, dynamic world of the Trickster. Thus begins a two-hour spectacle of gravity- and death-defying acts. Duncan Fisher, the chief show operations officer at Cirque du Soleil, calls Kooza 'the most 'circus' of all our circuses'. Duncan Fisher with a performer at the Central Harbourfront Event Space in Central, Hong Kong, where Cirque du Soleil will be performing Kooza until July 13. Photo: Sam Tsang Sante D'Amours Fortunato performs a hoop manipulation routine from Kooza. Photo: Sam Tsang


South China Morning Post
16-05-2025
- South China Morning Post
New House of Dancing Water in Macau is more Asian, says Cirque du Soleil's Jaden He Jingde
'A waterfront pavilion gets to enjoy the moonlight first.' This is a Chinese saying that explains how someone can benefit from being close to those with influence – and it more or less describes how Hong Kong resident Jaden He Jingde, a veteran martial arts director and Cirque du Soleil alum, landed in the reboot of House of Dancing Water in Macau. Originally directed by Franco Dragone , best known for his work with Cirque du Soleil, House of Dancing Water ran from 2010 until 2020, when Covid-19 restrictions forced the aquatic show to close down. Dragone died in 2022, but the show was revamped by his long-time collaborator Giuliano Peparini and reopened on May 7. 'I worked with Franco and Guiliano in [Las] Vegas,' says He. 'When the production company decided to incorporate more martial arts into the new House of Dancing Water, then they called me.' Jaden He Jingde performing on stage in Cirque du Soleil production Kà in Las Vegas. Photo: Jaden He Jingde